American actor (born 1987)
Michael B. Jordan
Born Michael Bakari Jordan
(1987-02-09 ) February 9, 1987 (age 37) Occupations Years active 1998–present
Michael Bakari Jordan
[1] (
bah-KAR -ee ; born February 9, 1987)
[2] is an American actor and producer. He is best known for his film roles as shooting victim
Oscar Grant in the drama
Fruitvale Station (2013), boxer
Adonis Creed in
Creed (2015), and
Erik Killmonger in
Black Panther (2018), all of which were written and directed by
Ryan Coogler .
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6] Jordan reprised his role of Creed in
Creed II (2018) and
Creed III (2023); the latter also marked his directorial debut.
Jordan initially broke out in television, playing
Wallace in the first season of the
HBO crime drama series
The Wire (2002). He went on to play
Reggie Montgomery on the
ABC soap opera
All My Children (2003–2006) and
Vince Howard in the
NBC sports drama series
Friday Night Lights (2009–2011). His other films include
Chronicle (2012),
That Awkward Moment (2014),
Fantastic Four (2015), and
Just Mercy (2019), in which he portrayed
Bryan Stevenson . He has also starred in and produced the
HBO film
Fahrenheit 451 (2018), for which he was nominated for the
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Television Movie .
Jordan was named one of the
100 most influential people in the world by
Time magazine in 2020 and 2023.
[7]
[8] Also in 2020, he was named
People ' s
Sexiest Man Alive ,
[9] and
The New York Times ranked him 15th on its list of the 25 greatest actors of the 21st century.
[10] Jordan is also a co-owner of English Premier League football club
AFC Bournemouth .
[11]
Early life
Michael Bakari Jordan was born on February 9, 1987, in Santa Ana, California,
[12] to Donna and Michael A. Jordan. He has an older sister and a younger brother.
[13] His family lived in Santa Ana, CA for two years before moving to Newark, NJ where Jordan grew up.
[12]
[14] He attended
Newark Arts High School , where his mother worked as a teacher, and where he also played basketball.
[15]
[16]
Career
1999–2008: Beginnings
Jordan worked as a child model for several companies and brands, including
Modell's Sporting Goods and
Toys "R" Us , before deciding to embark on a career as an actor.
[17]
[18] He launched his career as a professional actor in 1999, when he appeared briefly in single episodes of the television series
Cosby and
The Sopranos .
[14] His first principal film role followed in 2001 when he was featured in
Hardball , which starred
Keanu Reeves . In 2002, he gained more attention by playing the small but pivotal role of
Wallace in the first season of HBO's
The Wire .
In March 2003, he joined the cast of
All My Children , replacing
Chadwick Boseman , playing Reggie Montgomery, a troubled teenager, until June 2006 when Jordan was released from his contract.
[19] Jordan's other credits include guest starring appearances on
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ,
[20]
Without a Trace and
Cold Case . Thereafter, he had a lead role in the independent film Blackout and starred in
The Assistants on
The-N . In 2008, Jordan appeared in the music video "
Did You Wrong " by R&B artist
Pleasure P .
2009–2012: Friday Night Lights and Parenthood
Jordan in 2011
In 2009, Jordan began starring in the
NBC drama
Friday Night Lights as quarterback Vince Howard, and lived in an apartment in
Austin where the show was filmed.
[21] He played the character for two seasons until the show ended in 2011.
[22] In 2009, he guest-starred on
Burn Notice in the episode "
Hot Spot ", playing a high school football player who got into a fight and is being hunted by a local gangster. In 2010, he was considered one of the 55 faces of the future by
Nylon Magazine ' s Young Hollywood Issue.
[23]
[24]
In 2010, he guest-starred in the
Law & Order: Criminal Intent episode "Inhumane Society" as a boxer involved in a
Michael Vick -inspired
dog fighting scandal. That year, he landed a recurring role on the NBC show
Parenthood playing Alex (Haddie Braverman's love interest).
[25] This marked his second collaboration with
showrunner
Jason Katims , who was in charge of Friday Night Lights .
BuddyTV ranked him #80 on its list of "TV's Sexiest Men of 2011".
[26] Jordan voiced Jace in the
Xbox 360 game
Gears of War 3 .
[27] In 2012, Jordan appeared in the
George Lucas -produced film
Red Tails
[28] and played lead character Steve Montgomery in
Chronicle , a film about three teenaged boys who develop superhuman abilities.
[29] He also guest-starred in an episode of
House 's final season, playing a blind patient.
[30]
2013–present: Breakthrough
In 2013, Jordan starred as shooting victim
Oscar Grant in
Fruitvale Station , directed by
Ryan Coogler . His performance garnered critical acclaim, with
Todd McCarthy of
The Hollywood Reporter stating that Jordan reminded him of "a young
Denzel Washington ".
[31] Following his role in Fruitvale Station , Jordan was named an "actor to watch" by
People and
Variety .
[32]
[33]
Time magazine named him with Coogler one of 30 people under 30 who are changing the world, and he was also named one of 2013's breakout stars by
Entertainment Weekly and
GQ .
[34]
[35]
[36]
Jordan alongside
Sylvester Stallone and
Tessa Thompson promoting
Creed in November 2015
In 2015, he starred as Johnny Storm, the Human Torch, in
Fantastic Four .
[37]
[38]
[39] The film was universally panned by critics, holding a 9% approval rating on
Rotten Tomatoes , and was a bust at the box office.
[40] However, later in 2015, Jordan rebounded with critical acclaim when he starred as
Donnie Creed , the son of boxer
Apollo Creed in the seventh
Rocky film,
Creed , his second collaboration with Coogler, which co-starred
Sylvester Stallone .
[41] Jordan prepared for his role as a boxer in Creed by undertaking one year of rigorous physical training and a stringent low-fat diet.
[42] He did not have a body double during filming and was "routinely bloodied, bruised, and dizzy" when fighting scenes were being filmed.
[42]
In 2016, Jordan featured in the popular sports game
NBA 2K17 , portraying Justice Young, a teammate of the player in the game's MyCareer mode. In October 2017, it was announced that Jordan was cast in a supporting role as Mark Reese in the upcoming
Netflix superhero series
Raising Dion .
[43] In February 2018, Jordan starred as the villain
Erik Killmonger in the
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) film
Black Panther ; this marked Jordan's third collaboration with Coogler.
[44] His performance in Black Panther received critical acclaim, with Dani Di Placido of
Forbes stating that Jordan "steals the show", while Jason Guerrasio of
Business Insider wrote that the actor "plays a Killmonger fueled with hate and emptiness – we won't give away why – but he also delivers it with a swagger that's just a joy to watch ... the movie takes off more in story and viewing enjoyment whenever Jordan is on screen."
[4]
[5]
Later in 2018, Jordan starred in
Fahrenheit 451 with
Michael Shannon and
Sofia Boutella . The television film was distributed on
HBO by
HBO Films .
[45] That same year, Jordan reprised his role as boxer Donnie Creed in
Creed II , a sequel to
Creed (2015) and the eighth installment in the
Rocky film series . Creed II was released in the United States by
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer on November 21, 2018. The film received generally positive reviews from critics and it went on to debut to $35.3 million in its opening weekend (a five-day total of $55.8 million), marking the biggest debut ever for a live-action release over Thanksgiving.
[46]
[47]
He also voices the character Julian Chase in
Rooster Teeth 's animated series
Gen:Lock , which he also co-produces through his production company, Outlier Society Productions since January 2019.
[48] Jordan portrayed attorney
Bryan Stevenson in a legal drama,
Just Mercy , which he also co-produced. The film, based on a real-life story, was released in December 2019 to critical acclaim.
[49]
[50] Jordan stars in
Without Remorse , based on the book by
Tom Clancy , as
John Clark , a former Navy SEAL and director of the elite counterterrorism unit Rainbow Six. Originally planned for release on September 18, 2020, it was released on April 30, 2021 due to the
COVID-19 pandemic .
[51]
Jordan reprised his MCU role as Erik "Killmonger" Stevens in two episodes of the first season of
What If...? (2021), and in
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (2022),
[52]
[53] and made a cameo appearance in
Space Jam: A New Legacy (2021). He also starred in
A Journal for Jordan (2021), directed by
Denzel Washington , as a soldier who "kept a journal full of poignant life lessons for their newborn son, Jordan, while deployed overseas."
[54]
Jordan made his
directorial debut with
Creed III , a sequel to Creed II , in addition to producing and reprising his starring role as boxer Adonis Creed. It was released on March 3, 2023.
[11]
Upcoming projects
He is slated to reteam with Coogler for the fourth time in Wrong Answer , a film based on the
Atlanta Public Schools cheating scandal .
[42] Jordan is also set to appear in a second remake of
The Thomas Crown Affair .
[55] Jordan is also set to appear in the vampire film Blood Brothers .
[56] His production company Outlier Society signed a first look deal with Amazon,
[57] and is also developing
Val-Zod , an
HBO Max series featuring a Black version of the
DC Comics character
Superman .
[58]
As of March 2022
[update] , Jordan will produce and star in the sequel of
I Am Legend with
Will Smith .
[59]
Personal life
Jordan has resided in Los Angeles since 2006.
[60] He grew up in a religious household and considers himself to be spiritual.
[61] As of 2018
[update] , he lives with his parents in a
Sherman Oaks home that he purchased.
[62]
[63] Jordan is also a fan of
anime , particularly
Naruto: Shippuden and the
Dragon Ball franchise.
[64]
[65] Jordan grew up in
Newark, New Jersey and is a lifelong fan of the
New York Giants .
[66]
In November 2020, the actor began dating model
Lori Harvey , daughter of comedian
Steve Harvey .
[67] In June 2022, it was announced that the couple had ended their relationship.
[68]
Sports ownership
In December 2022, Jordan was announced as part-owner of English football club
AFC Bournemouth . The club was taken over by the consortium group the Black Knights Football Club led by fellow American Businessman
William Foley .
[69] Jordan led the minority ownership group with Kosmos Founder Nullah Sarker.
[70]
[71]
Filmography
Jordan at the
2019 Toronto International Film Festival
Film
Television
Video games
Music videos
Awards and nominations
References
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^
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a
b
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^
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External links
Awards for Michael B. Jordan
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Outstanding New Talent (1996–2010, 2012) Best First Feature (2011, 2016–2021) Breakthrough Performance Award (2013, 2022–present)
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