Grier studied at Yale’s School of Drama (one of the most elite artistic crucibles in the country) after graduating from Cass Tech with a B.A.
His first Broadway role was as Jackie Robinson in “The First,” and a Tony nomination quickly followed, followed by roles in August Wilson and Harold Pinter productions, Shakespeare plays, and an endless number of sketches.
Suddenly, David Alan Grier had become one of the wildest comedians on stage, best known for his role as Antoine Merriweather in the “In Living Color” sketch “Men on Films” as well as the uptight, hilarious “Calhoun Tubbs” (also “In Living Color”).
He did not just act – he shapeshifted – and you could hear the echoes of his Detroit upbringing in every character.
The preacher, the neighbor, the trickster, the teacher.
He has a wide range – from Broadway (Porgy and Bess, A Soldier’s Play), sitcoms (The Carmichael Show, Dad Stop Embarrassing Me!), to film (Boomerang, The Woodsman, Jumanji), and beyond.
David Alan Grier man does not merely fit a mold… he cracks it wide open and then performs in the rubble, continuing to reinvent himself even into middle age.
For instance, he won a Tony in 2021 for “A Soldier’s Play” and played Black Santa in Eddie Murphy’s 2023 movie “Candy Cane Lane”.
That said, David Alan Grier has at no point ever chosen laughter over legitimacy.
Instead, he has always fused the two, acting as one of the pioneers that proved black artists can have a multitude of talents:
- Classical and absurd.
- Comedic and cutting.
- Tragic and triumphant.
He moves between characters like Detroit does across eras.
Always shifting.
Always adapting.
All while never forgetting where he originated.