James E. Hurd Jr.(I)
- Actor
- Art Department
- Director
James E. Hurd, Jr. was raised in Wewahitchka, Florida, and began his
theatre work at Florida State University and Florida A&M, where he
starred in "The Mighty Gents" and "Room Beneath the Blues." His leading
role L.A. stage work includes "Sentence of Silence," "No Longer an
Alien," "Living on the Edge," "The Split," "Room 1222," (which he also
wrote and directed in workshop), "Peeled" and "Speaking of Charlie,"
which opened at the Wilshire Ebell Theatre in Los Angeles in October
2005. Hurd recently completed the feature films Columbus Day, Jive
Chicken, Duplicator, Red Herring, Able Edwards, Compton Cowboy and
Consignment. He appeared in episodes of "General Hospital" and "Murder
She Wrote," and he starred in the film "Repo Jake." His film debut was
in "Something Wild" with Melanie Griffith and Jeff Daniels. Hurd is
also a playwright and director, co-authoring civil rights-themed dramas
with his co-author, Linda Bannister. He wrote "One Sunday in
Mississippi," a one-act play about the murders of civil rights workers
in 1964, was featured at the National Black Theater Festival 2003.
Their latest full-length drama, Turpentine Jake, which concerns Black
laborers enslaved under debt peonage in 1930s Florida, received a
staged reading at The Bellarmine Forum at Loyola Marymount University
in November 2005. Hurd also directed and played the title role in
Turpentine Jake. Hurd and Bannister are completing Cul De Sac, a drama
on the experience of Menopause. Hurd spent 13 years working in the art
departments of feature films including The Five Heartbeats, Sneakers,
Next Friday, Batman, What Lies Beneath, Dog Catcher and Like Mike. Poet
of the Swingin' Blade is Hurd's first film behind and in front of the
camera; he co-authored, directed and produced.