Faizon Love


Considerably large both in actual physical stature and in presence, African-American actor-comedian Faizon Love moved to New York City from his Newark, New Jersey upon graduating from high school. While still a student, Love was encouraged by an English teacher who invited the young man to perform before the class at the end of the day if his studies were in order. This fostering of his creativity led to bigger and better things for the performer, who landed a role in the Off-Broadway play "Bitter Heart Midtown" at the Harlem National Black Theatre within his first year in NYC. A modernized take on Charles Dickens' "Great Expectations", the play was a good start for the actor, who had an early TV appearance in an episode of the CBS series "WIOU" in 1990. In 1992, Love was called in to replace Robin Harris when the comedian died suddenly, providing a voice for the animated feature "Bebe's Kids".

Love's career would hit an upswing when an assistant to actor-filmmaker Robert Townsend saw his comedy act and recommended the big man for a role in Townsend's 1993 superhero spoof "Meteor Man", beginning a long and fruitful partnership with the renowned comedic director. That same year he had a recurring role on the short-lived variety series "Townsend Television" (Fox). When Townsend launched his sitcom "The Parent 'Hood" on The WB in 1995, Love was there in a recurring role for the first partial season, playing Townsend's childhood friend and neighbor Wendell Wilcox, a role he took as a regular from the fall of 1995 through the series end in 1998. Often wrong-headed but right-hearted, Love's Wendell Wilcox was a persona that fit in well with the actor's appearance, comedic abilities and overwhelming charm.

In 1995, he hit the big screen again, playing a dope-dealing ice cream man who is bent on collecting money owed him by smoked-out Smokey (Chris Tucker) in the comedy "Friday", starring Ice Cube. The following year saw the actor team up with Martin Lawrence for the comedy "A Thin Line Between Love and Hate", and in 1997 he was featured in Townsend's "B.A.P.S." as well as the action comedy "Money Talks", which reunited him with Tucker. A seemingly ubiquitous presence in popular African-American films, Love was directed by former co-star Ice Cube in his ambitious 1998 directorial debut "The Players Club" and had a supporting role as a stripper-obsessed street hustler who inadvertently gets his recently paroled friend (Brian Hooks) in a heap of trouble in the action comedy "3 Strikes" (2000).

Moving towards more mainstream fare, Love was featured in "The Replacements" (2000), a comedy set during an NFL strike. Here he played a celebrity bodyguard turned football player, and reached a wider audience with his appropriately goofy portrayal. He also caught the attention of co-star Jon Favreau, who cast Love a supporting role as Horrace, Ruiz's (Sean Combs) muscle in "Made" (2001), writer-director Favreau's portrait of two dim-witted wannabe made men from L.A. (Favreau and Vince Vaughn) who get mixed up in real-life organized crime in New York City. The actor was quickly added to Favreau's regular ensemble of players (Love's hilarious outtakes are one of the highlights of the film's DVD edition).

Love's profile grew ever higher with his amusing and vanity-less appearance in the slick surfer chick flick "Blue Crush" (2002), playing a boisterous NFL player visiting Hawaii with an unexpected desire to learn how to surf. In "Wonderland" (2003) Love used his imposing frame to his advantage yet again in a variety of supporting bits, playing the ominous bodyguard of Los Angeles' real-life nightclub and drug kingpin Eddie Nash (Eric Bogosian) in the flashy retelling of L.A.'s infamous Wonderland Avenue murders, tackling a role in "The Fighting Temptations" (2003) as a prison warden and reteaming with director Favreau to play the manager of a team of department store Santa's helpers in the holiday charmer "Elf" (2003).

  • Also Credited As:
    Faison Love, Faizon A. Love
  • Born:
    June 14, 1968 in Newark, New Jersey
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Comedian
Milestones
  • 1990 Made early TV appearance on an episode of the CBS series "WIOU"
  • 1992 Lent his voice to a lead role in the animated feature "Bebe's Kids"
  • 1993 Had a recurring role on the short-lived Fox variety series "Townsend Television", hosted by Robert Townsend
  • 1993 Made feature on screen debut in Robert Townsend's "Meteor Man"
  • 1995 Had a recurring role on Townsend's sitcom "The Parent 'Hood" (UPN) playing Wendell Wilcox, the childhood best friend of Robert Peterson (Townsend)
  • 1995 Played Big Worm, a dope-dealing ice cream man, in the comedy "Friday"
  • 1996 Acted in the Martin Lawrence comedy "A Thin Line Between Love and Hate"
  • 1997 Appeared in the Robert Townsend comedy feature "B.A.P.S." and reteamed with Chris Tucker in "Money Talks"
  • 1998 Featured in "The Players Club", rapper Ice Cube's directorial debut
  • 2000 Had a supporting role in "3 Strikes" as Tone, the stripper-loving street hustler who lets down his friend (Brian Hooks)
  • 2000 Played a bodyguard-cum-pro football player in the strike-set comedy "The Replacements", featuring Jon Favreau
  • 2001 Acted in the Jon Favreau comedy "Made"
  • 2002 Featured in the surfing movie "Blue Crush"
  • 2003 Cast in the drama "Wonderland," which starred Val Kilmer
  • 2004 Featured in the film "Torque"
  • 2006 Cast as a fast-talking owner of a 1930s Southern speakeasy in "Idlewild"
  • 2007 Appeared opposite Gabrielle Union in the Christmas feature, "The Perfect Holiday"
  • At 19 was cast in the Off-Broadway play "Bitter Heart Midtown" at the Harlem National Black Theatre, a modern adaptation of Charles Dickens' "Great Expectations
  • Featured in the South African comedy "Mr. Bones" (lensed 2001)
  • Moved to New York after completing high school
  • Was a regular on "The Parent 'Hood"

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