
Nick Stewart
Acting • Born 1910-03-15 – Died 2000-12-18
Biography
Horace Winfred "Nick" Stewart (March 15, 1910 – December 18, 2000) also billed as Nick O'Demus was an American television and film actor. Stewart was known for his role as Lightnin' (Willie Jefferson) on TV's The Amos 'n' Andy Show. Nick Stewart was born on March 15, 1910, in Harlem, New York City, to Joseph (March 15, 1888 – July 1976) and Eva Stewart, who were recent immigrants from Barbados, British West Indies. He began his show business career as a dancer at the Cotton Club and Hoofers Club. Stewart also was a veteran of Broadway shows, having created a comedic character he called "Nicodemus" and playing that role in Swingin' the Dream and Louisiana Purchase, as well as in the film Go West, Young Man. Stewart also performed comedy as a cast member of the Rudy Vallée radio show in 1941. Other acting credits include the 1936 movie Go West Young Man, the voice of Br'er Bear in the 1946 Disney movie Song of the South, and Willy-Willy on the television series Ramar of the Jungle. Also in 1954, Stewart had an important role in The Reign of Amelika Joe presented by Fireside Theatre. He also won a comedy role in White Christmas (1954). He was originally offered the role of Calhoun the lawyer, which he turned down. (After his refusal, it went to Johnny Lee, who had the role on radio since 1949.) Soon Gosden and Correll were back on the telephone, this time offering Stewart the role of Lightnin' on the television show. Stewart accepted the role with one idea in mind: to make enough money to be able to open his theater where African Americans would not be typecast as maids and porters. In the 1960s, he would have small roles in Mister Ed and the classic comedy film, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) as the Migrant Truck Driver who is forced off of the road. In 1987, Doris McMillon devoted an entire week of her nightly talk show, On the Line, to a discussion of the documentary Amos 'n' Andy: Anatomy of a Controversy, and the issues surrounding the shows. Stewart was one of the participants, discussing the show and his role in it. He also had a role in the movie Carmen Jones. Stewart's final acting role would be returning to Disney to reprise the voice role of Br'er Bear for the theme park attraction Splash Mountain, which is based on the animated segments of Song of the South. He was the only actor to return and voice his character from the aforementioned movie. In an interview with author Jim Korkis, he was asked about whether or not his role of Br'er Bear was degrading. He replied, "Disney treated us like Kings." He went on to say that the money he earned from Song of the South was donated to a theatre for African-American actors to play roles other than maids and butlers, and was doing the same with the money from reprising his role for the Disneyland attraction.
Filmography
32 credits
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World
Movie • 1963
Driver run off highway

Song of the South
Movie • 1946
Br'er Bear (voice)

Behind Green Lights
Movie • 1946
Man reporting stolen car

Delightfully Dangerous
Movie • 1945
Desk Clerk

Go West Young Man
Movie • 1936
Nicodemus (as Nicodemus Stewart)

Flame of the Islands
Movie • 1955
Nick

My Son, The Hero
Movie • 1943
Nicodemus

International Crime
Movie • 1938
Bootblack

Gildersleeve's Ghost
Movie • 1944
Chauncey

Three Little Girls in Blue
Movie • 1946
Mo

Shine
Movie • 1942
(as Nicodemus)

Wall Street Cowboy
Movie • 1939
Train Porter

Stormy Weather
Movie • 1943
Cousin Jake (uncredited)

Tarzan's Fight for Life
Movie • 1958
Molo

False Faces
Movie • 1943
Mack (as Nicodemus)

Mind Your Own Business
Movie • 1936
Butler (as Nicodemus)

Dakota
Movie • 1945
Nicodemus

Night Train to Memphis
Movie • 1946
Train Porter

Robin Hood of the Pecos
Movie • 1941
Mose Johnson (uncredited)

She Wouldn't Say Yes
Movie • 1945
Porter (uncredited)

Hoosier Holiday
Movie • 1943
Aloysius Lincoln (as Nicodemus)

Silver Streak
Movie • 1976
Shoeshiner

Carmen Jones
Movie • 1954
Dink Franklin

Cabin in the Sky
Movie • 1943
Dude

Bud Abbott and Lou Costello in Hollywood
Movie • 1945
Houseboy (uncredited)

Who Killed Cock Robin?
Movie • 1935
Blackbird (voice) (uncredited)

The Meanest Man in the World
Movie • 1943
Elevator Operator

Dumbo
Movie • 1941
Specks Crow (voice) (uncredited)

Follow the Boys
Movie • 1944
Lt. Reynolds (uncredited)

Mister Ed
TV • 1961

Amos 'n' Andy
TV • 1951
Lightnin'

Ben Casey
TV • 1961