Darryl M. Bell

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Darryl M. Bell
Born (1963-05-10) May 10, 1963 (age 60)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Other names Daryl Bell
Education Delbarton School
Syracuse University
Occupation Actor
Years active 1987-present
Partner(s) Tempestt Bledsoe (1993-)

Darryl M. Bell (sometimes credited as Daryl Bell; born May 10, 1963) is an American actor best known for his role as Big Brother X-Ray Vision in the 1988 Spike Lee film School Daze and as Ron Johnson, Jr. on the NBC sitcom A Different World (1987-93). Additionally, he starred on the short-lived UPN sitcom Homeboys in Outer Space as Morris Clay.

Biography

Bell is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. He pledged into the fraternity through Delta Zeta Chapter in Spring 1982. Bell attended Syracuse University. He is in a 20-year-long committed relationship with actress Tempestt Bledsoe, who co-starred in the NBC TV comedy The Cosby Show. The couple appeared together in the Fox reality TV series Househusbands of Hollywood, that debuted in August 2009.[1] Bell graduated from Delbarton School in Morristown, New Jersey in May 1981, where he was one of four African American students, accounting for 1% of the school's enrollment.[2] Bell's father, Travers J. Bell, Jr., was the founder of the first black firm on the New York Stock Exchange.[3]

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1987-93 A Different World Ron Johnson 103 Episodes
1995 Black Scorpion E-Z Street
1996 Living Single John Season 3, Dear John
1996-97 Homeboys in Outer Space Morris Clay 21 Episodes
1997 Cosby Julius Three Episodes
1999 For Your Love Floyd Huxtable III Seasons 2, Van For All Seasons
2004 Beverly Hills S.U.V. TV Movie
2009 Househusbands of Hollywood Himself TV Reality Show

References

  1. The Obenson Report, 12/21/2008 (accessed 2/16/2009)
  2. Weaver, Maurice. "Darryl Bell Gets Caught Up In A World Of Success", Chicago Tribune, January 29, 1989. Accessed June 29, 2012. "Bell`s own education at Del Barton [sic], an all-boys Catholic preparatory boarding school in New Jersey run by Benedictine monks, was nothing like the atmosphere at A Different World`s fictional Hillman College, a historically black institution. 'As I look back, there were some very hard times for me being one out of four black students, out of 400 students at Del Barton,' says Bell, a talkative student but never the class clown."
  3. http://www.nytimes.com/1988/01/27/obituaries/travers-j-bell-jr-46-founder-of-only-black-firm-on-exchange.html

External links


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