Antwon Tanner Movies
For athlete/musician-turned-actor
Antwon Tanner life is all about goals. From his early days on the south side of Chicago to a flourishing screen career that has included roles in such hits as
The Wood,
Never Die Alone, and
Coach Carter,
Tanner cites every successful career step taken as a direct result of well-defined goals and unwavering faith in God.
Tanner is good-humored and has a handsome screen presence; his likable persona plays as well on the small screen as the silver screen. He has also become a familiar face to television viewers thanks to prominent supporting roles in such shows as
Boston Public and
One Tree Hill. With
Tanner's substantial role opposite
Samuel L. Jackson in the acclaimed 2005 sports drama
Coach Carter it appeared as if his career was finally about to break big. Though the streets of Chicago offered little in the way of creative inspiration during
Tanner's formative years, the athletically inclined youth made quite a name for himself in the two-guard position during his time at both Corliss and King high schools. After graduating from high school,
Tanner eschewed sports in favor of developing his musical talents following a chance meeting with an agent who represented a close friend. It didn't take the aspiring talent long to parlay his musical abilities into an acting career. A role opposite former
Cheers star
Rhea Pearlman in the 1996 basketball drama
Sunset Park served as an ideal introduction to the screen for the former baller with numerous supporting roles in both film and television serving to increase his public profile. In 1997
Tanner received the chance of a lifetime when he received the opportunity to appear on screen opposite personal role model
Samuel L. Jackson in the downbeat drama
One Eight Seven. A successful run during the millennial changeover found the increasingly in-demand star coming into his own as an actor, and following an appearance in the
Takeshi Kitano gangster drama and a turn as a wisecracking thug in
Never Die Alone,
Tanner could once again be seen opposite
Jackson -- basketball in hand -- in 2005's
Coach Carter. In 2005,
Tanner strapped on his spurs for a role opposite
David Carradine in the revisionist Western Brothas in Arms. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide