Ving Rhames
Irving Rameses "Ving" Rhames (born May 12, 1959) is an American actor recognized for his commanding presence and deep voice in portraying intense, authoritative characters across film and television.[1] Born and raised in Harlem, New York City, to a homemaker mother and auto mechanic father, Rhames honed his craft studying drama at the State University of New York at Purchase, where he developed alongside future stars like Stanley Tucci and Parker Posey.[1] His breakthrough came with the role of the gangster Marcellus Wallace in Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction (1994), which showcased his physicality and gravitas, followed by villainous turns in action thrillers like Con Air (1997).[2] Rhames achieved widespread acclaim for his portrayal of boxing promoter Don King in the HBO biopic Don King: Only in America (1997), earning him the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Miniseries or Television Film, though he famously declined to accept it personally, insisting it be given to fellow nominee Jack Lemmon in a gesture of respect for the veteran's career.[3] He has since become a staple in the Mission: Impossible franchise as technical expert Luther Stickell, appearing in all entries from the 1996 original through the ongoing series, contributing to the films' global box-office success.[2] Other notable credits include remakes like Dawn of the Dead (2004) and voice work in animated features, underscoring his versatility beyond stereotypical tough-guy roles.[2]Early life
Upbringing in Harlem
Irving Rameses Rhames, professionally known as Ving, was born on May 12, 1959, in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City, to Ernest Rhames, an auto mechanic, and Reather Rhames, a homemaker of religious disposition.[1][4] The family lived on 126th Street in a neighborhood rife with drug traffickers and gangsters, where heroin and cocaine were major issues during his youth, though youth involvement with guns was rarer than in later eras.[4][5] Rhames grew up alongside his brother Junior in this gritty urban setting, marked by economic hardship that fostered resourcefulness; he later described childhood improvisations like mixing flour, powdered sugar, and tea to mimic bread amid scarcity.[5][6] His mother, from a sharecropping family in South Carolina, played a dominant role in his moral formation, teaching reliance on faith, compassion, and diligence while urging avoidance of street temptations and prioritizing education.[5][4] Rhames endured teasing for his uncommon given name, Irving—chosen after journalist Irving R. Levine—which stood out among peers in Harlem.[7] These maternal lessons helped shield him from peer pressure in an environment he characterized as teeming with negative influences.[4]Education and acting training
Rhames initially aspired to play football but was encouraged by an English teacher in ninth grade to audition for the High School of Performing Arts in New York City, which he did on a whim and subsequently attended.[8] There, he developed a passion for acting and trained alongside future actors including Wesley Snipes, Angela Bassett, and Laurence Fishburne.[9] His performances earned him a drama scholarship to the Juilliard School.[4] Following high school, Rhames studied drama at the State University of New York at Purchase (SUNY Purchase).[10] He later attended the Juilliard School of Drama, where he received formal training in classical theater and graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in 1983.[11][12] At Juilliard, he focused on works by playwrights such as Shakespeare and Molière, establishing a foundation in stage acting that informed his early career.[13]Career
Stage career
Rhames began his professional acting career on stage following training at the High School of Performing Arts and the Julliard School's Drama Division.[4] His classical training led to roles in plays by Henrik Ibsen and Molière, among others, in regional theater productions during the early 1980s.[4] Rhames made his Broadway debut in John Pielmeier's The Boys of Winter, which opened on December 1, 1985, at the Biltmore Theatre and closed after eight performances on December 8, 1985.[14] He portrayed the character Doc, a Marine sergeant, in the play directed by Michael Lindsay-Hogg, which depicted tensions among U.S. soldiers in Vietnam.[15] [16] In Off-Broadway theater, Rhames appeared in productions including Map of the World, Short Eyes, Richard III, and Ascension Day.[4] [17] These roles, drawn from contemporary dramas and Shakespearean works, showcased his versatility in ensemble casts and historical narratives during the mid-1980s.[18] His stage work in this period emphasized physicality and intensity, attributes that later defined his screen presence.[4]Early film and television roles (1980s–early 1990s)
Rhames made his screen debut in the 1985 television adaptation of James Baldwin's novel Go Tell It on the Mountain, portraying the character Young Gabriel Grimes in the PBS anthology series American Playhouse.[19] He followed with guest appearances on crime dramas including Miami Vice in 1985 and Crime Story in 1986, as well as a recurring role on the daytime soap opera Another World spanning the late 1980s.[2] Additional television work included episodes of Tour of Duty in 1987 and the 1990 TV films When You Remember Me as Leon and Rising Son as Ed. Transitioning to film, Rhames appeared as Jack in the 1986 drama Native Son, an adaptation of Richard Wright's novel directed by Jerrold Freedman.[20] His supporting roles expanded with Cinque Mtume, a member of the Symbionese Liberation Army, in the 1988 biographical film Patty Hearst. In 1989, he played Lieutenant Reilly in Brian De Palma's war film Casualties of War, depicting U.S. soldiers' atrocities during the Vietnam War alongside Michael J. Fox and Sean Penn. Into the early 1990s, Rhames took on varied characters such as Herbert Cotter in the historical drama The Long Walk Home (1990), George in Adrian Lyne's horror-thriller Jacob's Ladder (1990), and Spencer in Wes Craven's horror film The People Under the Stairs (1991). He appeared as the titular character's friend Duane in the comedy Dave (1993) and as Sonny in the action-comedy Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot (1992) with Sylvester Stallone. These roles established Rhames as a versatile character actor in both independent dramas and mainstream productions prior to his breakthrough in 1994.[2]Breakthrough and major roles (mid-1990s–1999)
Rhames achieved his breakthrough with the role of the imposing gangster Marsellus Wallace in Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction (1994), a performance that showcased his commanding screen presence and contributed to the film's critical and commercial success, grossing over $213 million worldwide.[1][21] The character, a ruthless crime boss entangled in the film's nonlinear narrative of violence and redemption, marked Rhames' transition from supporting parts to high-profile recognition in Hollywood.[1] Following Pulp Fiction, Rhames landed the key supporting role of Luther Stickell, a skilled IMF computer technician, in Brian De Palma's Mission: Impossible (1996), which starred Tom Cruise and earned $457 million at the box office.[2] This espionage thriller, adapting the 1960s television series, featured Rhames as a loyal operative aiding in high-stakes covert operations, establishing him as a reliable presence in action franchises.[2] His portrayal emphasized technical expertise amid intense action sequences, including helicopter chases and vault infiltrations. Throughout the late 1990s, Rhames took on varied antagonistic and authoritative roles in major films, including the FBI agent M. O. "Mann" in Con Air (1997), a crime thriller directed by Simon West that depicted a hijacked prisoner transport plane and grossed $224 million.[22] He also appeared as the militant Screwmen leader in Rosewood (1997), John Singleton's historical drama about the 1923 Rosewood massacre in Florida, where his character navigated racial tensions in a segregated community.[23] In 1999, Rhames portrayed the devout paramedic Marcus in Martin Scorsese's Bringing Out the Dead, a gritty depiction of New York City night shifts, alongside Nicolas Cage, highlighting his ability to convey moral complexity in ensemble casts.[24] These roles solidified Rhames' reputation for intense, physically imposing characters across genres from action to drama.[25]Franchise work and later projects (2000–present)
Rhames continued his association with the Mission: Impossible franchise by reprising the role of IMF agent and hacker Luther Stickell in Mission: Impossible II (2000), directed by John Woo and released on May 24, 2000, where the character aids Ethan Hunt in averting a bioweapon threat.[26] He has appeared as Stickell in every subsequent installment, including Mission: Impossible III (2006), Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol (2011), Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation (2015), Mission: Impossible – Fallout (2018), Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One (2023), and Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning (2025).[27] Aside from Tom Cruise's portrayal of Hunt, Rhames holds the distinction of being the only actor to feature in all eight films of the series to date.[28] In Ghost Protocol, Rhames' role was limited to a brief video cameo due to scheduling conflicts, marking the smallest appearance of Stickell in the franchise up to that point.[29] Subsequent entries restored fuller involvement, with Luther providing crucial technical support and, in later films like Fallout and Dead Reckoning, grappling with ethical tensions over Hunt's high-stakes operations.[30] The character's consistent presence has positioned Stickell as a moral anchor and loyal operative within the IMF team across the franchise's evolution from espionage thrillers to spectacle-driven action sequences.[30] Beyond the Mission: Impossible series, Rhames took on varied supporting and lead roles in independent and studio films. In Baby Boy (2001), directed by John Singleton, he portrayed Melvin, the pragmatic partner of the protagonist's mother, contributing to the film's exploration of urban family dynamics in South Central Los Angeles. He followed with a voice role as CIA agent Cobra Bubbles in Disney's animated Lilo & Stitch (2002), though live-action projects included Dark Blue (2002) as a detective and the animated Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within (2001) voicing Sgt. Ryan Whitaker.[31] Rhames led the ensemble in Zack Snyder's remake Dawn of the Dead (2004), playing security guard Kenneth, one of the survivors barricaded in a mall amid a zombie outbreak; the film grossed over $102 million worldwide on a $28 million budget.[32] On television, he starred as the hard-nosed Lieutenant Theo Kojak in the USA Network revival Kojak (2005), a one-season update of the 1970s detective series that emphasized modern forensics and urban crime, though it drew mixed reviews for deviating from the original's gritty tone. Later film appearances encompassed comedic turns, such as UN inspector Fred G. Duncan in I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry (2007), and dramatic roles in lower-profile releases like A Broken Life (2008) as Max and The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard (2009) as Ben. In the 2010s, projects included Operator (2015) as Miller, a 911 dispatcher, and supporting parts in ensemble comedies like Father Figures (2017). Rhames maintained selective output into the 2020s, with Luther's franchise duties dominating, alongside occasional independent work such as the crime thriller Dope Thief (2024).[33]Voice work and other media
Animation and voice roles
Rhames voiced the character Ryan Whitcomb in the 2001 computer-animated science fiction film Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, directed by Hironobu Sakaguchi and Moto Sakakibara.[34] He provided the voice for Cobra Bubbles, a stoic social worker and former CIA agent, in Disney's 2002 animated feature Lilo & Stitch, directed by Chris Sanders and Dean DeBlois.[35] Rhames reprised the role in the direct-to-video sequels Stitch! The Movie (2003) and Leroy & Stitch (2006).[35] In 2003, Rhames voiced Thunderbolt, the heroic German Shepherd film star, in the direct-to-video animated sequel 101 Dalmatians II: Spot!'s London Adventure.[36] Rhames lent his voice to Thaddeus, a menacing palace dog and secondary antagonist, in the 2017 Sony Pictures Animation Christmas film The Star, directed by Timothy Reckart.[37][38] Most recently, in 2024, he voiced Otto, a hulking bull and ally to the protagonists, in the animated feature The Garfield Movie, produced by Alcon Entertainment and distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing.[39][40]| Year | Project | Character |
|---|---|---|
| 2001 | Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within | Ryan Whitcomb |
| 2002 | Lilo & Stitch | Cobra Bubbles |
| 2003 | Stitch! The Movie | Cobra Bubbles |
| 2003 | 101 Dalmatians II: Spot!'s London Adventure | Thunderbolt |
| 2006 | Leroy & Stitch | Cobra Bubbles |
| 2017 | The Star | Thaddeus |
| 2024 | The Garfield Movie | Otto |
Video games and miscellaneous
Rhames provided voice acting for the video game Mission: Impossible - Operation Surma, released in 2003 for PlayStation 2 and Xbox, where he reprised his role as Luther Stickell from the film series.[41][34] In 2004, he voiced the character Tobias Jones in Driv3r, a driving action game developed by Reflections Interactive for multiple platforms including PlayStation 2 and Xbox.[42][41] His most recent video game role came in 2017 with Call of Duty: WWII, voicing Jefferson Potts, a character in the game's Nazi Zombies mode, alongside actors such as Katheryn Winnick and Udo Kier.[34][43] Beyond video games, Rhames has appeared in various commercial campaigns. He featured in a series of RadioShack television advertisements around 2002, often alongside Vanessa Williams, promoting products like Motorola phones and Comcast computer services.[44][45] Starting in 2015, Rhames served as a spokesperson for ADT home security systems, starring in ads that emphasized 24/7 monitoring and visual deterrence against intruders, including the "Night Watch" campaign directed by Michael Stelmaszek and Matt Swanson.[46][47] Additionally, since 2014, he has provided the voiceover for Arby's fast-food commercials, delivering the slogan "We have the meats!"[48]Personal life
Family and relationships
Rhames was born Irving Rameses Rhames on May 12, 1959, in Harlem, New York City, to Ernest Rhames, an auto mechanic, and Reather Rhames, a homemaker.[49][50] He married actress Valerie Scott on July 4, 1994; the couple divorced on February 9, 1999, with no children from the marriage.[1] Rhames has been married to actress Deborah Reed since December 25, 2000.[1][50] The couple has two children: daughter Reignbeau Rhames (born 2000) and son Freedom Rhames.[51][50] Reed also has a daughter, Tiffany, from a previous relationship, whom Rhames has helped raise as a stepfather.[50]Lifestyle and philanthropy
Rhames resides in a expansive Brentwood, Los Angeles estate consisting of two adjacent mansions, purchased in 2000 for $4.75 million.[52] The primary residence spans 10,613 square feet with seven bedrooms and eight bathrooms, while the adjacent property covers 12,947 square feet with additional bedrooms and bathrooms; amenities include an infinity pool with waterfalls, a spa, a putting green with sand trap, a cabana, and a home gym with steam room.[52][53] He maintains a fitness regimen emphasizing weightlifting and boxing, incorporating short, intense sessions such as a 15-minute routine starting with three minutes of jump rope followed by shadow boxing and core exercises to build strength and endurance.[54] Rhames owns several large guard dog breeds, including mastiffs and a Fila Brasileiro, which he has described as protective companions bred historically for security purposes. In 2007, a live-in caretaker at his home was found dead from injuries authorities initially attributed to mauling by at least two of Rhames's dogs; Rhames expressed heartbreak over the loss of his friend and maintained the dogs were not responsible, with subsequent reports indicating the animals were cleared in the incident.[55][56] In philanthropy, Rhames has engaged in gang intervention efforts through Developing Options, a nonprofit aiding at-risk youth by providing intervention services, educational support, and alternatives to violence; he has stated involvement in stopping young adults from joining gangs and helping over 150 participants gain college admission while reducing community gang activity.[57][58] He spoke at a Developing Options charity benefit in 2010 to raise awareness and funds for these programs.[59] Additionally, in 2015, Rhames volunteered with ADT's "Always Cares" initiative, joining community efforts to enhance neighborhood security through installations and awareness events.[60]Notable public incidents
Golden Globe award gesture (1998)
At the 55th Golden Globe Awards held on January 18, 1998, Ving Rhames was awarded Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television for his role as boxing promoter Don King in the HBO biographical film Don King: Only in America.[61][62] Rhames, who had prepared no acceptance speech anticipating a loss, used the moment to applaud all nominees before singling out fellow contender Jack Lemmon's portrayal of juror Davis in the Showtime remake Twelve Angry Men.[63][64] Visibly emotional, Rhames invited the 73-year-old Lemmon onstage and presented him with the Golden Globe statuette, declaring, "In all humility, I'd just like to thank... no, wait... Mr. Jack Lemmon... Being an artist is about giving, and I'd like to give this to you."[63][65] Lemmon, surprised and reluctant, initially resisted but accepted amid sustained applause that moved many in the audience, including celebrities, to tears.[61][66] Rhames emphasized the gesture as a recognition of Lemmon's superior performance and lifetime contributions, rejecting Lemmon's attempts to return the award.[64] The Hollywood Foreign Press Association responded by providing Rhames with a replacement statuette, ensuring he retained official recognition of his win.[61][63] Lemmon kept the original award until his death on June 27, 2001.[63] While widely hailed as a profound act of generosity, the incident drew limited criticism from some activists who questioned Rhames yielding the honor to a white peer, though Rhames maintained it stemmed from genuine artistic respect rather than racial considerations.[67][66]Police encounter and racial profiling claim (2016)
On July 29, 2016, at approximately 1:52 p.m., the Santa Monica Police Department received multiple 911 calls from neighbors reporting a possible residential burglary in progress at Ving Rhames' home in the 800 block of 25th Street, with descriptions of an African-American male who had allegedly broken into the residence.[68] [69] Officers responded to the scene, where Rhames opened the door while inside the home with his wife and infant child.[70] [71] Rhames recounted the encounter in a 2018 interview, stating that upon opening the door, he faced officers with a red laser dot from a 9mm pistol aimed at his face, was ordered to raise his hands, and was held at gunpoint outside the residence alongside the police captain and a K-9 unit, while his family remained inside.[69] [70] He further claimed that when officers confronted the neighbor who made the call, the individual denied reporting a "large black man" breaking in, leading Rhames to attribute the incident to racial profiling based on the inclusion of racial descriptors in the 911 reports and the aggressive police response to a non-emergency situation at his own property.[71] [72] In an official statement, the Santa Monica Police Department confirmed the calls described suspicious activity matching a burglary but asserted that Rhames was cooperative, promptly identified as the homeowner, and that no weapons were drawn on him nor was he detained, with the matter resolving peacefully without arrest or further action.[68] The department rejected implications of racial bias, noting the response aligned with standard protocol for active burglary reports, and subsequently launched a "Meet Your Neighbor" community program to foster familiarity among residents and mitigate similar misunderstandings from perceived threats.[68] [73] The discrepancy between Rhames' description of drawn weapons and the police account of none being pointed at him highlights differing recollections of the event's intensity.[69] [68]Recognition
Awards and nominations
Rhames received one Golden Globe Award for his performance as boxing promoter Don King in the 1997 HBO television film Don King: Only in America. The award was for Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television, presented at the 55th Golden Globe Awards ceremony on January 18, 1998.[3] For the same role, he earned a nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie at the 50th Primetime Emmy Awards in 1998, though he did not win.[74]| Year | Award | Category | Nominated work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | Golden Globe Awards | Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television | Don King: Only in America | Won[3] |
| 1998 | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie | Don King: Only in America | Nominated[74] |
Critical reception and industry impact
Rhames' breakthrough role as Marcellus Wallace in Pulp Fiction (1994) earned acclaim for his imposing physicality and authoritative baritone voice, which critics highlighted as enhancing the film's tense underworld dynamics.[76] Publications such as Little White Lies have retrospectively praised Rhames' delivery in the role for embodying a "gravitas" that elevates supporting characters, noting his Juilliard-trained precision in conveying menace without overstatement.[76] Similarly, rankings from outlets like Collider and SlashFilm consistently place Pulp Fiction atop lists of his best work, crediting his performance with contributing to the film's enduring critical success, which holds a 92% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[24][77][78] In the Mission: Impossible franchise, Rhames' recurring portrayal of Luther Stickell, the team's tech expert, has been lauded for providing emotional grounding amid high-stakes action. RogerEbert.com described him as "the cog that kept everything moving forward" and "the true heart" of the series, emphasizing his reliability across eight films since 1996, where he balances technical savvy with loyalty in a genre often criticized for formulaic plotting.[30] This role garnered steady praise for multidimensionality, with Rotten Tomatoes aggregating positive notices for films like Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation (94% score), where Rhames' contributions were seen as stabilizing the ensemble.[79] Critics have noted fewer standout individual reviews for his supporting turns compared to leads like Tom Cruise, reflecting his niche as a character actor whose impact accrues through consistency rather than solo acclaim.[22] Rhames' industry influence stems from his transition from stage-trained supporting parts to blockbuster reliability, modeling sustained careers for actors of color in action and voice roles. His Mission: Impossible longevity—spanning over 25 years and grossing billions globally—demonstrates how dependable ensemble players can anchor franchises, influencing casting trends toward versatile, non-lead black actors in tech-savvy positions atypical for the era.[30] Sources like MovieWeb attribute his Golden Globe-winning TV work and film versatility to broadening perceptions of African American performers beyond stereotypes, though his output has leaned toward genre fare with variable critical highs, such as in Dawn of the Dead (2004).[22][24] Overall, while not a transformative figure like Denzel Washington, Rhames' body of work has quietly advanced opportunities for physically imposing, vocally distinctive actors in Hollywood's commercial ecosystem.[77]Filmography
Feature films
| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1989 | Casualties of War | Lt. Reilly[80] |
| 1990 | The Long Walk Home | Herbert Cotten[79] |
| 1991 | The People Under the Stairs | Leroy[80] |
| 1991 | Homicide | Randolph[79] |
| 1992 | Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot | Mr. Tony[80] |
| 1993 | The Saint of Fort Washington | Little[79] |
| 1994 | Pulp Fiction | Marsellus Wallace[80][79] |
| 1995 | Kiss of Death | Omar[80] |
| 1996 | Mission: Impossible | Luther Stickell[80][79] |
| 1997 | Con Air | Nathan Jones[80] |
| 1997 | Rosewood | Mann[79] |
| 1998 | Out of Sight | Buddy Bragg[80] |
| 1999 | Entrapment | Aaron Thibadeaux[80] |
| 2000 | Mission: Impossible II | Luther Stickell[80][79] |
| 2001 | Baby Boy | Melvin[80] |
| 2002 | Undisputed | George Chambers[80] |
| 2003 | Dark Blue | Arthur Holland[80] |
| 2004 | Dawn of the Dead | Kenneth[80] |
| 2006 | Mission: Impossible III | Luther Stickell[79] |
| 2006 | Idiocracy | Sergeant Grif[80] |
| 2007 | I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry | Fred G. Duncan[80] |
| 2008 | The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard | Jibby Newsome[80] |
| 2009 | Surrogates | The Prophet[80] |
| 2010 | Piranha 3D | Deputy Fallon[80] |
| 2011 | Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol | Luther Stickell[80] |
| 2012 | Safe House | Robert DuPont[80] |
| 2015 | Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation | Luther Stickell[80][79] |
| 2016 | Operator | Richard[80] |
| 2017 | Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 | Charlie-27[80] |
| 2017 | The Star | Thaddeus (voice) |
| 2018 | Mission: Impossible – Fallout | Luther Stickell[80] |
| 2022 | Wendell & Wild | Buffalo Belzer (voice)[79] |
| 2023 | The Locksmith | Frank[79] |
| 2023 | Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One | Luther Stickell[79] |
| 2024 | The Garfield Movie | Otto (voice)[79] |
| 2024 | The Instigators | [79] |
| 2024 | The Wild Robot | Thunderbolt (voice)[79] |
| 2025 | Uppercut | Elliott Duffond[79] |
| 2025 | Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning | Luther Stickell[79][80] |
Television
Rhames began his television career with guest appearances in crime dramas during the 1980s, including roles in Miami Vice (1985), Crime Story (1986), and Tour of Duty (1987).[1] From 1994 to 1996, he portrayed Walt Robbins, the brother-in-law of Dr. Peter Benton, in a recurring capacity on the NBC medical series ER, appearing across three seasons.[81] His performance as boxing promoter Don King in the 1997 HBO television film Don King: Only in America received critical acclaim and earned him the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Miniseries or Television Film.[79] In 2005, Rhames starred as the titular Lieutenant Theo Kojak in a USA Network reboot of the classic detective series Kojak, which consisted of 10 episodes over one season before cancellation.[82] Additional television credits include the lead role of "Holiday" Heart in the 2000 Showtime film Holiday Heart, voice work as Cobra Bubbles in the Disney animated series Lilo & Stitch: The Series (2003–2006), and a guest appearance as Quito Real in UC: Undercover (2001).[83] More recent projects feature Rhames in the short-lived TNT medical drama Monday Mornings (2014) and as a lead in the Apple TV+ limited series Dope Thief (2025).[22]Video games
Ving Rhames has provided voice acting for select video games, typically portraying commanding or tough characters akin to his live-action roles. His contributions span action, driving, and first-person shooter genres, with credits appearing in titles tied to film franchises or original narratives.[41] In the 2003 action-adventure game Mission: Impossible – Operation Surma, developed by Atari, Rhames reprised his role as Luther Stickell, the tech-savvy IMF operative from the Mission: Impossible film series, assisting Ethan Hunt in covert missions involving espionage and gadgetry.[84] Released for PlayStation 2 and Xbox, the game featured his authentic vocal performance, confirmed by production records, enhancing continuity for fans of the cinematic Luther.[85] Rhames voiced Tobias Jones, a veteran Miami detective, in the 2004 open-world driving game Driv3r, directed by Maurice Suckling and published by Atari for platforms including PlayStation 2, Xbox, and PC.[86] In the game's story, Jones partners with undercover agent Tanner (voiced by Michael Madsen) to dismantle a criminal syndicate, with Rhames' deep, authoritative delivery underscoring the character's streetwise demeanor amid high-speed chases and shootouts.[41] His most prominent video game role came in 2017 with Call of Duty: WWII, developed by Sledgehammer Games and published by Activision for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC, where he voiced Colonel Jefferson Potts in the Nazi Zombies cooperative mode.[87] Potts leads a squad of Allied operatives, including characters voiced by actors like David Tennant and Élodie Yung, in supernatural battles against undead Nazi forces across maps such as "The Final Reich" and "The Darkest Shore."[88] Rhames' performance, highlighted in official reveals and gameplay voice lines, brought gravitas to the mode's narrative of historical horror infused with otherworldly elements.[89]| Year | Title | Role | Platform(s) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | Mission: Impossible – Operation Surma | Luther Stickell | PlayStation 2, Xbox | Reprise from film series; espionage action.[84] |
| 2004 | Driv3r | Tobias Jones | PlayStation 2, Xbox, PC | Detective in crime thriller; driving-focused gameplay.[86] |
| 2017 | Call of Duty: WWII | Jefferson Potts | PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC | Lead in Nazi Zombies mode; squad-based survival horror.[87] |