Birth Date: | 29 December 1974 |
Birth Place: | New York City, U.S. |
Years Active: | 1994–present |
Occupation: | Actor |
Spouse: | |
Children: | 2 |
Mekhi Phifer (; born December 29, 1974) is an American actor. He portrayed Dr. Greg Pratt on NBC's long-running medical drama ER from 2002 to 2008, and had a co-starring role opposite rapper Eminem in the 2002 feature film 8 Mile. He was a recurring cast member on the Showtime drama House of Lies, and also starred as CIA officer Rex Matheson in . Phifer is also known for his appearance in the music video for "The Boy Is Mine" by Brandy and Monica.[1]
Phifer was born on December 29, 1974,[2] [3] in Harlem, New York City. He grew up in a single-parent household with his mother, Rhoda Phifer,[4] a high-school teacher.
In 1994, while attending Columbia University to study electrical engineering, 19-year-old Phifer attended an open-casting call for director Spike Lee's Clockers, beating over a thousand others to get the lead role as a narcotics dealer embroiled in a murder cover-up. He followed that role with another in the comedy spoof feature High School High (which also starred his former wife Malinda Williams) and continued by co-starring in the horror film I Still Know What You Did Last Summer, starring Jennifer Love Hewitt and Freddie Prinze Jr. He also starred in the film Paid in Full in 2002.
He portrayed Dr. Gregory Pratt on the NBC medical drama ER, a role which he introduced in April 2002. Phifer left the show in September 2008, in the first episode of Season 15. His character died during the conclusion of the season 14 finale cliffhanger involving an ambulance explosion that was rigged to kill an injured FBI informant (Steve Buscemi). During his six years in the show, he was nominated twice for an NAACP Image Award.
Phifer's television credits include the film The Tuskegee Airmen (1995), HBO's Subway Stories: Tales from the Underground (1997), and Brian's Song as former Chicago Bear Gale Sayers. He received additional notice for his performance opposite singer Beyoncé Knowles (from Destiny's Child) on MTV's alternative take on the Carmen legend with the film (2001).
Phifer had a recurring guest role in the fifth and sixth seasons of , portraying "Junior Bunk", the troubled nephew of Baltimore drug lord Luther Mahoney, and also guest-starred in New York Undercover. He earned an NAACP Image Award nomination for the TV film, A Lesson Before Dying, opposite Don Cheadle. In 2009, Phifer began a guest-starring arc on the Fox drama Lie to Me.[5]
Among Phifer's other big-screen credits are Soul Food, The Biography of Spud Webb, Hell's Kitchen, NYC, Tears of a Clown, O (as the titular character Odin a.k.a. O), and the thriller Uninvited Guest (as Silk). He appeared in Impostor as well as Paid in Full, an urban classic, that has given him notorious recognition as he portrayed Mitch and director Curtis Hanson's 8 Mile, opposite Eminem. He is mentioned in the Grammy- and Academy Award-winning song "Lose Yourself" by Eminem.
In June 2011, Phifer starred alongside John Barrowman and Eve Myles as CIA agent Rex Matheson in , the fourth series of the BBC/Starz Entertainment TV show Torchwood. In December of that year, he also starred on Broadway in Lydia Diamond's Stick Fly.
Phifer starred as Agent Collins in the fourth season of White Collar.
He made a guest appearance on the sitcom series Husbands in its second season.
In Fall 2016, he joined the TV show Frequency as a series regular. He was mentioned in the Eminem song "Lose Yourself"."it's no movie, there's no Mekhi Phifer!"
Phifer has a son with his former wife, actress Malinda Williams. His second son was born to Oni Souratha in Los Angeles in 2007.[6] On March 30, 2013, Phifer married his longtime girlfriend Reshelet Barnes in Beverly Hills, California.[7]
Phifer was the 2004 winner of the Celebrity Poker Showdown Championship, defeating Neil Patrick Harris during the fourth season. Phifer plays on the World Poker Tour in the Hollywood Home games for the Love Our Children USA charity. Phifer is chairman of the board of trustees of The Vine Group USA.[8] a non-profit organization established in 2000 to provide educational resources to universities in Africa. He has signed up with Full Tilt Poker. He has his own well on the poker forum 2+2.
Phifer is an owner of a number of Athlete's Foot athletic shoe-store franchises in California.
In January 2011, Phifer launched Third Reel Films.[9] The stated mission of the company is to provide an environment for filmmakers to showcase their work to entertainment representatives, acquisition executives, and other key-industry professionals.
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1995 | The Tuskegee Airmen | Lewis Johns | Television film |
Clockers | Ronald 'Strike' Dunham | ||
1996 | Girl 6 | Himself | |
High School High | Griff McReynolds | ||
Sureshot | Kevin | ||
1997 | SUBWAYStories: Tales from the Underground | Man in Hallway | Television film |
Soul Food | Lem Van Adams | ||
Hav Plenty | Harold | ||
1998 | Hell's Kitchen | Johnny | |
I Still Know What You Did Last Summer | Tyrell Martin | ||
1999 | A Lesson Before Dying | Jefferson | Television film |
Uninvited Guest | Silk | ||
2000 | Shaft | Trey Howard | |
2001 | Derek Hill | Television film | |
O | Odin "O" James | ||
Impostor | Cale | ||
Brian's Song | Gale Sayers | Television film | |
Head Games | John Ambrose, Jr. 'John John' | ||
2002 | The Other Brother | Martin | |
Paid in Full | Mitch | ||
8 Mile | David "Future" Porter | ||
2003 | Honey | Chaz | |
2004 | Dawn of the Dead | Andre | |
2005 | Slow Burn | Isaac Duperde | |
2006 | Puff, Puff, Pass | Big Daddy | |
2007 | This Christmas | Gerald | |
2008 | Dr. Terry | ||
2009 | A Day in the Life | King Khi | |
2010 | Tenement | Tyrese Harris | |
2011 | Flypaper | Darrien | |
Last Man Standing | Jeremy Davis | Television film | |
2013 | The Suspect | The Suspect | |
The Love Section | James Johnson | ||
2014 | Divergent | Max | |
A Day Late and a Dollar Short | Lewis | Television film | |
2015 | Max | ||
2016 | Pandemic | Gunner | |
Max | |||
2017 | Best Valentine | ||
2018 | A Talent for Trouble | Mekhi Phifer | |
Canal Street | Prosecutor A.J Canton | ||
2019 | Obsession | Sonny | |
2024 | Lights Out | Max Bomer | [10] |
The Supremes At Earl's All-You-Can-Eat | Filming | ||
Long Gone Heroes | Moreao | Post-production | |
New Jersey's Finest | Steve Sugar | Pre-production | |
10-13 | Dave Harris | Pre-production |
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1995 | Models Inc. | Model #2 | Episode: "By Crook or by Hook" | |
1995–96 | New York Undercover | Dion Broat / Sekou | 2 episodes | |
1996–98 | Nathaniel Lee "Junior Bunk" Mahoney | 3 episodes | ||
2002–08 | ER | Gregory Pratt | Recurring cast: season 8, main cast: season 9–14, guest: season 15 | |
2004 | Punk'd | Himself | Episode: "Episode #3.6" | |
2005 | Curb Your Enthusiasm | Omar Jones | Recurring cast: season 5 | |
2008 | The Black Poker Stars Invitational | Himself | TV series | |
2009–11 | Lie to Me | Ben Reynolds | Recurring cast: season 1, main cast: season 2 | |
2011 | Torchwood | Agent Rex Matheson | Main cast: season 4 | |
2012 | Psych | Drake | Episode: "Let's Doo-Wop It Again" | |
White Collar | Kyle Collins | Episode: "Wanted" & "Most Wanted" | ||
Husbands | Mark | Episode: "The Straightening" | ||
2014 | House of Lies | Andrew "Dre" Collins | Recurring cast: season 3 | |
2015 | Key & Peele | Cousin | Episode: "Hollywood Sequel Doctor" | |
2016 | Roots | Jerusalem | Episode: "Part 4" | |
Secret City | US Ambassador to Australia Moreton | Main cast: season 1 | ||
2016–17 | Frequency | Satch Reyna | Main cast | |
2017 | Match Game | Himself/Celebrity Panelist | TV series | |
2018 | Chicago P.D. | Joe Baker | Episode: "Captive" | |
The Bobby Brown Story | Tommy Brown | 2 episodes | ||
2019–23 | Truth Be Told | Markus Killebrew | Main cast | |
2020–22 | Love, Victor | Harold Brooks | Recurring cast |