Pop Culture

Michael K. Williams, Star of The Wire, Is Dead at 54

The five-time Emmy nominee died of a suspected drug overdose, reports the New York Post.

Michael K. Williams was found dead in his Brooklyn apartment Monday afternoon. The actor was a staple of prestige TV series like Boardwalk Empire, Lovecraft Country, and especially The Wire, David Simon’s celebrated drama about drug dealers in Baltimore.

Williams’ performance as Omar Little was unforgettable not just because of its badass fearlessness—the shotgun, the long duster, the laconic philosophizing in lines like, “A man’s got to have a code” and “Boy, you got me confused with a man who repeats himself”—but also because of its warring strains of tenderness and violence. Omar’s grief over a young, fallen boyfriend was no less convincing than the character’s ferocity and ingenuity; it was clear that even the character famous for saying, “It’s all in the game, yo,” could be devastated by what the game demanded. Williams’s work in the series is central to The Wire’s reputation as one of the greatest TV dramas of all time. 

Like many of his best-known roles, Omar was informed by Williams’ own rough past, as the actor told Vanity Fair’s Julie Miller in 2017. Williams grew up in the public housing projects of East Flatbush, Brooklyn; as a teenager, he fought addiction. He found solace in performing—first as a dancer for the likes of Madonna, Missy Elliott, Crystal Waters, and Ginuwine, then as an actor. As he told Miller: “The arts gave me something that no amount of money, no statue could—a life, a voice, a purpose.”

Williams’s death was first reported by the New York Post and confirmed by Variety. Law-enforcement sources told the Post that drug paraphernalia was found at the scene, indicating that the five-time Emmy nominee may have died of an overdose. Williams’ body was discovered by his nephew.  

This story is developing…

More Great Stories From Vanity Fair

— Unhappy Little Trees: The Dark Legacy of Bob Ross
The True Story of a Hollywood Partnership Built and Destroyed by Money, Sex, and Celebrity
Ted Lasso’s Roy Kent on Why the Show Isn’t “Warm and Fuzzy”
Caftans, Goyard, and Elvis: Inside The White Lotus’s Costumes
The Chair Is Like an Academic Game of Thrones
— The Best Movies and Shows Streaming on Netflix This Month
— Rachael Leigh Cook on Reclaiming She’s All That
— Watch Kristen Stewart Channel Princess Di in Spencer’s Official Trailer
— From the Archive: Jeffrey Epstein and Hollywood’s Omnipresent Publicist
— Sign up for the “HWD Daily” newsletter for must-read industry and awards coverage—plus a special weekly edition of “Awards Insider.”

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

An Eye-Opening Read to Inform Abortion Debates
The News Book Riot Covered This Week
19 Best New Books of November 2024, Reviewed
Lululemon Black Friday Deals 2024: Everything We Know So Far
Gabrielle Union Joins Growing List Of Figures Leaving X