Broadway Actor Anthony Mackie Tapped To Play Dr. Martin Luther King in TV All the Way | Playbill

News Broadway Actor Anthony Mackie Tapped To Play Dr. Martin Luther King in TV All the Way Anthony Mackie has found his "dream" role: he will play Dr. Martin Luther King in HBO's TV adaptation of the 2014 Tony-winning Best Play All the Way, according to Deadline Hollywood. He will appear opposite Bryan Cranston, who will recreate his Tony-winning performance as President Lyndon Johnson.

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Bryan Cranston Photo by Evgenia Eliseeva

The 2014 film "Selma" was criticized by some for presenting an distorted picture of the relationship between King and President Lyndon Johnson during the battle to pass the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The stage drama presented a much more complex picture of the same events, which formed a centerpiece of both men's careers.

Mackie is known for his performance as Falcon in the "Captain America" films and is poised to star in another historical film, a biography of runner Jesse Owens. He has appeared on Broadway three times, in A Behanding in Spokane (2010), Drowning Crow (2004) and Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (2003).

Production on "All the Way" is scheduled to commence in September. No HBO airdate has been reported.

Robert Schenkkan’s drama about President Johnson’s first year in office will be directed for TV by Jay Roach. HBO acquired the rights to adapt the play in July 2014, about a month after it also won the Tony Award as Best Play. Stephen Spielberg will serve as executive producer.

Roach produced and directed Cranston in Trumbo, a film about blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo, which is scheduled for release later this year. Roach directed another politically themed 2012 HBO project, "Game Change," about Republican John McCain and Sarah Palin’s 2008 campaign for the White House.

 
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