In his new book titled ‘Scenes From My Life’, the late ‘The Wire’ star explained how he struggled with his face after he got the scar from an altercation at a birthday party in Brooklyn in 1991.
AceShowbiz –Michael K. Williams “never felt more ugly” in the aftermath of his facial scar. The late “The Wire” star, who worked as a dancer and a model before his big break, explained how he struggled with his face at first after he got the marking after getting involved in an altercation when he was 25 at a birthday party in Brooklyn in 1991.
In an extract of his posthumously published memoir, “Scenes From My Life”, shared in PEOPLE, Michael wrote “the cut healed into one big swollen line and I never felt more ugly.” The “12 Years a Slave” star, who died from a fentanyl overdose in 2021 aged 54, detailed how he got the scar on Jamaica Avenue after he tried to defend a friend in a bar fight and how he approached one of the men while he stood alone.
“In a flash, he smacked me across the face. I put my hand to my forehead. Then I saw the dark liquid on my fingers,” he wrote. “The guy hadn’t been slapping me. He had been cutting me open.”
Michael penned, “Strangers would stop me on the street and say they found my scars striking. I began to get gigs in music videos, not even to dance,” including a request from David LaChapelle to photograph him and being cast by Tupac Shakur from his headshot alone to play his younger brother in his film debut, “Bullet” in 1996.
The “Boardwalk Empire” star, who is survived by his son Elijah, admitted that the scar made him stand out and appear like a “tough guy,” which he denied actually being in reality. Michael added, “I guess the scar gave me an ‘edge.’ It made me look like the tough guy I wasn’t.”
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