Paul Benjamin
Paul Benjamin (February 4, 1935 – June 28, 2019) was an American actor known for his work in film and television during the 1970s and 1980s, particularly in gritty crime dramas and socially grounded stories. He was respected for portraying streetwise, morally complex characters whose actions often set larger events into motion.
Benjamin is best known for his role as Jimmy Harris in Across 110th Street (1972), a landmark crime film exploring race, power, and urban violence in New York City. Harris is a criminal figure involved in the robbery of an Italian Mafia operation, during which several mobsters are killed and a large sum of money is stolen. Though Harris appears briefly, he serves as a central narrative force in the film, becoming the man sought by both the Italian Mafia and Harlem’s criminal organizations as they attempt to recover the stolen money. Benjamin’s performance gives the character a sense of realism and desperation, grounding the film’s larger conflict in human motive rather than abstraction.
He later appeared in Hoodlum (1997), portraying an elder figure within Harlem’s criminal world during the Prohibition era. His presence contributed to the film’s historical texture and sense of generational continuity.
Throughout his career, Benjamin frequently portrayed men operating on the margins of power—figures shaped by survival, opportunity, and consequence rather than ideology. His performances were marked by restraint and authenticity, lending credibility to films concerned with crime, race, and social tension.
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