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Ulrick Alexander Fox, Jr

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Toronto, ON, Canada
Immediate Family:

Son of Ulrick Fox; Private and Dianne Gerace
Ex-husband of Vanessa Williams
Ex-partner of Private
Father of Private and Private
Brother of Private; Private and Private

Occupation: Television actor, retired professional basketball player
Managed by: Ricardo A. Russell
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

    • Private
      child
    • Private
      ex-partner
    • Private
      child
    • father
    • Private
      parent
    • Private
      sibling
    • Private
      sibling
    • Private
      sibling
    • mother
    • Private
      ex-wife's child
    • Private
      ex-wife's child

About Rick Fox

Former professional basketball player Rick Fox was the team captain for the Boston Celtics before he became a free agent and headed for Hollywood to pursue an acting career on the side. He signed with the Los Angeles Lakers as a veteran free agent and started in all 82 games in 1997-98 before assuming a reserve role in 1998-99. Fox is recognized by his co-starring roles in such shows as HBO's "Oz," and his marriage to actress/singer/model Vanessa Williams.

He was born in Ulrich Alexander Fox on July 24, 1969 in Toronto, Canada, the son of Ulrich Fox and Diane Gerace. They moved to the Bahamas when he was two. His mother represented Canada as a high jumper in the 1964 Olympics. Fox went to high school in Warsaw, Indiana, before setting his sights on the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he became part of UNC's history books as a stellar basketball player.

While he was a Tarheel at UNC, Fox never missed one game and tied a school record for playing in the most games--140 during his four-year career. He also left his mark on UNC by becoming the all-time leader in steals with 197. In 1991, Fox helped lead the Tarheels to the NCAA Final Four and graduated with a degree in radio, television and motion pictures. That same year, the Boston Celtics drafted Fox as a forward in the first round; he was the 24th pick, overall.

Fox entered the NBA with modest beginnings. He averaged eight points and 2.7 rebounds in his first season with the Celtics, and was named to the 1991-1992 NBA All-Rookie Second Team. With Larry Bird injured for 45 games of his final NBA year, Fox had the opportunity to fill in for the veteran player. He played in 81 games, and ironically, Fox became the first Celtics rookie to start on opening night since Bird in 1979.

By the 1993-94 season, Fox doubled his playing minutes and scored a career-high 33 points against the Milwaukee Bucks. Fox's increasing numbers indicated that he was settling in with his new team, but by the 1994-95 season, he watched pieces of the house he'd begun to build crumble. He was put on reserve after Dominique Wilkins joined the Celtics and was further handicapped by injuries that significantly cut his playing time. Toward the end of the season, he underwent surgery to repair bone spurs in his ankles. Another factor contributed to his troubled season--in 1994 Fox was identified as having Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD).

ADD is a condition characterized by hyperactivity and short attention span that is often associated with children. Dr. Edward Hallowell, who has treated Fox for the condition, told Sports Illustrated that six to eight million adults have ADD, and more than half of them are unaware that they have it. Since his diagnosis, Fox has used mental exercises to improve his ability to focus. After being treated for his ADD, Fox was quoted in Sports Illustrated as saying, "I see things in a whole new light."

Fox picked up the pieces and burst back onto the hardwood in the following season. He started 81 games in the 1995-96 season and missed only one. In 15 of those games, Fox scored at least 20 points. His numbers continued to soar during his tenure with the Celtics, and, in the 1996-97 season, he became Boston's team captain. That season, Fox set a franchise record for the team with 167 steals--one more than Larry Bird's 166 steals in the 1985-86 season. As Boston's third leading scorer, Fox increased his career-high to 34 points, and scored double digits in 64 of his 76 games. Despite his exceptional performance, Fox was one of nine Celtics whose rights were renounced in order for the team to clear salary cap room and sign Travis Knight as a free agent.

A bidding war began for Fox after his release in 1997, and, ultimately, the Los Angeles Lakers would win, but not because they named the highest price. In fact, the Cleveland Cavaliers offered Fox a higher salary than the Lakers, but because Fox had a true love for acting and had begun to test the waters in film, he turned down Cleveland's offer to be near Hollywood.

In his first year with the Lakers, Fox made his presence known in the sunshine state with season highs of 31 points and 10 rebounds. In the 1998-99 season, his playing time and scoring average dropped, but he was still a valuable team player. In a game against the Charlotte Hornets, he scored 20 points in just 24 minutes. In 1999, eight years after joining the league, Fox scored his 6,000th career point in a defeat over the Denver Nuggets. His ambition was evident throughout the season, and he played in all six games of the Finals, averaging 6.7 points per game in 17.3 minutes per game. By the end of the season, he joined his teammates to bask in the glory of a victory, when the Lakers defeated the Indiana Pacers and arose as the champions of the 2000 NBA Finals.

While Fox is an accredited star to the LA Lakers and the NBA, he is gaining more recognition when he's out of uniform. As many professional athletes are crossing over into other entertainment genres, Fox is among them, but he seemed to shine a bit brighter. "He was the only one who made me say, 'He can really act,'" Tom Fontana, executive producer of HBO's Oz, told Sports Illustrated after auditioning five NBA players for Fox's role.

In Oz, Fox played Jackson Vahue, an NBA star who was serving 12 years for attempted rape and assault. This HBO break was the first cable opportunity for Fox and knocked at his door between several film appearances. In 1994, Fox appeared in Blue Chips with Lakers teammate Shaquille O'Neil and other NBA names to depict the story of a corrupted collegiate team whose members are offered money and gifts by a desperate coach. In 1996 Fox played basketball player Terry Hastings in Eddie, a story of a Manhattan limousine driver turned NBA coach. Fox made a cameo appearance in Spike Lee's 1998 film He Got Game, the story of a college basketball player with NBA dreams. In 1999, Fox starred in an independent film titled The Collectors, and helped underwrite and produce his own short film, The Four Faces of God, a story about a drug dealer who looks for repentance after killing two drug addicts.

While Fox is a credible actor, it's difficult to deny his stunning good looks. However, it was an hindrance when he auditioned for the role of a death-row inmate in The Green Mile. As Fox told The Wall Street Journal, he was rejected because "they told me I was too pretty."

Fox often looks for parallels in his crafts. While filming Eddie, he learned to increase his level of cooperation with his costars. "If you can bring greatness out of them, then you can get it out of yourself," he was quoted as saying in Sports Illustrated. Fox transferred this notion to his basketball career and used it to improve his game.

When Fox is off the court and away from the cameras, he spends time with his family. In 1999, Fox married internationally know entertainer Vanessa L. Williams at a private ceremony in a New York Roman Catholic church. Williams, who was the first black woman to be crowned Miss America in 1983, is an accomplished singer and actress. Her accolades include two NAACP Image Awards, and an Academy Award as well as a Golden Globe Award for her performance of "Colors of the Wind" from the Pocohontas soundtrack. Williams has also been nominated for nine Grammy Awards. In 2000, Fox's and Williams' love blossomed with the birth of their first child, Sasha Gabriella Fox. Sasha entered the world as the youngest of four siblings. Williams has three children, Melanie, Jillian, and Devin, from her marriage to her former manager Ramon Hervey, and Fox has one son, Kyle, from a previous relationship with his college sweetheart.

While it is likely that Fox will be remembered as a basketball player, he does not want the sport to be his claim to fame. In fact, despite his accomplishments in basketball, Fox was quoted in The Wall Street Journal as saying that his goal "is to someday be forgotten as a basketball player." Whether Fox will decide to pursue acting full-time or another venue, one thing is clear--it seems unlikely that his life will be void of sports. Fox enjoys golfing, watching ESPN Sports Center and football, and he wants to open a sports bar after his NBA career.

Sources: Wikipedia, Answers


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Fox

Ulrich Alexander Fox (born July 24, 1969)[3] is a Canadian actor and former basketball player. He played in the National Basketball Association (NBA) for the Boston Celtics and Los Angeles Lakers, and played college basketball for the North Carolina Tar Heels. He was the owner of the eSports franchise Echo Fox until his departure from the franchise in October 2019.

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Rick Fox's Timeline

1969
July 24, 1969
Toronto, ON, Canada