Actor Isiah Whitlock Jr., best known for playing Maryland state senator Clay Davis on HBO’s The Wire, has died at 71, his manager said. Brian Liebman confirmed Whitlock died in New York after a short illness, and said he passed peacefully.
Tributes arrived fast from collaborators who leaned on Whitlock’s blend of warmth and bite. Director Spike Lee posted a photo with Whitlock and wrote, “Today I Learned Of The Passing Of My Dear Beloved Brother ISIAH WHITLOCK. GOD BLESS.” Lee later called Whitlock’s death “a big, big, big loss,” adding, “I’m going to miss him for the rest of my life.”
Whitlock’s Clay Davis became one of The Wire’s defining political operators, a character who could turn a courtroom defense or a backroom deal into theater. He played Davis across 25 episodes over the show’s run, and the performance cemented a catchphrase—his drawn-out “sheee-it”—that crossed from the series into pop culture. The actor first used the elongated delivery in Lee’s 2002 film “25th Hour,” then carried it into Davis’ scenes on The Wire.
After The Wire, Whitlock stayed in the political lane, shifting gears to comedy on HBO’s “Veep” as Secretary of Defense George Maddox. He kept working steadily across film and TV, and Lee repeatedly brought him back, casting him in “She Hate Me,” “Red Hook Summer,” “Chi-Raq,” “BlacKkKlansman” and “Da 5 Bloods.”
Whitlock grew up in South Bend, Indiana, and attended Southwest Minnesota State University, where he played football and studied theater before injuries pushed him toward acting. He moved to San Francisco for theater work, then built a screen resume through guest roles, including “Cagney & Lacey,” with small early film appearances in “Goodfellas” and “Gremlins 2.” The Wire creator David Simon remembered him as “an even better spirit and the greatest gentleman.”





















































