Morgan Freeman was born on June 1, 1937, in Memphis, Tennessee, the youngest of five children of Morgan Porterfield Freeman Sr., a barber, and Mamie Edna Freeman, a teacher. His childhood was nomadic โ the family moved repeatedly between Tennessee, Mississippi, Indiana, and later Chicago โ and he spent significant time in Greenwood, Mississippi, where the realities of segregation were immediate and daily. He showed early talent for performance and storytelling: he won a statewide drama competition at twelve and performed in school plays throughout his youth. He enrolled in the Air Force at eighteen rather than accepting a drama scholarship, a decision he later described as motivated by a temporary disenchantment with theater that passed quickly. After his discharge in 1959, he studied at the Los Angeles City College while working as a dancer and as a clerk at American Airlines.
Freeman's theatrical training and New York stage career in the 1960s and early 1970s โ including work with the Negro Ensemble Company โ gave him a technical grounding that informed every subsequent performance. His breakthrough on the children's television program The Electric Company (1971โ1977), where he played Easy Reader with a warmth and authority that made the character beloved, established his television presence but not yet his film career. Off-Broadway and Broadway work continued through the 1970s and 1980s; his Tony Award nomination for The Gospel at Colonus and Obie Award for recognition of his theatrical work established him as one of the most respected stage actors in New York. His film career accelerated with Street Smart (1987), which earned him his first Academy Award nomination.
The decade that followed produced the body of work that defined his cultural position: Driving Miss Daisy (1989, Oscar nomination), The Shawshank Redemption (1994, Oscar nomination), Se7en (1995), Amistad (1997), and Deep Impact (1998). The Shawshank Redemption โ in which he plays Red, the institutional man who has found his humanity within the dehumanizing structure of prison โ gave him what may be the most distinctive narrator's voice in the history of American cinema. His Morgan Freeman narration became shorthand for moral authority, wisdom, and trustworthiness, a voice quality so recognizable that it has become a cultural reference point. His Academy Award for Best Actor came in 2004 for Million Dollar Baby, Clint Eastwood's film about a boxing trainer and his fighter.
Freeman's INFJ quality is audible more than visible: the depth of inner life that he carries behind his performances, the sense that what you are hearing and seeing is the surface of a larger knowing, produces the impression of wisdom that has made him the go-to casting choice for God (Bruce Almighty), Nelson Mandela (Invictus), and a dozen other figures whose authority derives from their relationship to truth rather than power. He has also narrated more than sixty documentaries, including March of the Penguins (2005), in which his voice alone transforms footage of bird behavior into an experience of something approaching the transcendent. His is the INFJ's gift at its most concentrated: the ability to communicate depth of feeling through apparent simplicity.