Education
He studied at Benson Polytechnic High School in Portland, Oregon, and was a star basketball player for the school.
Actor singer basketball player
He studied at Benson Polytechnic High School in Portland, Oregon, and was a star basketball player for the school.
After serving briefly in the United States Army, he was recruited in 1954 to the Harlem Globetrotters where he played for two years and toured with the team In 1956 he played with the Harlem Magicians. Hannibal"s television acting debut was in 1963 on "Columbia Broadcasting System Repertoire Workshop", where he narrated the story of the historical Dred Scott Supreme Court case.
He starred in several variety shows, including "Hannibal"s Trunk".
He had guest appearances in a number of television series including Dragnet 1967, Marcus Welby, Doctor of Medicine, Columbo, a number of Adam-12 episodes and in Mission Impossible, McCloud, Kojak and others He produced and starred in the Las Vegas variety show On the Strip.
He also appeared in long feature films most notably in Airport and starred as a gladiator superhero in 1975 in the Italian cult film Superuomini, superdonne, superbotte (English title Three Fantastic Supermen). As a child, Hannibal was featured on the "Stars of Tomorrow" show in Portland.
He sang throughout the 1960s and early 1970s in various Portland venues including the Jazz Quarry and the Prima Donna.
He recorded two albums: the first, self-titled Marc Hannibal for Philips label, the second entitled Night Times for First American independent label. His music was chronicled in the Carolan Gladden book entitled The First Book of Oregon Jazz, Rock and All Sorts of Music. In 2002, Marc Hannibal"s song "Forever Is a Long, Long Time" taken from his debut album Marc Hannibal, was sampled by Royce da 5"9" for the latter"s song "Boom" that appeared on the album Rock City
The song was also used on the soundtrack of Music Television"s 2001 television film Hip Hopera: Carmen.