01/26/2026
Rest In Peace to Graham Greene โ The Quiet Strength of the Screen
Graham Greene (June 22, 1952 โ 2025) was more than an actor; he was a proud Oneida man of the Haudenosaunee (Six Nations) Confederacy whose presence carried the weight of history, resilience, and quiet dignity.
Born on the Six Nations Reserve in Ohsweken, Ontario, Greene grew up far from the spotlight. Before Hollywood ever knew his name, he worked as a welder, carpenter, and high-steelworkerโjobs that demanded steady hands, fearlessness at great heights, and the kind of everyday grit that shaped the man he would become. He never set out to be famous; fame simply found someone who refused to compromise his truth.
His breakthrough came in 1990 with Dances with Wolves. As Kicking Bird, the compassionate Lakota medicine man, Greene delivered a performance of profound depth and restraint. He spent weeks learning the Lakota language phoneticallyโdetermined to honor the role with authenticity rather than approximation. The effort paid off: he earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor, becoming one of the first Indigenous actors to receive such recognition in a major Hollywood film. The nomination was historic, but for Greene it was personalโa small but powerful step toward reclaiming Indigenous voices on screen.
He once reflected with characteristic honesty: โI donโt even speak my own languageโฆ We were taught not to speak it. Itโs like forgetting your heart.โ Through roles like Kicking Birdโand later in films such as The Green Mile (1999), Thunderheart (1992), Maverick (1994), The Education of Little Tree (1997), Wind River (2017), and Longmire (as the recurring character Malachi Strand)โGreene gave that heart a voice again. He played elders, warriors, fathers, and survivors with a stillness that spoke louder than any monologue, always bringing cultural depth and moral gravity to characters who might otherwise have been reduced to stereotypes.
Greene never chased awards or headlines. He chose roles that mattered, supported Indigenous storytelling whenever possible, and remained grounded in the values of his community. Off-screen, he was known for his humility, dry humor, and unwavering pride in his Oneida heritage.
Graham Greene passed away in 2025 at the age of 73, leaving behind a legacy that transcended entertainment. He reminded the world that true strength is rarely loudโit is the quiet endurance of a man who stands tall even when history tried to silence his people, the steady hand of a high-steelworker who learned to build bridges between worlds, and the gentle wisdom of an elder who never forgot where he came from.
Rest in peace, Graham Greene.
Your heart was never forgotten.
And through your work, neither will ours be.