LOS ANGELES — Actor Albert Al Freeman Jr., perhaps best known for his role in Spike Lee's 1992 film “Malcolm X,” has died, Howard University said on Friday. “He was a brilliant professor, a renowned actor and a master director who made his mark in the classroom as well as on stage, screen and television. ... He has mentored and taught scores of outstanding actors. He was a resounding voice of Howard and will be missed,” university spokeswoman Kerry-Ann Hamilton said in a statement. “It is with tremendous sadness that the passing of our beloved Professor Al Freeman, Jr. is confirmed,” Kim James Bey, chair of the university's theater department said in a statement. Freeman was a faculty member at the university. She gave no details about the death of Freeman, who was 78 and taught acting at the Washington-based university, but said a statement would be issued later. Freeman's long career in film, television and theater included an enduring role playing police Captain Ed Hall on the TV soap opera “One Life to Live” from 1972 through 1987. He was credited with being the first African American to win a Daytime Emmy Award for outstanding lead actor for his work on the soap opera, a prize he was awarded in 1979. Freeman's theater credits included a starring role on Broadway in James Baldwin's “Blues for Mister Charlie” in 1964. — Agencies