David Patrick Kelly The Warriors (1979)
David Patrick Kelly (born January 23, 1951, Detroit, Michigan) played Luther in The Warriors (1979). The role was his film debut and the one in which he improvised the line that became the most-quoted moment in the film.
Luther is the film's moral diagnostic
Kelly plays Luther as wiry, grinning, and unanchored — a small-time gang leader whose menace is the absence of motive rather than its presence. He shoots Cyrus and frames the Warriors not because he wants Cyrus's position or because he has a plan but because he likes doing things like that. The performance has to make that legible without making it ridiculous, and Kelly carries the line. Luther grins at moments where another performance would scowl; he gestures small where another performance would gesture large. The distance from theatrical villainy is the point.
The two-line exchange on Coney Island Beach is the film's moral verdict in miniature:
"Why'd you do it? Why'd you waste Cyrus?" "No reason. I just like doing things like that."
Kelly delivers the answer without affect, almost amused, and the line lands as the film's diagnosis of the night. The disruption to the gang polity came from inside the polity, from a small-time leader with no motive other than appetite. See Themes and Analysis (The Warriors).
"Warriors, come out to play-i-ay" was Kelly's improvisation
The most-quoted moment in the film — Luther on the beach clinking three glass bottles between his fingers and sing-songing the call — was Kelly's improvisation on set. Walter Hill (in The Warriors) had blocked the scene with Luther needling the Warriors out from behind the boardwalk; Kelly added the bottles (picked up off the beach), the chant, and the sing-song cadence, and Hill kept all three. Kelly has told the story consistently for forty-five years.
"I had a neighbor who used to do that with kids in the neighborhood. The bottles I just picked up. The chant came out of nowhere — well, it came out of him." — David Patrick Kelly, The Hollywood Reporter (2024)
The line has been referenced in television (The Simpsons, The Sopranos, Family Guy, Robot Chicken), in music (Iron Maiden, multiple hip-hop samples), in video games, and in everyday speech. The full afterlife is on its own page: Warriors Come Out to Play - The Improvisation.
A character-actor career across film, television, and stage
Kelly's work after The Warriors has been a steady character-actor career across film, television, and stage. He has worked twice with Walter Hill (after The Warriors, on 48 Hrs. in a small role), has been a regular collaborator with David Lynch, and has had recurring television work alongside ongoing theater commitments.
| Year | Project | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1979 | The Warriors | Luther |
| 1982 | 48 Hrs. | Luther (different character, same name) |
| 1984 | Dreamscape | — |
| 1990 | Wild at Heart (David Lynch) | Dropshadow |
| 1994 | Last Action Hero | Mr. Vivaldi |
| 1994 | The Crow | T-Bird (the "Abashed the devil stood" speech) |
| 2001 | K-PAX | Trustee |
| 2002 | Songcatcher | — |
| 2006–2010 | Flags of Our Fathers, Letters from Iwo Jima | Supporting |
| 2010s | Twin Peaks: The Return (David Lynch) | Jerry Horne (returning role) |
| 2010s–2020s | Stage work — including Hadestown on Broadway | Recurring |
The repetition of "Luther" across both The Warriors and 48 Hrs. is intentional on Hill's part — a small inside joke between director and actor — though the two characters are otherwise unrelated.
The Crow's "Abashed the devil stood"
Kelly's other most-quoted moment in film is from The Crow (1994), where his character T-Bird delivers a recitation of John Milton's Paradise Lost — "Abashed the devil stood, and felt how awful goodness is" — moments before being killed. The performance is recognizably the same instrument as Luther: the grin, the unanchored menace, the willingness to play villainy slightly off the expected key.