Monday 15 April 2013

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Black Actresses On TV Biography

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Talented TV and Movie Actress for over Three Decades

Cicely Tyson is one of America’s most respected dramatic actresses.  She was born in 1933 in Harlem, New York to parents who immigrated to the United States from the West Indies.

Modeling Career
She began her career as a model.  A fashion editor at Ebony magazine discovered her and she quickly became one of the top African-American models in the United States. 

Cicely Tyson appeared on the covers of many Black American publications and some mainstream magazines such as Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar.  However, she wasn’t completely happy with her modeling career.  When asked by a Time magazine reporter about it, Tyson stated, “I felt like a machine.”
Stage, Television Series and Soap Opera
Cicely Tyson decided to pursue an acting career after she was asked to participate in a movie named "The Spectrum" that was never released.  She enjoyed acting and decided to enroll in acting school.  While learning her craft, she also began performing in Off-Broadway stage productions. 

While Cicely Tyson was performing in the Off-Broadway production of "The Blacks", actor George C. Scott discovered her.  He admired her work and asked Tyson to play a continuing role in his television series "East Side/West Side".  This made Cicely Tyson one of the few Black American faces to be seen regularly on television in the 1960s.

Her success led to more television roles.  She became a frequent guest star on numerous 1960s and 1970s television programs such as I Spy, Naked City, The Nurses and The Bill Cosby Show.

During 1966, Cicely Tyson also had a reoccurring role in the daytime soap opera. The Guiding Light.  Her character’s name was Martha Frazier.
Refused to Do Blaxploitation Films
Cicely Tyson’s first major movie screen credit was for the 1966 film, "A Man Called Adam".  She played the love interest of Sammy Davis Jr.

She continued to perform in other films, but when the 1970s blaxploitation film era began, Tyson turned down roles.  According to a People magazine interview, Tyson said that “she would rather be unemployed than act in blaxploitation films.”
Breakthrough Performance in Sounder
Cicely Tyson became a star for her critically-acclaimed performance in the 1972 film "Sounder". Her outstanding acting earned her many honors including a Best Actress Academy Award nomination.

Moreover, her portrayal of a strong Black woman in "Sounder" went against the common stereotypes of African-American women in films of that time.   

Cicely Tyson is quoted as saying that “One lady told me that before she saw "Sounder", she didn’t believe black people could love each other, have deep relationships in the same way as white people.”

First African-American Woman to Win an Emmy Award
Cicely Tyson followed up her stellar performance in Sounder with another highly-acclaimed role in The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman.  The film follows the life of a 110 year old woman over a 90 year period – from her childhood in slavery to her old age during the Civil Rights Moviement.

For her compelling performance, Cicely Tyson won two Emmy Awards – Best Actress and Actress of the Year. She became the first African-American actress to win the Best Actress Emmy Award.

Cicely Tyson School of Performing and Fine Arts
Because of her enormous contributions to performing arts, the East Orange School District in New Jersey decided to name its new performing arts school after Cicely Tyson. 

The Cicely Tyson School of Performing and Fine Arts is an East Orange, New Jersey public high school that currently has over 650 students enrolled.

Cicely Tyson 
Black Classic Movies
Top 100 Films

The Autobiography of 
Miss Jane Pittman
King
A Lesson Before Dying
Roots
Women of Brewster Place
Continues High Standards for Roles
Cicely Tyson continues to act, but will only accept roles that continue to meet her high standards for positive portrayals of African-American women.

She has won a record twelve National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Image awards and has been honored by many other African-American organizations for her tremendous acting talent and contributions to the African-American community.
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Fat Black Actress Biography

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I am definitely an aspiring actress, I sit and have dreams about acting with the best, being on the big screen, walking down red carpets and schmoozing with Brangelina, the whole cliche Hollywood dream. But seriously, I want to be an actress so bad it's stupid, not because of just the 'perks' but because it's the only thing I can actually see myself wanting to do when I wake up for a good chunk of my life! I've realised a lot of things though, being the analytical person I am, I've noticed that they're aren't many black actress out there and the handful that are deep into the industry tend to be skinny and sexy (two things which  most definitely am not!), with the exception of Gabourey Sidibe and Mo'nque, but even with them, they seem to be extremes. I would consider myself as overweight but not an extreme, which makes me fear that I'm too much in the middle to be considered special. Even Glee's Amber Riley is a prime example of that, although we can all agree she's a powerhouse with that voice of hers, she got turned down plenty of times before glee, just because of her weight! It's things like this that make me doubt things, will I ever get that 'big break' or will I just be one of the millions of 'never-has-or-will-be actors' that end up stuck working in a coffee shop for the rest of their lives. 
Being from a Nigerian family is so much of hindrance in any person hoping to have career in the arts, you're told that you must be successful, you must earn lots of money, you must be doctors, lawyers, politicians. The creative dream is not at all something that fits into that ideology, making it a problem. Although, I'm lucky enough to have VERY Nigerian parents (I'm talking born and raised, met and married) who support what I want to do, it's everyone else that I have to worry about from church members to relatives they all want to put their own two cents in, either that or they believe you're so good that you'll start earning straight away putting an enormous amount of pressure on me to be better than the best. Even normal people seem to be against an acting career, tagging it with words such as unreliable and unrealistic, fact! Quite Recently, I was at A&E, while getting checked out, the female doctor asked me what I want to do when I'm older, I had a moment of hesitation thinking whether to tell her the truth or not, since I had just decided acting is what I wanted to do but then I thought screw it and told her. I am not joking when say her face switched immediately, resulting in her giving me the 'the look' most people give when you say you want to be an actor. She then went on to give me and my dad a lecture about the negatives of my chosen career path, finishing off with saying my dad should pay her for (and I quote) 'steering me in the right direction'. I smiled politely throughout her little speech and said nothing but inside I was fuming, she blatantly tried to rubbish my still fragile choice, although she may have meant well, I don't think she should have done that, I'm strong-willed so my decisions don't change easily but some impressionable teen's whole life could be changed by that one thing she said and that's a very scary thought.
I guess it's that comes with the territory, the disapproval and insecurity but like everything in life, you have to choose between security and happiness, the ultimate head and heart dilemma because the truth is it's not them that'll have to do the Job, it's you, it's me and no one else so the decision is one I will make based solely (hopefully) on me. Sometimes I wonder how I'm only 14 and these are the things I think about, Lord help me.
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Meet Joe Black Actress Hot Photos Pictures Images Pics

Meet Joe Black Actress Biography

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Claire Antonia Forlani (born 1 July 1972) is an English actress. She is arguably best known for her role as Susan Parrish in the 1998 film, "Meet Joe Black" co-staring Brad Pitt & Anthony Hopkins.
Contents  [hide] 
1 Early life
2 Career
3 Personal life
4 Filmography
5 References
6 External links
[edit]Early life

Claire Forlani was born in 1972 in Twickenham, London, the daughter of Barbara (née Dickinson), who was English, and Pier Luigi Forlani, a music manager from Ferrara, Italy.[1][2][3] At the age of 11, Forlani entered the Arts Educational School in London, where she began to study acting. During her six years at the school, she also studied dance, which led to performances on stage in The Nutcracker and Orpheus in the Underworld.
[edit]Career

Forlani's parents moved to San Francisco in 1993, in order to allow for wider casting opportunities in Hollywood films. Subsequently, Forlani was cast in the television mini-series J.F.K.: Reckless Youth and the film Police Academy: Mission to Moscow. In 1995, she played the supporting role of Brandi Svenning in Mallrats. In 1996, Forlani appeared in a supporting role as Sean Connery's daughter in the film The Rock. She continued to appear in both widely released and smaller-budget films. In 1998, she starred with Anthony Hopkins and Brad Pitt in Meet Joe Black. She then appeared in Antitrust, a thriller released in January 2001. Forlani was the new face of L'Oréal in 2001. She has been ranked no. 51 (2000) and no. 89 (2001) in Stuff magazine's 100 Sexiest Women, no. 85 (2001) in FHM magazine's 100 Sexiest Women and was slotted in Loaded's Hot 100 Babes. In 2003, she co-starred with Jackie Chan in The Medallion.
In autumn 2006, Forlani joined the cast of CSI: NY in a recurring role as a medical examiner, Dr. Peyton Driscoll.[4] In February 2007, Forlani portrayed Tori Bodeen in the film version of Nora Roberts's best-selling book Carolina Moon. In 2008, she starred opposite Daniel Craig in Flashbacks of a Fool. In 2011, Forlani played Queen Igraine in Camelot and Kate Templeton in Love's Kitchen alongside her husband Dougray Scott.[5]
In 2011, she also made an appearance in NCIS: Los Angeles as Agent Lauren Hunter replacing Henrietta Lange (Linda Hunt) temporarily as the operations director at NCIS for the end of season 2. She also appeared in season 3's finale, where she is killed in a car blast.
She has recently begun to appear in a series of television commercials for Dewar's Scotch whisky, where she sports a thick Scottish accent.
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Tall Black Actresses Hot Photos Pictures Images Pics

Tall Black Actresses Biography

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Naomie Melanie Harris[1] (born 6 September 1976)[1] is a British actress. She is best known for her starring role as Selena in 28 Days Later, her supporting turn as Tia Dalma/Calypso in the second and third Pirates of the Caribbean films, and as Eve Moneypenny in the 23rd James Bond film, Skyfall.
Contents  [hide] 
1 Personal life
2 Career
3 Filmography
3.1 Films
3.2 Television
3.3 Video games
3.4 Theatre
4 Awards and nominations
5 References
6 External links
[edit]Personal life

Harris was born and brought up in London, and educated there at St Marylebone School.[2] Her mother, Lisselle Kayla, is originally from Jamaica, and her father is from Trinidad. They separated when she was a child, and she was raised by her mother.[3][1] Her mother worked as a screenwriter on Eastenders.[4] After graduating in 1998 from Pembroke College, Cambridge with a degree in Social and Political Sciences, Harris trained at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School.
[edit]Career

Harris has appeared in television and film since she was nine, including a stint on the remake of the science fiction series The Tomorrow People.[5] She became internationally well known in 2002 with her lead performance in Danny Boyle's post-apocalyptic film 28 Days Later, opposite Cillian Murphy.[1] In the same year, she starred in the television adaptation of Zadie Smith's White Teeth.[1]
Since then, Harris has been cast in supporting roles in big budget films, such as Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End and Michael Mann's Miami Vice.[1] She also did a comic turn in Michael Winterbottom's well-regarded indie ensemble piece, A Cock and Bull Story, and appeared with Josh Hartnett in the 2008 release of August.[1] She starred in Channel 4's adaptation of the novel Poppy Shakespeare which was first shown on 31 March 2008. She also appeared in BBC's historical drama Small Island in December 2009.[6][7]
She played Elizabeth Lavenza in Danny Boyle's stage production of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein for the National Theatre from 22 February to 2 May 2011.[8]
She plays the lead role in The First Grader, directed by Justin Chadwick, and premiered on 18 May 2011 in the Seattle International Film Festival.[9]
Harris co-starred in the 23rd James Bond film, Skyfall, playing Eve Moneypenny.[4] She is the first black actress to play Moneypenny.[10] In 2012, Harris was the voiceover for the Boss Nuit Pour Femme advert starring actress Gwyneth Paltrow.
Harris will portray Winnie Mandela in the upcoming biopic Long Walk to Freedom, based on the book of the same name opposite actor Idris Elba.
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