*** Welcome to piglix ***

Leslie Uggams

Leslie Uggams
Leslie Uggams 1971.JPG
Uggams in 1971
Born Leslie Marian Uggams
(1943-05-25) May 25, 1943 (age 73)
Harlem, New York City, New York, U.S.
Nationality American
Education Juilliard School
Occupation Actress, singer
Years active 1951–present
Known for Kizzy Reynolds – Roots
Spouse(s) Grahame Pratt (m. 1965)
Children 2
Awards
Website leslieuggams.com

Leslie Marian Uggams (born May 25, 1943) is an American actress and singer. Beginning her career as a child in the early 1950s, Uggams is recognized for portraying Kizzy Reynolds in the television miniseries Roots (1977), earning Golden Globe and Emmy Award nominations for her performance. She had earlier been highly acclaimed for the Broadway musical Hallelujah, Baby!, winning a Theatre World Award in 1967 and the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical in 1968.

Later in her career, Uggams appeared opposite Ryan Reynolds in Deadpool (2016), portraying Blind Al, the sharp, foul-mouthed roommate of Reynolds' Wade Wilson and Empire

Uggams was born in Harlem, the daughter of Juanita Ernestine (Smith), a Cotton Club chorus girl/dancer, and Harold Coyden Uggams, an elevator operator and maintenance man, who was a singer with the Hall Johnson choir. She attended the Professional Children's School of New York and Juilliard. She met her husband, Grahame Pratt while she was performing in Sydney; they married in 1965. After their wedding, the couple decided to reside in New York, in part to avoid America's racial segregation laws of that time.

Uggams started in show business as a child in 1951, playing the niece of Ethel Waters on Beulah. Uggams made her singing debut on The Lawrence Welk Show and was a regular on Sing Along with Mitch, starring record producer-conductor Mitch Miller. In 1960, she sang, off-screen, "Give Me That Old Time Religion" in the film Inherit the Wind. Uggams came to be recognized by TV audiences as an upcoming teen talent in 1954 on the NBC/CBS hit musical quiz show series Name That Tune (1953–59), along with child hitmaker Eddie Hodges. Her records "One More Sunrise"(an English-language cover of Ivo Robic's "Morgen", 1959) and "House Built on Sand" made Billboard magazine's charts.


...
Wikipedia

...