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Isabel Sanford

 
Actor: Isabel Sanford
 
  • Born: Aug 29, 1917 in New York City, New York
  • Died: Jul 09, 2004 in Los Angeles, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '70s-'80s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, The Great Man's Whiskers, Desperate Moves
  • First Major Screen Credit: Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967)

Biography

Defying her mother's wishes, African-American actress Isabel Sanford secretly worked as a nightclub performer in her teens. Upon winning 3rd prize in an Apollo Theatre amateur contest, Sanford could keep her new career a secret no longer. Married to a house painter who worked only on a seasonal basis, she held down a full-time job as a keypunch operator at the New York City department of Welfare, spending her evenings acting with such groups as Harlem Y and the American Negro Theatre. Seeking out better opportunities, Sanford packed her family into a bus and headed to Hollywood in the early 1960s. Her breakthrough film role was in Stanley Kramer's Guess Who's Coming to Dinner; she played Tillie the cook, who heartily disapproved of the upcoming interracial marriage between Katharine Houghton and Sidney Poitier (the hardest part of this assignment was not mouthing the "controversial" dialogue but preparing dinner in a key scene; Sanford had never learned to cook!) On the strength of this film, Isabel Sanford was hired for several guest spots on The Carol Burnett Show, which led to her most famous characterization: Louise Jefferson, the acerbic but loving wife of "movin' on up" Sherman Hemsley, on the immensely popular sitcom The Jeffersons (1975-82). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Black Biography: Isabel Sanford
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actor

Personal Information

Born Isabel (Eloise?) Gwendolyn Sanford on August 29, 1917, in New York City; died on July 9, 2004, in Los Angeles, CA; married William Edward Richmond; children: Pamela Ruff, William Eric, and Sanford Keith Sanford.
Memberships: Kwanza Foundation, corresponding secretary, 1973.

Career

Actress, stage, 1946-1993; film, 1967-1999; television, 1967-2004.

Life's Work

Best known for her portrayal of Louise Jefferson--Weezy--on the hit television situation comedy The Jeffersons, Isabel Sanford became the first black woman to win an Emmy award for best actress in a comedy series. Sanford's acting career included stage and film, as well as television stardom. In her early life as a young cleaning woman, then a housewife, and later a single mother holding down a day job, her chances of succeeding as an actress appeared nonexistent. Indeed Sanford's career did not take off until she was almost 50. She told Contemporary Theater, Film and Television in 2002: "If there's anything in life you consider worthwhile achieving--go for it. I was told many times to forget show business, I had nothing going for me. But I pursued it anyway."

Isabel Gwendolyn Sanford was born on August 29, 1917, in Harlem, New York, the daughter of James Edward and Josephine (Perry) Sanford. She was the last of the couple's seven children and the only one to survive infancy. Growing up poor in New York, Isabel became interested in the stage during elementary school. As a teen she sang in nightclubs against the wishes--and sometimes knowledge--of her mother. She performed at amateur nights at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, and by high school she knew that she wanted to become an actress. When her mother died, however, Sanford took over her cleaning job to help support her father.

Although her path to stardom was slow and often interrupted, Sanford never lost her interest in acting and took advantages of opportunities as they arose. Sanford's training began in the 1930s when she joined the Star Players, which later became the American Negro Theater. However when performance venues closed during World War II, the theater group languished for a time. Sanford then focused her energies on her family--her husband William Edward Richmond and their three children. But even as a housewife, she kept her eye out for acting jobs. She made her professional stage debut with the American Negro Theater's production of On Stivers Row in 1946 and appeared in several other Off-Broadway productions.

When her estranged husband drowned in 1960, Sanford returned to acting to supplement her income as a data processor for IBM. She went on a national tour with Here Today and made her Broadway debut in the 1965 production of James Baldwin's The Amen Corner. There she came to the notice of film director Stanley Kramer. He cast her as the outspoken housekeeper Tillie in the film Guess Who's Coming to Dinner?--; a classic interracial love story starring Sidney Poitier, Katharine Hepburn, and Spencer Tracy.

Sanford moved her family to Los Angeles, California, to further her career. There she began appearing on television. Between 1967 and 1969 she performed on The Carol Burnett Show and made guest appearances on Julia, The Mod Squad, and Bewitched. Sanford continued to appear on stage and she toured the United States in Nobody Loves an Albatross and Funny Girl. She also appeared in various films including the 1972 story of singer Billy Holiday, Lady Sings the Blues.

In 1971 Sanford was cast as Louise Jefferson, the friend and neighbor of Edith Bunker, on the controversial hit sitcom All in the Family. Louise's blustery husband, George Jefferson, played by Sherman Hensley, nicknamed his wise-cracking, strong-willed wife Weezy. The couple proved so popular that in 1975 producer Norman Lear spun off The Jeffersons as its own series. George Jefferson's dry-cleaning establishment became a chain and the Jeffersons left Archie and Edith Bunker behind in their working-class Queens neighborhood. The newly-rich Jeffersons moved into a penthouse on Manhattan's Upper East Side. The series ran for 11 seasons before going into reruns. The Jeffersons was a fan favorite. In addition to her six Emmy nominations, Sanford was nominated three times for the Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series-Comedy/Musical.

The Jeffersons was considered groundbreaking television. It was the first series featuring a mostly-black cast since the infamous Amos 'n' Andy Show was cancelled in 1953. It was the first television series to feature an upwardly-mobile black American family and its theme song was "Movin' On Up." The Jeffersons was a socially relevant sitcom that dealt with racial issues and tensions. American TV's first prime-time interracial married couple appeared on The Jeffersons. Although the black community remained divided over the show's message, it appealed to large audiences, both black and white. Sanford especially enjoyed the show's continuing appeal. She loved getting mail from fans who saw The Jeffersons for the first time as reruns. Her longtime manager Brad Lemack told Hollywood Reporter in 2004: "She was just amazed and so pleased that the show had that kind of lasting power and entertainment because she loved to make people laugh."

Isabel Sanford continued to appear on stage and in films and on television until shortly before her death. In 1993 she reunited with other cast members for a live stage production, The Best of the Jeffersons, in which they reenacted some of the most popular television episodes. Between 1968 and 2004 Sanford made numerous guest appearances on television series and specials and was a popular guest panelist. In 2004 her voice was heard on an episode of The Simpsons.

In their later years Sanford and Sherman Hensley resurrected Louise and George Jefferson in television commercials for Denny's restaurants and other sponsors. Isabel Sanford also sold Old Navy clothing and Lipton Tea on television. She was noted for her philanthropy and established a scholarship for minority students at Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts. In January of 2004 Sanford received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Hollywood Reporter quoted her as saying: "Here with stars in my eyes--something that I dreamed about when I was 9 years old."

Sanford died of natural causes on July 9, 2004, in Los Angeles. She was 86. Her health had been failing during the previous months, following preventative surgery on an artery in her neck. In a tribute to Sanford in Entertainment Weekly at the end of 2004, Norman Lear--creator, writer, and director of All in the Family--wrote: "Isabel was a universal actress. She brought much more woman and mother to the character of Weezy than she did black woman or black mother. I don't think people thought of The Jeffersons as a 'black show.' They were simply tuning in to a funny show about a family they knew, and Isabel was the key to its appeal."

Awards

"Y" Drama Guild, New York City YMCA, Trouper Award, 1965; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Image Award for Best Actress in Comedy Role, 1975; 20 Grand Salutes, Outstanding Actress, 1976; NAACP, TV Image Award for Best Actress, 1978; Emmy Award, Best Actress in a Comedy Series, 1981, for The Jeffersons; Hollywood Walk of Fame, star, 2004.

Works

Selected works

    Films
    • Guess Who's Coming to Dinner? 1967.
    • The Young Runaways, 1968.
    • The Comic, 1969.
    • Pendulum, 1969.
    • The Red, White, and Black, 1970.
    • Hickey & Boggs, 1972.
    • Lady Sings the Blues, 1972.
    • The New Centurions, 1972.
    • Stand Up and Be Counted, 1972.
    • Up the Sandbox, 1972.
    • The Photographer, 1975.
    • Love at First Bite, 1979.
    • Desperate Moves, 1981.
    • Pucker Up and Bark Like a Dog, 1990.
    • South Beach, 1992.
    • Original Gangstas, 1996.
    • Sprung, 1997.
    • Click Three Times (short film), 1999.
    Plays
    • On Stivers Row, 1946.
    • The Amen Corner, 1965.
    • And Mama Makes Three, 1977.
    • Night of 100 Stars, Radio City Music Hall, 1982.
    • The Subject Was Roses, 1988.
    • The Best of the Jeffersons, 1993.
    Television
    • All in the Family, 1971-75.
    • The Great Man's Whiskers (television movie), 1972.
    • The Jeffersons, 1975-85.
    • Honeymoon Hotel, 1987.
    • A Pup Named Scooby-Do (voice), 1988.
    • Jackie's Back! (television movie), 1999.
    • Intimate Portrait: Isabel Sanford, 2003.

    Further Reading

    Books

    • "Isabel Sanford," Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television, Volume 43, Gale Group, 2002.
    Periodicals
    • Entertainment Weekly, July 23, 2004, p. 14; December 31, 2004, p. 100.
    • Hollywood Reporter, July 13, 2004, pp. 4-5.
    • Jet, August 2, 2004, pp. 61-2.
    • Los Angeles Times, July 13, 2004.
    • People Weekly, July 26, 2004, p. 69.
    • Washington Post, July 13, 2004, p. B6.

    — Margaret Alic

     
    Wikipedia: Isabel Sanford
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    Isabel Sanford

    with Sherman Hemsley on The Jeffersons, 1975
    Born Eloise Gwendolyn Sanford
    August 29, 1917(1917-08-29)
    New York City, New York,
    United States
    Died July 9, 2004 (aged 86)
    Los Angeles, California,
    United States
    Occupation Actress
    Years active 1967—2004

    Isabel Sanford (August 29, 1917 – July 9, 2004) was an American actress best known for her role as Louise "Weezy" Jefferson on the CBS television sitcoms All in the Family (1971–1975) and The Jeffersons (1975–1985).

    Contents

    Biography

    Career

    Born Eloise Gwendolyn Sanford in New York City, New York, Sanford was the first African-American actress to win a Lead Actress Emmy Award (for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series in 1981), and has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

    During the 1960s, Sanford worked in the theatre industry, and in 1967 she made her film debut in Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, playing the critically acclaimed role of the maid Tillie Binks. She caught the attention of major Hollywood players, including Norman Lear, who cast Sanford in the role of Louise Jefferson in All in the Family. She almost turned down the role after receiving a bucket of fried chicken in her dressing room. Norman Lear assured her that it was a genuine gift, and she eventually agreed to play the part. Sanford and her TV husband, Sherman Hemsley, were so popular that The Jeffersons was spun-off into its own series, but were mostly typecast by the roles. Such was their compatibility and credibility as a married couple that no one seemed to notice or care that Sanford was twenty years older than Hemsley. Member of Alpha Kappa Alpha.

    After production of The Jeffersons ended in 1985, Sanford was mostly limited to guest TV appearances and cameo appearances in movies, appearing in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Dream On, Roseanne, Living Single, Hangin' with Mr. Cooper, In the House and The Steve Harvey Show, as well as the extremely short-lived 1992 CBS Hearts Are Wild (similar to Love Boat). She also did voice acting for The Simpsons in her final television appearance before her death.

    Sanford also appeared with Sherman Hemsley in a series of advertisements for Denny's and Old Navy.

    Death

    Sanford died on July 9, 2004 of cardiac arrest and heart disease at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California. She was 86 years old and was interred at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills in Los Angeles.

    For her contribution to the television industry, Isabel Sanford has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7080 Hollywood Boulevard.

    Filmography

    Film
    Year Film Role Other notes
    1967 Guess Who's Coming to Dinner Tillie
    1968 The Young Runaways Sarah
    1969 Pendulum Effie
    The Comic Woman
    1970 The Red, White, and Black Isabel Taylor
    1972 The New Centurions Wilma
    Hickey & Boggs Nyona's Mother
    Lady Sings the Blues The Madame
    Up the Sandbox Maria
    1974 The Photographer Mrs. Slade
    1979 Love At First Bite Judge R. Thomas
    1981 Desperate Moves Dottie Butz
    1990 Pucker Up and Bark Like a Dog Joanna
    1992 South Beach Mama
    1996 Original Gangstas Gracie Bookman
    1997 Sprung Sista #1
    1998 Jane Austen's Mafia! Mrs. Louise Jefferson Uncredited
    2000 Click Three Times Dorothy
    Television
    Year Title Role Notes
    1968 Bewitched Aunt Jenny 1 episode
    The Mod Squad Lillian 1 episode
    1970 Daniel Boone Maybelle 1 episode
    1971 The Bill Cosby Show Bertha 1 episode
    The Interns Dr. Hearn 1 episode
    1971-1972 Love, American Style 2 episodes
    1971-1979 All in the Family Louise Jefferson 26 episodes
    1972 The Mary Tyler Moore Show Mrs. Wilson 1 episode
    1973 Temperatures Rising 1 episode
    1974 Kojak Grace 1 episode
    1978 Vega$ Mae 1 episode
    1975-1985 The Jeffersons Louise Jefferson 251 episodes
    1979 Supertrain Reba 1 episode
    1980-1983 The Love Boat Tanya, Isaac's Aunt 2 episodes
    1986 Crazy Like a Fox 1 episode
    The New Mike Hammer Mama Vibes 1 episode
    1987 Isabel's Honeymoon Hotel Isabel Scott Unknown episodes
    1988 A Pup Named Scooby-Doo Additional voices Episode A Bicycle Built for Boo!
    1993 Dream On Judge Isabel Kohner 1 episode
    Living Single Eunetta Ryan 1 episode
    1994 Hangin' with Mr. Cooper Judge 1 episode
    Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman Ms. Duffy 1 episode
    1995 Roseanne Louise Jefferson, TV Mom #3 1 episode
    In the House Nanna 2 episodes
    1995-1996 The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air Louise 'Weezy' Jefferson 2 episodes
    1996 The Steve Harvey Show Mother Hightower 1 episode
    1997 Teen Angel Laurie 1 episode
    1998 Pepper Ann Bernice 1 episode
    2001 The Parkers Evelyn 'Nana' Smith 1 episode
    2002 The Young and the Restless Sylvia 1 episode
    2004 The Simpsons Herself 1 episode
    2004 Candid Camera Mrs. Jefferson 1 episode

    Awards and nominations

    Year Award Result Category Film or series
    1979 Emmy Award Nominated Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series The Jeffersons
    1980 Nominated Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series The Jeffersons
    1981 Won Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series The Jeffersons
    1982 Nominated Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series The Jeffersons
    1983 Nominated Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series The Jeffersons
    1984 Nominated Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series The Jeffersons
    1985 Nominated Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series The Jeffersons
    1977 Golden Globe Award Nominated Best TV Actress - Musical/Comedy The Jeffersons
    1978 Nominated Best TV Actress - Musical/Comedy The Jeffersons
    1983 Nominated Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Comedy/Musical The Jeffersons
    1984 Nominated Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Comedy/Musical The Jeffersons
    1985 Nominated Best Performance by an Actress in a TV-Series - Comedy/Musical The Jeffersons
    2004 TV Land Awards Won Favorite Cantankerous Couple The Jeffersons (Shared with Sherman Hemsley)

    References

    Kathryn Shattuck (13 July 2004). "Isabel Sanford, 86, Actress Who Portrayed Mrs. Jefferson, Dies". The New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C06E6D81E3BF930A25754C0A9629C8B63&sec=&spon=. Retrieved on 2008-03-19. 

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    Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Isabel Sanford" Read more