Esther Sutherland

Esther Sutherland
With Telly Savalas in Kojak, Season 2, Episode 3, Hush Now, Don't You Die (1974)
Born (1932-08-29)August 29, 1932
New York City, New York, U.S.
Died December 31, 1986(1986-12-31) (aged 54)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Occupation Actress
Years active 1950-1986
Spouse(s) never married

Esther Sutherland (August 29, 1932 – December 31, 1986) was an African-American film actress who made a name for herself in several features of the 1970s and 1980s often portraying nurses, maids, spinster aunts, Jamaican women, cleaning ladies, and matriarch types.

Life and career

She was born on August 29, 1932, in New York City, New York. Upon graduating from high school, she began her career as a jazz and gospel singer in various New York nightclubs and churches and later appeared in several well known theatre productions both on and off Broadway, some of which included The Piano Lesson, A Raisin in the Sun, Blues for Mister Charlie, Black Nativity, Dutchman, and revivals of Cabin in the Sky and Porgy and Bess. After two decades of professional singing and theatre work, she moved out to Los Angeles in 1968 and made her film debut in the dramatic feature Riverrun. She found a great deal of success in film and television,[1] and went on to appear in such syndicated programs as Kojak, Sanford and Son, The Jeffersons, Hill Street Blues, Archie Bunker's Place and Lou Grant. She also appeared in such feature films as 9 to 5, The Goodbye Girl, Stir Crazy, and Young Doctors in Love. Her last appearance was in the 1985 film UFOria. She appeared alongside to such equally established performers as Pam Grier, Gene Wilder,[1] Redd Foxx, Dolly Parton, Richard Pryor, and Marsha Mason. She continued to sing professionally and was often seen in several theatre productions in the Los Angeles Dinner Theatre circuit until her unexpected death on New Year's Eve 1986 from undisclosed causes. Her survivors included only two younger brothers, in-laws, and nieces and nephews, who spread her cremains off the Los Angeles coast. She was 54 at the time of her death. Aside from performing, Sutherland was a devout Methodist, a staunch Democrat, and she also enjoyed writing poetry, painting in oils, sculpting, and was a volunteer in narrating audiobooks for the blind.

Filmography

  • UFOria - Deaf woman's aunt
  • 1980-1983 The Jeffersons (TV Series) - as Mary in 4 episodes:
    • The Good Life (1983)
    • Men of the Cloth (1982)
    • The Arrival: Part 2 (1980)
    • The Arrival: Part 1 (1980)
  • 1981-1982 Hill Street Blues (TV Series) in two episodes:
    • Domestic (1982) as landlady
    • Film at Eleven (1981) as Haitian woman
  • 1982 Young Doctors in Love - The Nurses - Willa Mae
  • 1980 9 to 5 - Janitress
  • 1980 Lou Grant (TV Series) as Etta in episode Streets
  • 1980 Stir Crazy - Sissie
  • 1980 Archie Bunker's Place (TV Series) as Nurse Wilson in The Return of Sammy episode
  • 1978 Battered (TV Movie) - Black Woman in Nursery
  • 1978 Baby... I'm Back! (TV Series) as Ruby in 1978 episode The Confessions of Col. Wallace Dickey
  • 1977 The Goodbye Girl Strip Club Manager
  • 1973-1977 Sanford and Son (TV Series) in episodes:
    • The Reverend Sanford (1977) as Woman #1 (uncredited)
    • The Engagement (1973) as Aunt Minnie
  • 1976 The Commitment
  • 1974 Kojak (TV Series) as Evangeline in 1974 episode Hush Now, Don't You Die
  • 1974 Act of Vengeance as woman at laundromat
  • 1974 The Boys (TV Movie) - Cassie Ryan
  • 1974 Truck Turner - Black Momma
  • 1974 Foxy Brown - Nurse Crockett
  • 1974 Black Belt Jones - Lucy
  • 1973 Hell Up in Harlem - The Cook
  • 1968 Riverrun - The Lady

References

  1. 1 2 "Esther Sutherland Biography and Filmography 1932". Hollywood.com. 2017-08-29. Retrieved 2018-03-02.
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