Alfre Woodard (1952- )

July 22, 2020 
/ Contributed By: Beatrice Johnson

Alfre Woodard at the Emmys Performers Nominee Reception at Pacific Design Center on September 20

Alfre Woodard at the Emmys Performers Nominee Reception at Pacific Design Center on September 20

Actor Stock photos by Vecteezy||Courty Alan Light (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Alfre Ette Woodard, an American actress, producer, and political activist, was born on November 8, 1952 in Tulsa, Oklahoma to Marion H. Woodard, an interior designer/ wildcat oil driller and Constance “Connie” B. Robinson Woodard, a homemaker. Woodard’s parents once operated a nursing home. She has two older siblings, Marionette (Gibson) and Cornell Woodard.

Woodard competed on the track team and was a cheerleader for a private Catholic high school, Bishop Kelley in Tulsa. Graduating from high school in 1970, she moved to Boston, Massachusetts to attend Boston University. She graduated cum laude with a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) degree in drama from the university in 1974.

Woodard immediately put her acting training and skills to work at the Mark Taper Forum located at The Music Center in Los Angeles, California and made her professional theater debut the same year on Washington, D.C.’s Arena Stage. She moved to Los Angeles, California in 1976 and the following year performed in the off-Broadway play, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf. She acted in the play an estimated several thousand times between the Los Angeles, Australian and PBS performances before she was hired for her first film, Remember My Name.

Starring in movies such as Grand Canyon (1991), Crooklyn (1994), Miss Evers’ Boys (1997), Down in the Delta (1998), The Family That Preys (2008), 12 Years a Slave (2013), and Juanita (2019), the Academy Award-nominated actress has had roles in more than fifty films and television shows. Woodard is the winner of a Golden Globe Award, three Screen Actors Guild Awards, a CableACE Award and an NAACP Image Award. Of the 18 times Woodard has been nominated for Emmy Awards, she has won four of the honors. In November 2014, Woodard was inducted into the Oklahoma Hall of Fame at Gaylord Pickens Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. She is a board member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS).

Woodard is a dedicated activist. In 1989, Woodard co-founded Artists for a New South Africa (ANSA), a nonprofit organization working in the United States and South Africa to advance human and civil rights, empower and educate young people, and to combat the spread of HIV/ AIDS. Woodard traveled to South Africa to register blacks to vote in the first open election of their country. In 2009, Woodward was named to the President’s Committee on Arts and Humanities by President Barack Obama.

While she loves acting, Woodard points out that her family comes first. Woodard has been married to writer/ producer Roderick M. Spencer since October 21, 1983 and has two children, Mavis and Duncan Spencer.

Author Profile

Beatrice Johnson is a native of Tulsa, Oklahoma born to Reverend Alvan Nathaniel Johnson, Sr. and Verla Odelma Clardy Johnson. She is an alumna of Booker T. Washington High School and the University of Tulsa. In 1995, she started writing for the Oklahoma Eagle newspaper, where her uncle Reverend Ben H. Hill was once the editor. Her love for writing has never stopped. Earning an MBA degree in Business Administration, Johnson is a co-author for the book, Before I Got Here: The Wondrous Things We Hear When We Listen to the Souls of Our Children edited by Blair Underwood. Johnson became an Independent Historian while researching her grandfather, Bishop William Decker Johnson’s history with the AME (African Methodist Episcopal) church. She is currently an actress and freelance writer in Atlanta, Georgia.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Johnson, B. (2020, July 22). Alfre Woodard (1952- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/alfre-woodard-1952/

Source of the Author's Information:

Hugh W. Foley, Jr., “Woodard, Alfre,” The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture, https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=WO010; Frank Clancy, “A Profile of Actress Alfre Woodard”, Mother Jones, October 1987, https://www.encyclopedia.com/people/literature-and-arts/music-popular-and-jazz-biographies/alfre-woodard; Mike Hughes, “Alfre Woodard feels close to role,” The Des Moines Register (Des Moines, Iowa) Jan 17, 1988, https://www.newspapers.com/image/132576081/?terms=Alfre%2BWoodard [login required].

Further Reading