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‘Roots’ actress & Emmy winner

- By Lynn Elber Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Olivia Cole, who won an Emmy Award for her portrayal of Matilda, wife to Chicken George in the landmark miniseries “Roots,” has died, a burial associatio­n executive said. She was 75.

Cole died Jan. 19 at her home in San Miguel de Allende, a central Mexico city, said Linda Cooper, executive secretary of the 24 Horas de San Miguel de Allende cremation and burial group.

The cause of death was a heart attack, Cooper said.

Cole received an Emmy Award for her role in ABC’s hit 1977 drama based on AfricanAme­rican writer Alex Haley’s book “Roots,” which dramatized the lives of his ancestors from West Africa to slavery and post-Civil War.

She was the first AfricanAme­rican to win in the Emmy category of best supporting actress in a miniseries.

In the late 1970s, Cole lamented that Hollywood failed to respond to “Roots” with more opportunit­ies for black actors and actresses. She wasn’t alone.

“You’d think somebody might have followed up with stories about other black families and experience­s. Nobody followed up,” series executive producer David L. Wolper told The Associated Press in 2002, on the drama’s 25th anniversar­y.

Ben Vereen played Chicken George in the cast that also included LeVar Burton, Leslie Uggams, Cicely Tyson and Madge Sinclair.

Cole, a native of Memphis, Tenn., attended New York City’s Hunter College High School, Bard College in New York and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, from which she graduated with honors in 1964. She also earned a theater arts master’s degree from the University of Minnesota.

Her first credited screen performanc­e came in the daytime serial “Guiding Light” in 1969, with other TV and movie credits including “North and South,” Oprah Winfrey’s “The Women of Brewster Place” and “Coming Home.”

Cole received a lead-actress Emmy nomination for the 1979 miniseries “Backstairs at the White House.”

She embraced stage work, appearing regularly on Broadway in the 1960s and ’70s in plays including “The Merchant of Venice,” “You Can’t Take It With You” and “The School for Scandal.”

In her adopted town of San Miguel de Allende, Cole held readings of Shakespear­e’s plays for three decades, The New York Times said.

Cole, who was divorced from actor Richard Venture, is survived by cousins.

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