Call & Times

Cicely Tyson, actress who gave electrifyi­ng portrayals of resilient Black women, dies at 96

- By ADAM BERNSTEIN

Cicely Tyson, an actress whose electrifyi­ng portrayals of resilient Black women – foremost in the 1974 TV movie “The Autobiogra­phy of Miss Jane Pittman,” but also as Coretta Scott King and Harriet Tubman – brought some of the first ennobling portrayals of African Americans to a vast television audience, died Jan. 28. She was 96.

Tyson had shrouded her age until late in life. For much of her career, she convincing­ly presented herself as 15 years younger than she was, and she continued to appear on-screen and in Broadway roles past what was her 90th birthday. Her family announced the death in a statement shared by her manager, Larry Thompson, providing no further details.

Regal in bearing, with willowy beauty and delicately chiseled features, Tyson was known for embodying women of great poise striving under great pressure.

Her life had been strewn with obstacles and marked by periods of tumult: a childhood of desperate poverty, a deeply religious mother who considered her daughter’s career choice “sinful,” and a tempestuou­s, much-examined celebrity marriage to jazz trumpeter Miles Davis in the 1980s.

Also looming over her career were the persistent limitation­s in an entertainm­ent industry that cast Black women in demeaning roles as prostitute­s, drug addicts, and housemaids.

Tyson said she refused many such roles offered to her, vowing to accept only parts of “strength, pride and dignity.” Because of her uncompromi­sing selectivit­y, she was out of work for months and sometimes years at a stretch, even after her breakthrou­gh, Oscar-nominated performanc­e as a sharecropp­er’s wife in “Sounder” (1972), a drama set in the Depression-era South.

“I wait for roles – first, to be written for a woman, then, to be written for a Black woman,” she told the Entertainm­ent News Service in 1997. “And then I have the audacity to be selective about the kinds of roles I play. I’ve really got three strikes against me. So, aren’t you amazed I’m still here?”

In TV movies, where she made her most enduring mark, she played the abolitioni­st Tubman, civil rights activist King, the inner-city Chicago educator Marva Collins, and the mothers of Rosa Parks and Olympic track star Wilma Rudolph.

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