Lynn Hamilton, an actor who made her mark on “Sanford and Son” and “The Waltons” and appeared in 132 episodes of “Generations,” the primary Black daytime drama, has died.
Hamilton died Thursday surrounded by her grandchildren, family members and caregivers, her former supervisor and publicist the Rev. Calvin Carlson mentioned in an announcement Sunday on social media.
“Her passing marks the end of an era,” Carlson wrote, “but her legacy will continue to inspire and uplift future generations.”
Born Alzenia Lynn Hamilton on April 25, 1930, in Yazoo Metropolis, Miss., and raised from age 12 in Chicago, she studied appearing on the Goodman Theatre and later earned a bachelor of arts diploma. She didn’t see a lot success till she hit New York Metropolis, the place she was in reveals on Broadway and off and did Shakespeare within the Park. Hamilton was the primary solid member onstage within the 1959 manufacturing of “Only in America,” which featured a younger Alan Alda at what’s now the James Earl Jones Theatre.
By the point the Nineteen Sixties rolled round, she had joined the Seattle Repertory Theatre, the place she met her husband, poet-playwright Frank Jenkins. They moved to Los Angeles in 1968 and by 1972 she had landed the recurring function of Donna Harris, actor Redd Foxx’s nurse girlfriend and later his fiancée on “Sanford and Son.” Make-up made her look older than she was, as Foxx — who died in 1991 — was eight years her senior.
“I like the show,” Hamilton mentioned in an October 1972 interview. “I think what the world needs is to laugh more and to love more and ‘Sanford and Son’ helps. On Friday night, when the show is on, I can hear the laughter coming at the same time from all the homes around me.”
Hamilton advised actor-singer-author Demetris Dennis Taylor, a.okay.a. Huge Meach (no relation to the Black Mafia Household founder), on his on-line speak present “Dishing Tea” that she was chosen for the function from about “100 other actresses in Hollywood” who auditioned. She mentioned raunchy comic Foxx was “impressed with my experience and he always said, ‘You’re so dignified’ and ‘I need somebody dignified opposite me.’
“He was aware of his, what, his earthiness, shall we say.”
Lynn Hamilton and her husband, poet Frank Jenkins, in 2001.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Instances)
On “The Waltons” she performed Verdie Grant Foster, a personality whose grandparents had been enslaved. Hamilton advised Huge Meach that Verdie was a job she was happy with as a result of “she proved that you can improve yourself at any time in your life. When we first see her … she’s a successful, accomplished wife and mother and had a good job and was well respected, but she couldn’t read. And of course John-Boy [played by Richard Thomas] taught her how to read. “ Learning, Hamilton said, “opened up a whole new world” for the character.
The Verdie function recurred over the 9 seasons the present ran.
Hamilton received an NAACP Picture Award for her 1984 efficiency within the unique manufacturing of Christine Houston’s play “227” at Marla Gibbs’ Crossroads Theater in Los Angeles. She and Gibbs alternated within the play’s feminine lead function. In 1985, she was proclaimed half of the “most amusing twosome” in Celeste Walker’s “Reunion in Bartersville,” a play about members of a Black, small-town Texas highschool’s Class of 1933 who reunite 50 years down the road. Hamilton performed nightclub proprietor Pollina, who brings alongside a 28-year-old partner — the character’s fifth husband. “As a light vehicle for older black actors, [the play] runs like a well-tuned sports car,” The Instances mentioned in its assessment.
Hamilton helped increase cash in 1987 for skid row’s Midnight Mission, becoming a member of in a profit efficiency of Studs Terkel’s “Hard Times” on the Los Angeles Theatre Heart. Her castmates had been Tyne Daly, John Lithgow, Martin Sheen, Ned Beatty, Barry Bostwick, Nan Martin, Doris Roberts and — await it — Little Richard.
Husband and spouse collaborated steadily, and because the new century started, Hamilton directed “Driving While Black in Beverly Hills,” written by Jenkins. Set in 1970, it addressed racial profiling: The success and social standing of the play’s protagonist imply nothing to the police who goal him and his companions due to their pores and skin colour.
Hamilton had urged her husband to maintain remodeling a play he had began writing in 1968 a few wronged Black motorist. Fifteen drafts and 30 years later, that play grew to become “Driving While Black.” They discovered a producer in 2000 after a staged studying of the present, and that producer instructed Hamilton direct after studying that she had instructed parts of the studying that he preferred.
“Under Lynn Hamilton’s focused staging, the fine cast makes the play’s earnest, often eloquent articulation of its issues affecting and persuasive,” The Instances mentioned in its March 2001 assessment of the present on the intimate Matrix Theatre on Melrose — although the critic additionally famous that the play’s quite a few prolonged speeches undermined its dramatic actuality.
“Their partnership was a shining example of creativity, love, and dedication,” supervisor Carlson wrote Sunday. Additionally they collaborated on the performs “Nobody” and “The Bert Williams Story.”
Hamilton was nonetheless doing episodic TV into the 2000s, notching credit on “NYPD Blue,” “Curb Your Enthusiasm,” “Cold Case” and extra after the flip of the century.
Her many different appearing gigs included roles in “Dangerous Women,” “Roots: The Next Generation,” “A Dream for Christmas,” “The Jesse Owens Story,” “The Practice” and “Lady Sings the Blues.”
In an undated interview taped by her supervisor, she suggested younger performers to “first and foremost, get proper training” in voice and diction.
“I’m amazed at the youngsters today. I can’t understand what they’re saying,” she mentioned. “Acting is a form of communication. You are trying to communicate to your audience what it is the playwright has given you to portray. And if I can’t understand what you are saying, then everything is lost.”