Phylicia Rashād

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Phylicia Rashād
Image:PhyliciaRashad.jpg
Birth name Phylicia Ayers-Allen
Born June 19 1948 (1948-06-19) (age 61)
Houston, Texas,
United States
Spouse(s) William Lancelot Bowles, Jr. (1972-1975)
Victor Willis (1978-1980)
Ahmad Rashād (1985-2001)

Phylicia Rashād (born Phylicia Ayers-Allen on June 19, 1948) is a Tony Award-winning African-American actress, best known for her role as Clair Huxtable in the 1980s television series The Cosby Show.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Rashād was born in Harris County, Texas, to African American parents, (Andrew Arthur Allen) and (Vivian Ayers) [1]. Arthur was a dentist and Vivian was a Pulitzer-prize nominated artist, poet, playwright, and publisher. Rashād's siblings are jazz-musician brother Tex (Andrew Arthur Allen Jr, born 1945), sister Debbie Allen (1950), and brother Hugh Allen (real estate banker in North Carolina). Debbie Allen is an actress, choreographer, and director. While Rashād was growing up, her family moved to Mexico to escape U.S. racism; as a result, Rashād speaks both English and Spanish fluently.

She graduated from Howard University, where she later taught drama, and is a member of the sorority Alpha Kappa Alpha. Rashād first became notable on the stage with a string of Broadway credits, including a small role in the musical Dreamgirls (1981), and playing a Munchkin in The Wiz (1978). In 1978, she released the album Josephine Superstar, a disco concept record telling the life story of the ealry 20th century entertainer and pioneering civil rights activist Josephine Baker. The album was mainly written and produced by Jacques Morali and Rashād's one-time husband Victor Willis. Rashād received another career boost when she joined the cast of the ABC soap opera One Life to Live in 1983.

Rashād is best known for another television role, that of attorney Clair Huxtable on the NBC sitcom The Cosby Show. The show starred Bill Cosby as obstetrician Cliff Huxtable, and focused on their life with their five children.

When Cosby returned to TV comedy in 1996 with CBS's Cosby, he called on Rashād to play Ruth Lucas, his character's wife. The pilot episode had been shot with Telma Hopkins, but Cosby then fired the executive producer and replaced Hopkins with Rashād [2]. The sitcom ran from 1996 to 2000 [3]. That year, Cosby asked Rashād to work on his animated television series Little Bill, in which the actress voiced Bill's mother, Brenda, until the show's end in 2002.

Phylicia played Kill Move's mother on Everybody Hates Chris on Sunday December 9, 2007.

In 2008 she will star on Broadway as Big Mama in an all-African-American production of Tennessee Williams's Pulitzer Prize-winning drama Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, directed by her sister Debbie Allen. She will appear alongside stage veterans James Earl Jones (Big Daddy) and Anika Noni Rose (Maggie), as well as film actor Terrence Howard, who will make his Broadway debut as Brick.

[edit] Personal Life

Rashād's first marriage, in 1972, was to dentist William Lancelot Bowles, Jr. They had one son, William Lancelot Bowles III, who was born the following year. This marriage ended in 1975. Rashād married Victor Willis (of the Village People) in 1978. They divorced in 1980.

Phylicia married former NFL wide receiver and sportscaster Ahmad Rashād on December 14, 1985, after he proposed to her during a pregame show on a nationally televised Thanksgiving Day game between the New York Jets and the Detroit Lions on November 28, 1985 [4]. Their daughter, Condola Phylea Rashād, was born on December 11, 1986 in New York City. Along with her son, William, Rashād also has three stepchildren (Ahmad's from a previous marriage): daughters Keva (born in 1970) and Maiysha (born in 1974), and son Ahmad Jr. (born in 1978). The couple divorced in 2001 [5].

[edit] Awards

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Phylicia Birthday-01948-June-19. Retrieved on 2007-12-27.
  2. ^ Dana Kennedy. "Pilot Errors This Fall Season", Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved on 2007-06-21. 
  3. ^ "Cosby" (1996). IMDb.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-21.
  4. ^ Ken Shouler. "Catching It All", Cigar Aficionado, 1994. Retrieved on 2007-06-21. 
  5. ^ "Actress Phylicia Rashad Divorcing Sportscaster Husband Ahmad Rashad", Jet, 2001-03-05. Retrieved on 2007-06-21. 
  6. ^ Monsters & Critics: "Tony Awards Wrap Up", by Amy Somensky. Jun 9, 2004
  7. ^ a b Tony Awards (official site)

[edit] References

[edit] External links

interviews)

[edit] References

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