Leslie Uggams
Leslie Marian Uggams (born May 25, 1943) is an American actress and singer whose seven-decade career encompasses Broadway musicals, television hosting, miniseries roles, and recent film appearances.[1][2] Uggams began performing professionally at age six on the radio series Beulah and at age nine opened for artists like Louis Armstrong at Harlem's Apollo Theater, establishing her early foundation in entertainment.[2][1] She achieved her Broadway breakthrough in 1967 with Hallelujah, Baby!, earning the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical in 1968 for her lead role, which highlighted themes of racial progress through multiple generations.[2][1] In television, she became the first African-American woman to star in her own variety series with The Leslie Uggams Show in 1970, and later won a Daytime Emmy Award in 1983 for co-hosting the game show Fantasy.[2] Her portrayal of Kizzy Reynolds, the determined enslaved daughter of Kunta Kinte, in the 1977 miniseries Roots garnered widespread acclaim, along with Emmy and Golden Globe nominations, cementing her as a pivotal figure in depicting African-American historical narratives.[2][1] Uggams has continued with versatile roles, including the sharp-witted Blind Al in Deadpool (2016) and Deadpool 2 (2018), and Mama Rose in a 2019 Broadway revival of Gypsy—marking the first time an African-American actress originated the part—while maintaining an active schedule in cabaret and theater.[2]Early Life
Family and Upbringing
Leslie Uggams was born Leslie Marian Uggams on May 25, 1943, in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City.[3][4][5] She was the only child of Juanita Ernestine Smith, a chorus girl and dancer who performed at the Cotton Club during its heyday in the 1920s and 1930s, and Harold Coyden Uggams, who worked as an elevator operator while pursuing interests in singing.[3][6][7] Uggams grew up in a working-class household shaped by her parents' ties to the entertainment industry, which fostered an early environment conducive to artistic pursuits despite the modest family circumstances.[8][9] Her mother's background in Harlem's vibrant nightlife scene and her father's supplemental vocal talents exposed her to performance culture from childhood, setting the foundation for her own entry into show business.[3][10]Initial Exposure to Performing Arts
Leslie Uggams was exposed to the performing arts from a young age due to her family's involvement in entertainment; her father was a singer, and her mother was a dancer, fostering an environment that encouraged her early interest in singing and acting.[11] She also drew inspiration from relatives like her aunt Eloise Uggams and performers such as Ethel Waters, whose work she later emulated on screen.[12] Her professional debut came at age six in 1949, when she portrayed the niece of Ethel Waters on the nationally televised series Beulah, marking her initial exposure to a broad audience through acting and singing on a prominent network program.[1] This role introduced her to the demands of live performance under professional conditions, as Beulah transitioned from radio to television and featured her in episodes that highlighted her vocal talents alongside established stars.[2] By age nine in 1952, Uggams expanded into stage work, performing up to 29 shows per week at Harlem's Apollo Theater, where she honed her skills before the theater's famously discerning crowds and gained recognition for her poise and voice.[13] These frequent appearances at the Apollo, combined with her continued television guest spots, solidified her early foundation in variety performance, blending song, dance, and audience interaction while attending the New York Professional Children's School to balance education with her burgeoning career.[14]Career
Early Performances and Breakthroughs (1950s–1960s)
Uggams initiated her professional career as a child performer in the early 1950s, appearing on television and in live venues. At age six in 1950, she made her debut singing at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, opening for artists such as Louis Armstrong and Ella Fitzgerald.[15] In 1951, she portrayed the niece of Ethel Waters' character on the CBS sitcom Beulah, marking one of her initial acting roles alongside established performers.[3] Throughout the mid-1950s, Uggams continued building experience through guest spots on variety programs and talent showcases, including appearances on Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts. By the early 1960s, she secured steady television exposure as a regular singer on NBC's Sing Along with Mitch, hosted by Mitch Miller, which aired from 1961 to 1964 and featured her in ensemble performances of popular songs.[16] During this era, she also contributed vocals to film soundtracks, such as for the 1960 production Inherit the Wind, and performed on high-profile broadcasts like The Ed Sullivan Show, including a 1966 rendition of The Beatles' "We Can Work It Out."[17] Uggams' major breakthrough arrived in theater with her Broadway debut in the musical Hallelujah, Baby!, which premiered on April 26, 1967, at the Martin Beck Theatre. Stepping into the lead role of Georgina after Lena Horne declined it, she portrayed a Black woman navigating racial barriers across decades, earning critical praise for her vocal and dramatic range in songs like "I Don't Know You Very Well."[18] The production's success culminated in Uggams winning the 1968 Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical, along with a Theatre World Award, establishing her as a prominent stage talent amid the era's evolving opportunities for Black performers.[14]Broadway Achievements and Challenges
Uggams made her Broadway debut in the musical Hallelujah, Baby!, which opened on April 26, 1967, at the Martin Beck Theatre (later renamed the Al Hirschfeld), in the lead role of Georgina, a Black woman navigating racial discrimination across decades.[18][19] The production, with music by Jule Styne, lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green, and book by Arthur Laurents, earned five Tony Awards, including Best Musical, while Uggams won Best Actress in a Musical for her portrayal, marking a breakthrough for a Black performer in a starring role during an era of persistent industry segregation.[14][20] Her performance, noted for its vocal power and emotional depth in songs like "My Own Morning," propelled her to stardom and helped the show run for 293 performances despite mixed critical reception on its thematic handling of race.[21] Subsequent Broadway appearances included supporting roles that showcased her versatility, such as Muzzy van Hossmere in the 2002 revival of Thoroughly Modern Millie, where she contributed to the show's Tony-winning choreography and score.[20] In 2001, she earned a Tony nomination for Best Actress in a Play as Ruby in August Wilson's King Hedley II, demonstrating her range beyond musical theater amid a career spanning over 15 Broadway credits.[20] These achievements underscored her technical proficiency and endurance, with accolades like the 2025 John Willis Award for Lifetime Achievement in Theatre recognizing her foundational contributions.[20] Uggams' path involved overcoming entrenched racial barriers, as Broadway in the mid-20th century offered few lead opportunities for Black actresses due to discriminatory casting practices and audience expectations rooted in segregationist norms.[1] She assumed the Hallelujah, Baby! role after Lena Horne's abrupt departure amid reported creative disputes, illustrating the instability and scarcity of such parts even for established talents.[1] Industry analyses note that pre-1960s productions rarely integrated Black leads without controversy, limiting performers like Uggams to ensemble or racially themed vehicles until civil rights pressures began expanding access, though substantive roles remained infrequent into later decades.[22] Her persistence amid these constraints—evident in navigating typecasting and unequal promotion—exemplified the causal role of institutional biases in constraining Black artists' trajectories, yet her Tony win signaled incremental progress without erasing ongoing hurdles.[23]Television and Variety Show Success
Uggams first gained national television exposure as a regular vocalist on the NBC variety series Sing Along with Mitch, which aired from October 1, 1961, to June 28, 1964, attracting audiences with its communal sing-along format led by host Mitch Miller. As the program's only African American performer appearing weekly, she performed solo numbers and ensemble pieces, such as "On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe," amid initial network resistance from NBC executives fearing viewer backlash to her integration into the predominantly white cast. Miller defended her participation, explicitly positioning her performances to subvert historical minstrelsy tropes by emphasizing her vocal poise and contemporary appeal, which contributed to the show's high ratings—peaking at over 30% share in its first season.[24][25][6] Her visibility on Sing Along with Mitch opened doors to guest spots on other variety programs, including The Ed Sullivan Show, where she performed numbers like "This Is the Life" in the mid-1960s, and early appearances on shows such as The Milton Berle Show during her teenage years. These roles highlighted her singing and dancing talents, building on her Broadway momentum from Hallelujah, Baby!, and established her as a versatile entertainer capable of appealing to mainstream audiences during a period of gradual desegregation in network programming.[24][26] The pinnacle of Uggams' variety show career came with The Leslie Uggams Show, a CBS primetime series that premiered on September 28, 1969, making her the first African American woman to host such a program since Nat King Cole's short-lived series in the 1950s. Featuring musical segments, comedy skits, dance routines, and guests like The Temptations, the 45-minute format ran for 10 episodes until December 14, 1969, before cancellation amid intense competition from established shows like Hee Haw and ratings challenges typical of the era's variety genre. Despite its brevity, the series underscored Uggams' pioneering status and showcased her command as host, blending hit singles from her discography with live band performances.[16][26][27]Film and Later Television Roles (1970s–Present)
Uggams entered film with supporting roles in the early 1970s, including Lovejoy Wells in the aviation thriller Skyjacked (1972), directed by John Guillermin, and Netta in the drama Black Girl (1972), adapted from a play by J.E. Franklin.[28] Her portrayal of Kizzy Reynolds, the daughter of enslaved characters Chicken George and Kizzy, in the ABC miniseries Roots (1977), adapted from Alex Haley's novel, marked a significant breakthrough, drawing an audience of over 100 million for its finale and earning her nominations for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series and a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Miniseries, or Motion Picture Made for Television.[2] [26] Following Roots, Uggams appeared in various television projects through the 1980s and 1990s, including guest spots on series such as The Cosby Show and Touched by an Angel, though her screen roles remained sporadic compared to her earlier stage and variety work.[2] In the 2000s and 2010s, she took on recurring and guest roles in procedurals and dramas, such as Evelyn on Nurse Jackie (2010), a judge on The Good Wife (2011), and supporting parts in Memphis Beat (2010) and NYC 22 (2012).[2] A notable return to prominence came with her role as Leah Walker, the resilient matriarch of the Lyon family, in the Fox series Empire (2015–2016), appearing in multiple episodes amid the show's focus on hip-hop industry dynamics.[2] [29] Uggams achieved renewed visibility in film during the late 2010s, playing the blind informant Blind Al opposite Ryan Reynolds' Deadpool in Deadpool (2016), reprising the role in Deadpool 2 (2018), and again in Deadpool & Wolverine (2024), contributing to the franchise's box office success exceeding $1.3 billion worldwide for the first two installments combined.[30] She portrayed Sadie, Deborah Lacks' cousin, in the HBO film The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (2017), based on Rebecca Skloots's book about medical ethics and cell research.[31] Other credits include Madame Arcati in the comedy Blithe Spirit (2020) and Agnes Ellison in the satirical drama American Fiction (2023), which earned critical acclaim for its examination of racial stereotypes in publishing.[26] [28] In recent television, Uggams has appeared as Ernestine Brown in the HBO period drama The Gilded Age (2022–present), depicting a household staff member in 1880s New York society, and as Betty Pearson in the Prime Video series Fallout (2024), adapted from the video game franchise set in a post-apocalyptic world.[32] These roles, alongside earlier miniseries work like Roots, underscore her versatility across genres from historical epics to superhero action and prestige dramas.[33]Personal Life
Marriage and Family
Leslie Uggams married Grahame Pratt, an Australian-born advertising executive who later became her manager, on October 16, 1965, following their meeting during her tour in Australia.[5] The union, one of the few high-profile interracial marriages at the time, drew significant backlash, including hate mail from both Black and white audiences who opposed the pairing amid the era's racial tensions, though the couple persevered and settled in New York where societal resistance was comparatively muted.[34] Their enduring partnership, spanning nearly 60 years as of 2025, has been described by Uggams as rooted in Pratt's intelligence, wit, and fearlessness.[34][35] The couple has two children: daughter Danielle Chambers (née Pratt), born circa 1971, and son Justice Pratt, born July 28, 1975, in Los Angeles.[36][37] Danielle, who appeared alongside her mother in public events during childhood, has pursued family life and is married with children, including granddaughter Kassidy Chambers, an aspiring actress.[38] Justice, raised in a creative household influenced by his parents' entertainment careers, maintains a lower public profile.[39] Uggams and Pratt are grandparents to several grandchildren, with the family emphasizing close-knit bonds despite professional demands.[40]Long-Term Residence and Lifestyle
Leslie Uggams and her husband, Grahame Pratt, established a permanent residence in Los Angeles in the early 1970s after years of frequent moves tied to her performing career, expressing a firm resolve against further relocation to prioritize stability.[41] This West Coast base aligned with her growing involvement in television and film, contrasting her New York roots and Broadway focus.[41] Uggams maintains an intellectually engaged lifestyle, emphasizing cognitive maintenance through daily habits like solving crossword puzzles and reading three or four books concurrently, which she credits for sustaining her professional sharpness into her eighties.[42] Her routine reflects a balance of family priorities—rooted in a marriage enduring over six decades—and ongoing artistic pursuits, including stage and screen work, without evident reliance on luxury or extravagance beyond career necessities.[43]Recognition and Awards
Theater and Stage Honors
Leslie Uggams earned the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical on April 14, 1968, for her role as Georgina in the Broadway production Hallelujah, Baby!, marking a significant early career milestone in her stage work. She also received the Theatre World Award in 1967 for the same debut performance, recognizing her as one of the season's promising new talents.[44] Additionally, that year, Uggams won the Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Debut Performance for Hallelujah, Baby!.[44] In 2001, Uggams was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play for portraying Ruby in August Wilson's King Hedley II, directed by Marion McClinton at the Virginia Theatre, where she delivered a performance noted for its emotional depth amid the play's exploration of post-industrial Pittsburgh life.[44] She received a corresponding nomination for Outstanding Actress in a Play from the Outer Critics Circle for the role.[44] Uggams was inducted into the Theater Hall of Fame in 2021, honoring her enduring contributions to Broadway over decades, including barrier-breaking roles in musicals and plays.[45] On May 29, 2025, she was awarded the John Willis Award for Lifetime Achievement by the Theatre World Awards, acknowledging her seven-decade career that began with Apollo Theater appearances at age nine and encompassed landmark Broadway turns like Hallelujah, Baby!.[45][44]Television and Film Accolades
Uggams earned a Primetime Emmy Award nomination in 1977 for Outstanding Lead Actress for a Single Appearance in a Drama or Comedy Series for her portrayal of Kizzy Reynolds in the miniseries Roots.[46] Her performance in the same role also garnered a Golden Globe nomination in 1978 for Best Actress in a Television Series – Drama.[47] These nominations highlighted her dramatic range following earlier variety and musical television appearances.[2] In 1983, Uggams won a Daytime Emmy Award for her work as co-host of the NBC series Fantasy, recognizing her engaging presence in the anthology format that showcased extraordinary talents.[2] She received another Daytime Emmy nomination in 1984 for the same series.[48] Additional television recognition included a 1996 NAACP Image Award nomination for Outstanding Actress in a Daytime Drama Series for her role as Rose Keefer on All My Children.[6] For film, Uggams was nominated in 2024 for a Screen Actors Guild Award as part of the Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture for Deadpool & Wolverine, where she reprised her role as Blind Al.[49] Earlier film efforts yielded limited accolades, with a 2021 win for Best Ensemble at the Los Angeles Film Awards for The Ravine.[10] These honors reflect her sustained contributions to both mediums amid a career emphasizing television prominence.[48]Honorary Recognitions
Uggams has been conferred honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degrees in recognition of her enduring contributions to theater, music, and television. On May 9, 2015, the University of Connecticut awarded her this degree during its commencement exercises, honoring her six-decade career as a Tony- and Emmy-winning performer who broke racial barriers in entertainment.[50][51] Similarly, on May 4, 2019, the University of Michigan presented her with an honorary Doctor of Fine Arts at its spring commencement, acknowledging her pioneering roles and influence on American arts.[52] In 2022, Uggams was named an Inaugural Juneteenth Legacy Award honoree by the Broadway League, celebrating her as a trailblazing African American artist alongside Ben Vereen for advancing opportunities in Broadway and beyond.[53] More recently, on June 3, 2025, she received the John Willis Award for Lifetime Achievement from the Theatre World Awards, marking the 12th annual presentation of this honor for her Broadway debut in 1967 and subsequent iconic performances.[45][54] In September 2025, Porchlight Music Theatre bestowed upon her the ICON Award at its gala, recognizing her multifaceted legacy in musical theater, film, and recording.[55]Performing Arts Credits
Stage Productions
Uggams achieved her Broadway breakthrough starring as Georgina, a young Black woman navigating racial barriers across decades, in the musical Hallelujah, Baby!, which premiered on April 26, 1967, at the Martin Beck Theatre and ran for 293 performances until January 13, 1968.[20] For this debut role, she won the 1968 Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical, the Theatre World Award, and the Outer Critics Circle Award for outstanding debut performance.[44][2] In October 1968, she starred as Cleopatra opposite Richard Kiley in the short-lived musical comedy Her First Roman, which closed after 17 performances on November 2.[20] Uggams returned to Broadway in 1982 as Woman #1 in the revue Blues in the Night, which ran for 53 performances, followed by a featured performer role in the revue Jerry's Girls from December 1985 to April 1986.[20] She assumed the lead role of Reno Sweeney in the 1987 revival of Anything Goes from March to September 1989 at the Vivian Beaumont Theatre.[20][2] Uggams received a Tony nomination for Best Actress in a Play in 2001 for her portrayal of Ruby in August Wilson's drama King Hedley II, which ran from May to July at the Virginia Theatre.[20][44] She later replaced as Muzzy Van Hossmere in Thoroughly Modern Millie from April 2003 to June 2004 and starred as Ethel Thayer opposite James Earl Jones in the revival of On Golden Pond from April to June 2005 at the Cort Theatre.[20][2] In regional and off-Broadway theater, Uggams became the first African-American actress to play Rose in Gypsy at the Connecticut Repertory Theatre in 2014.[2] She appeared in Encores! concert stagings, including Pipe Dream and Jelly's Last Jam as Gran Mimi in 2024 at New York City Center.[56] Her autobiographical one-woman show Uptown...It's Hot! has toured nationally, earning awards including the LA Drama Critics Circle Award and NAACP Theatre Award.[2] Other regional credits encompass Hello, Dolly!, A Little Night Music, Into the Woods, and Master Class.[2]Filmography
Uggams made her film debut in an uncredited role in the 1962 drama Two Weeks in Another Town, directed by Vincente Minnelli.[57] Her early film work in the 1970s included supporting roles in blaxploitation and action genres, such as Netta in Black Girl (1972) and the flight attendant Lovejoy Wells in Skyjacked (1972).[31] She portrayed the singer Elizabeth "Liz" St. John in the horror film Poor Pretty Eddie (1975).[58] Later credits encompass Sugar Hill (1993), where she played Doris Holly, and Toe to Toe (2009) as the grandmother of the protagonist.[59] Uggams gained renewed prominence in the 2010s and 2020s through the role of the eccentric Blind Al in the Deadpool franchise, appearing in Deadpool (2016), Deadpool 2 (2018), and Deadpool & Wolverine (2024).[30] Additional recent roles include Regina in Just the Three of Us (2014), Kathleen in Nanny (2022), Joanna in The Ravine (2022), Agnes Ellison in the satirical American Fiction (2023), and an appearance in Dotty & Soul (2023).[58][33]| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1972 | Black Girl | Netta |
| 1972 | Skyjacked | Lovejoy Wells |
| 1975 | Poor Pretty Eddie | Elizabeth "Liz" St. John |
| 1993 | Sugar Hill | Doris Holly |
| 2009 | Toe to Toe | Grandma |
| 2014 | Just the Three of Us | Regina |
| 2016 | Deadpool | Blind Al |
| 2018 | Deadpool 2 | Blind Al |
| 2022 | Nanny | Kathleen |
| 2022 | The Ravine | Joanna |
| 2023 | American Fiction | Agnes Ellison |
| 2023 | Dotty & Soul | |
| 2024 | Deadpool & Wolverine | Blind Al |
Television Roles
Uggams made her national television debut at age six in 1949 on the NBC series Beulah, portraying the niece of Ethel Waters' title character.[1] She gained prominence as a regular singer on the NBC variety program Sing Along with Mitch from 1961 to 1964, performing alongside Mitch Miller and the Sing Along Gang, which exposed her talents to a wide audience despite racial tensions of the era.[61] In 1969, she hosted her own CBS variety series, The Leslie Uggams Show, which featured musical performances and celebrity guests but lasted only one season amid network shifts.[6] Transitioning to dramatic roles, Uggams portrayed Kizzy Reynolds in the 1977 ABC miniseries Roots, a character depicting the daughter of author Alex Haley's ancestor Kunta Kinte, earning her an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series.[62] She followed with the role of Mary Elizabeth "Lizzie" McDuffie, a White House maid, in the 1979 NBC miniseries Backstairs at the White House.[63] In 1983, Uggams starred in and hosted the CBS anthology series Fantasy, adapting short stories into hour-long episodes, though it ran for only one season.[24] Earlier game show appearances included serving as a panelist on High Rollers from 1974 to 1980.[6] In later decades, Uggams recurred as Leah Walker, the estranged mother of Lucious Lyon, on the Fox drama Empire starting in 2015.[64] She appeared as Ernestine Brown in the HBO series The Gilded Age from 2022 onward, portraying a household staff member in the period drama.[32] Additional credits encompass guest spots on soaps like All My Children and voice work in projects such as the 2024 video game adaptation Fallout as Betty Pearson.[6][32]| Series | Years | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Sing Along with Mitch | 1961–1964 | Regular singer |
| The Leslie Uggams Show | 1969 | Host |
| High Rollers | 1974–1980 | Panelist |
| Roots | 1977 | Kizzy Reynolds |
| Backstairs at the White House | 1979 | Mary Elizabeth "Lizzie" McDuffie |
| Fantasy | 1983 | Host and actress |
| Empire | 2015– | Leah Walker |
| The Gilded Age | 2022– | Ernestine Brown |
Discography Highlights
Leslie Uggams released her first recordings as a child performer in 1954, including a Christmas EP on MGM Records featuring tracks such as "Uncle Santa (Santa Baby)" and "Missus Santa Claus."[65] Her debut album, The Eyes of God, followed in 1959 on Columbia Records, marking her entry into studio recordings with spiritual and gospel-influenced material.[66] Early television tie-ins like Leslie Uggams on TV (1962, Columbia) captured her appearances with Mitch Miller's Sing Along Chorus, compiling 25 tracks across reissued volumes of popular standards.[67] A pivotal release was the original Broadway cast recording of Hallelujah, Baby! in 1967 on Columbia's KOS label, showcasing Uggams in the lead role of Georgina, for which she earned a Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical; the album includes her performances of "My Own Morning" and ensemble numbers like "Feet Do Yo' Stuff."[21] Subsequent solo efforts in the late 1960s included A Time to Love (1966, Atlantic) and Leslie (1969), blending pop soul and vocal jazz standards.[68] Later career highlights encompass On My Way to You (2003), a collection of romantic ballads, and reissues of classics like So in Love! (originally 1963, Columbia), featuring love songs now available digitally.[69][67] In 2014, Uggams issued April Showers and Get Happy, focusing on interpretive standards.[69] The two-disc cast album Uptown...Downtown (2012) documents her autobiographical musical, containing 21 tracks from the production.[67] Out-of-print LPs such as 'S Wonderful, 'S Marvelous, 'S Gershwin and What's an Uggams? remain sought by collectors for their Gershwin tributes and personal style explorations.[67]| Notable Release | Year | Label | Type/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hallelujah, Baby! (Original Broadway Cast) | 1967 | Columbia | Cast recording; features Tony-winning performance[21] |
| So in Love! | 1963 (reissued digitally) | Columbia | Studio album of love songs[67] |
| Uptown...Downtown | 2012 | Independent | 2-CD autobiographical musical cast album, 21 tracks[67] |
| April Showers / Get Happy | 2014 | Independent | Standards collections[69] |