LaTanya Richardson is an American actress and producer
@Producer, Career and Personal Life
LaTanya Richardson is an American actress and producer
LaTanya Richardson born at
While LaTanya Richardson was in college, she met Samuel L. Jackson, who studied in another college. They met due to their mutual love for acting in 1974 and started dating. Samuel was hell bent on making a career in acting, and LaTanya said that this passion which he carried inside him was one of the biggest reasons for her initial attraction towards him, along with the fact that he was a superb actor.
The couple got married in 1980, and she gave birth to their daughter, Zoe Jackson, in 1982, who now works as a freelance filmmaker. LaTanya accepts that living with Samuel is a very ardent task as he is ‘emotionally distant’ but she has also accepted that he has improved quite a lot in the very recent years and she is in love with him more than ever.
LaTanya Richardson was born in a humble American black family in Georgia on t October 21, 1949. She was a very strong headed kid and her parents who disapproved of her acting aspirations. But LaTanya wasn’t stopping at that and she started doing plays in high school, preparing herself for a career in acting.
She finished her early education in Atlanta and while she was in the High School and 15 years old, her then teacher and mentor, Georgia Allen, took the kids to Spelman College, to show children’s theatre, and LaTanya got hooked to it.
She went to the Spelman College, a college for black women, and pursued B.A. in theatre. Initially, she was disinterested in doing films as she found peace of mind with theatre and kept doing that for many years. She worked in a college production of ‘Macbeth’, starring alongside Diana Sands, from whom she apparently learned a lot. Atlanta’s theatre movement was quite strong as it was home to many popular theatre actors of those times and LaTanya being one of them, got involved in a lot of acting projects.
LaTanya, being a strong advocate of black rights became involved in the Black Rights Movement as she found racism in the theatre circles outside Atlanta not very welcoming of the coloured actors. While doing a show in Atlanta called ‘The Best Man’, starring E.G. Marshall, she met Joseph Papp, who then got impressed by her performance and invited her over to New York to become part of bigger theatre productions. Joseph Papp became a mentor to her and she slowly rose up in the New York theatrical scene.
In 1970, Woodie King Jr. started a theatre company called New Federal Theatre, which became a frequent stage for LaTanya to showcase her acting talent. Although Woodie loved her, she had to constantly audition for the roles and she wouldn’t earn the role each time. She recalls it as one of the most fulfilling experiences of her life and says that New York City shaped her up as a good actress.
Roles for African-American women were already scarce, and there were a lot of better actors than her, so she struggled hard to bag even the smallest of roles in big productions. Some of her major Off-Broadway productions from her early days include ‘Spell #7’ and ‘From the Mississippi Delta’ and she earned her name as one of the most wonderful black actresses working in the Broadway in Georgia region and NYC.
After doing several roles in Off-Broadways and earning a great name, she switched to other mediums to showcase her acting prowess. Films were still afar, so she started auditioning for TV roles and for an actor of her calibre, it wasn’t very difficult to bag some good initial roles. She made her debut with 1989 TV show ‘A Man called Hawk’, a mystery drama show which was short lived and ran for a few months. But somehow, it was all the exposure that LaTanya required to grab some more roles and rightly so, she was seen the next year in an episode of a major crime drama titled ‘Law and Order’.
She managed to bag her very first film role in ‘Hanging with the Homeboys’ in 1991, which happened to be a comedy drama film. The film premiered at the prestigious Sundance film festival and earned some rave reviews, mostly for the performances of the actors.