Gloria Foster

Actress

Birthday November 15, 1933

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Chicago, Illinois, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2001-9-29, The Bronx, New York, U.S. (67 years old)

Nationality United States

#19868 Most Popular

1933

Gloria Foster (November 15, 1933 – September 29, 2001) was an American actress.

She had acclaimed roles in plays In White America and Having Our Say, winning three Obie Awards during her career.

Foster was born on November 15, 1933, in Chicago, Illinois.

As a young child, Foster was put into the custody of her maternal grandparents.

Foster never knew who her father was and she moved to Janesville, Wisconsin after her mother was hospitalized for a mental illness.

Foster attended the University of Illinois at Chicago, where she participated in plays, but did not focus on acting.

Foster decided to be a professional actor when her godmother introduced her to the Goodman Theatre in Chicago.

Foster became one of the few African Americans at the Goodman School of Drama at the Art Institute of Chicago (now at DePaul University).

During her studying at the Goodman School she also, "learned professional acting skills in the Court Theater at the University of Chicago".

One of her most influential instructors was Bella Itkin, who cast Gloria in many classical roles.

1963

Foster began acting on Broadway in 1963.

Her first role was Ruth in the show of A Raisin in the Sun.

Her first professional performance was In White America.

Foster, "play[s] a 13-year-old Arkansas girl who tries to enter her Little Rock school".

She won an Obie Award or Off-Broadway Theater Award.

Instead having to audition for roles, people started to make parts for her to be in.

Foster was known for her work with Joe Papp, and appeared in his productions of Long Day's Journey into Night, Chekhov's Cherry Orchard, Brecht's Mother Courage (adapted by Ntozake Shange), and Shakespeare's Coriolanus.

Foster searched for roles in which she could perform to the best of her ability.

She once said, "Young people today, I think, are thinking in terms of stepping stones.…I don't know that I ever thought that way. It sounds ridiculous, but I was always thinking in terms of a more difficult role".

Moving from the New York stage, Gloria Foster started to do roles on the big screen.

She was in many theatrical performances and also performed some roles on television.

1964

The Cool World (1964) – This was Gloria Foster's first appearance on a full-length feature film.

She played Mrs. Custis.

It was on the set of this film that she starred next to her future husband, Clarence Williams III.

Nothing But a Man (1964) – Gloria Foster plays a woman named Lee, who lives with the main character's (Duff Anderson) father.

The two acted together in a 1964 film, The Cool World.

1967

Foster married the actor Clarence Williams III in 1967.

1968

They appeared on an episode of Williams's television show The Mod Squad that ran from 1968 to 1973; Foster made two guest appearances.

1985

Foster played the role of the mother of Yusef Bell in the miniseries The Atlanta Child Murders which aired in 1985.

1987

She was also active in television, appearing in such programs as I Spy, two episodes of Law & Order and The Cosby Show (1987).

Her character in both Law and Order episodes, named Satima Tate, was based on the widow of Malcolm X, Betty Shabazz.

1992

The first episode, titled Conspiracy (1992), was based on Malcolm X's assassination.

Malcolm X was played by Hal Miller.

1995

She returned to theatre again in 1995, acting alongside Mary Alice (who was later to replace her in The Matrix films following her death), appearing as 103-year-old Sadie Delany, in Having Our Say, on Broadway at the Booth Theatre, for which she received rave reviews.

1997

The second episode, titled Entrapment (1997), focused on her character's children's acts of revenge against the people they believed were really responsible.

1999

Foster played the Oracle in The Matrix (1999) and The Matrix Reloaded (2003) films, the latter film being her last.

She played the Oracle in The Matrix (1999) and The Matrix Reloaded (2003); however, she died during filming and was thus unable to portray her role in the third film.

As a result, Mary Alice replaced her in The Matrix Revolutions and Enter the Matrix.

2001

Williams was the one to announce her death in 2001.

While Foster did not have many close relatives, she stayed in contact with her Delta Sigma Theta sorority sister, Cicely Tyson.