LaWanda Page

Actress

Popular As Alberta Peal

Birthday October 19, 1920

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2002-9-14, Hollywood, California, U.S. (81 years old)

Nationality United States

#16388 Most Popular

1912

She was the daughter of Willie Richmond and Estella Small and had an older sister, Anna (Born 1912).

She was the older sister of Lynn Hamilton; however, this is not the Lynn Hamilton who co-starred with Page on Sanford and Son, despite a rumor that the two actresses were sisters.

1916

Skillet was Ernest "Skillet" Mayhand (1916–2007) and Leroy was Wilbert LeRoy Daniel (1928–1993).

1920

LaWanda Page (born Alberta Richmond; October 19, 1920 – September 14, 2002) was an American actress, comedian, and dancer whose career spanned six decades.

Crowned "The Queen of Comedy" or "The Black Queen of Comedy", Page melded blue humor, signifyin', and observational comedy to jokes about sexuality, race relations, African-American culture, and religion.

Page was born Alberta Richmond on October 19, 1920, in Cleveland, Ohio.

1950

The exact year she moved is unknown, though she likely moved sometime in the 1950s.

Once there, Page took a gig dancing and waiting tables at the Brass Rail Club for 15 years.

She also toured her fire dancing act and made appearances at nightclubs across the country and world, including Canada, Brazil, and Japan.

It is unknown when and where Page began stand-up comedy.

She may have been introduced to stand-up while dancing at the Brass Rail Club in Los Angeles.

According to an interview in the Philadelphia Tribune, Page did not like comedy at first, but a fellow Brass Rail Club employee and member of the comedy duo Skillet & Leroy saw Page's potential, telling her: "you can do comedy. As a matter of fact, if you don’t do comedy you can’t work here".

Page may have also been introduced to stand-up while touring the Chitlin' Circuit, where she shared stages with noted comedians such as Redd Foxx and Richard Pryor.

No matter how or when she transitioned to comedy from dance, it was in Los Angeles that Page started honing the feisty approach to comedy that would make her famous.

1960

In the mid-1960s Page became a member of the comedy group Skillet, Leroy & Co. (before Page joined, the group was a duo known as Skillet & Leroy).

Page recorded five live solo comedy albums for the Laff Records label and several other collaborative live comedy albums with comedy group Skillet, Leroy & Co. in the late 1960s and early 1970s under her LaWanda Page stage name (she often went just by her first name, sometimes styled as La Wanda).

Other than the relatively clean Sane Advice album, released two years after the run of Sanford and Son, Page's albums and stand-up material were raunchy blue comedy in nature.

One release, a gold-selling album called Watch It, Sucker!, was titled after one of her Aunt Esther character's catchphrases in order to capitalize on her newfound television fame.

1972

As an actress, Page is best known for portraying the Bible-toting and sharp-tongued "Aunt" Esther Anderson in the popular television sitcom Sanford and Son, which originally aired from 1972 until 1977.

1975

Page knew from a young age that she wanted to work in show business: as she told Call and Post journalist Mary Lynn in 1975, Page was "born talented" and "never took a singing or dancing lesson".

Growing up, Page danced at the Friendly Inn Settlement in Cleveland, a community center run by the Women's Christian Temperance Union.

When she was young, her family moved to St. Louis, Missouri.

Page attended Banneker Elementary School, where she met Redd Foxx (who portrayed Fred Sanford on Sanford and Son), who was two years her junior.

Eventually, both entered the field of comedy separately and performed their own stage acts, working alongside each other on the Chitlin' Circuit and Foxx's TV sitcom Sanford and Son.

Page began her show business career at age 15 in St. Louis, where she learned how to fire dance.

Swallowing fire, lighting matches and cigarettes with her fingertips, and walking over flames were part of Page's entertaining bag of tricks.

She burned herself frequently in her early days, though never badly.

But, as she told journalist Vashti McKenzie at the Baltimore Afro-American, "if I had to burn to make a living, I was willing to burn".

Billed as "The Bronze Goddess of Fire" or "LaWanda, the Flame Goddess", Page entertained small St. Louis nightclubs.

She later described one East St. Louis club where she worked as "the kind of place where if you ain’t home by nine o’clock at night you can be declared legally dead. [Everybody] walked around with knives in there. You better had one, too—knife or gun or something!"

At some point, Page moved to Los Angeles, California.

1976

Page later reprised this role in the short-lived television shows Sanford Arms (1976–1977) and Sanford (1980–1981).

1977

She released five solo albums, including the 1977 gold-selling Watch It, Sucker!.

She also collaborated on two albums with comedy group Skillet, Leroy & Co.

1979

She also co-starred in the 1979 short-lived series Detective School.

Throughout her career, Page advocated for fair pay and equal opportunities for Black performers.

1982

Page used the catchphrase again for the title of her 1982 stand-up tour, "The Watch It Sucker Review".

When the New Pittsburgh Courier wondered why "'Aunt Esther' might do a show like this", Page explained that she was not on tour because she needed the money; rather, she toured because she wanted to meet Aunt Esther's fans and perform her own stand up.

1990

During her tenure as a stand-up comic, a career she continued into the 1990s, Page often was billed as "The Queen of Comedy" or "The Black Queen of Comedy".

2016

Series co-lead Demond Wilson, who played Lamont Sanford, said the rumor was false in 2016.