American actress, social activist (born 1944)
Denise Nicholas
|
---|
Nicholas, 2015.
|
Born
| Denise Donna Nicholas
[1]
(
1944-07-12
)
July 12, 1944
(age 79)
[1]
|
---|
Education
| |
---|
Occupation(s)
| Actress, author,
social activist
|
---|
Years active
| 1966?present
|
---|
Known for
| Role of Liz McIntyre in
Room 222
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---|
Spouses
|
(
m.
1964;
div.
1965)
(
m.
1973;
div.
1974)
(
m.
1981;
div.
1984)
|
---|
Denise Donna Nicholas
(born July 12, 1944)
[1]
is an American actress. Nicholas played high-school guidance counselor Liz McIntyre on the
ABC
comedy-drama
series
Room 222
[2]
and Councilwoman Harriet DeLong on the
NBC
/
CBS
drama series
In the Heat of the Night
.
Biography
[
edit
]
Early life and education
[
edit
]
Nicholas was born to Louise and Otto Nicholas
[3]
in Detroit, where she spent her early years. With the remarriage of her mother to Robert Burgen, she moved to
Milan, Michigan
, a small town south of
Ann Arbor
. At the age of 16, Nicholas appeared on the August 25, 1960, cover of
Jet
magazine as a future school teacher prospect at the National High School Institute at
Northwestern University
.
[4]
She graduated from Milan High School in 1961. Nicholas is the middle child of three, with an older brother, Otto, and a younger sister, Michele, who was murdered in 1980.
[5]
Nicholas entered the
University of Michigan
as a Pre-Law student. Nicholas then switched her major to
Latin-American
politics, Spanish, and English before dropping out after her second completed academic year. Nicholas moved to New York City, and worked for the J. Walter Thompson (JWT) advertising firm.
[6]
She subsequently transferred to
Tulane University
, where she majored in
Fine Arts
. Her acting debut was in a
Spanish-language
play presented by her language class.
[4]
Nicholas dropped out of
Tulane University
as well, this time to join the
Free Southern Theater
(FST), during the
Civil Rights Movement
.
[7]
After spending two years touring the
deep South
with the FST, Nicholas went to
New York City
and joined the
Negro Ensemble Company
, working in all productions during the first season of that theatre ensemble.
[5]
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
From the stage of the St. Mark's Playhouse in New York, Nicholas was cast as Liz McIntyre, the
Guidance Counselor
on
ABC
series
Room 222
. Nicholas received her
Bachelor of Arts
in Drama from the
University of Southern California
Theater Program in 1987, after living in
Southern California
for a number of years.
[5]
[12]
Career
[
edit
]
Nicholas began her television acting career in 1968, with an episode of
It Takes a Thief
. Nicholas had three consecutive (1970?1972)
Golden Globe
nominations for Best Actress in a Drama TV Series, for her role as Liz McIntyre on the
ABC
comedy-drama
series
Room 222
.
Following
Room 222
(1969?1974), she won two
Image Awards
in 1976 for Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture and Outstanding Actress in a Drama Series, for her role as Beth Foster in
Let's Do It Again
(1975).
[13]
Nicholas also played Olivia Ellis on
Baby... I'm Back!
, a sitcom that aired on CBS in 1978
[14]
Nicholas wrote the song "Can We Pretend," which her then-husband
Bill Withers
recorded on his 1974 album
+'Justments
.
[15]
Nicholas later appeared as Harriet DeLong in the cast of
NBC
/
CBS
'
In the Heat of the Night
(1989?1995). Nicholas wrote six episodes of the series, thus beginning her second career as a writer.
[16]
When that show was cancelled, she enrolled in the Professional Writing Program at the University of Southern California, eventually finding her way to the Journeymen's Writing Workshop under the tutelage of author
Janet Fitch
. She worked with Fitch for five years. Nicholas also attended the Squaw Valley Community of Writers Workshop, and the Natalie Goldberg Workshop, in
Taos, New Mexico
.
Nicholas's first novel,
Freshwater Road
, was published by
Agate Publishing
, in August 2005. It received a starred review in
Publishers Weekly
and was selected as one of the best books of 2005 by
The Washington Post
,
The Detroit Free Press
,
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
,
Newsday
and the
Chicago Tribune
.
The novel won the
Zora Neale Hurston
/
Richard Wright
Award for
debut fiction
in 2006, as well as the
American Library Association
's Black Caucus Award for debut fiction the same year.
Freshwater Road
was reprinted by
Pocket Books
.
Brown University
commissioned Nicholas to write a staged adaptation of
Freshwater Road
, which was presented in May 2008. Nicholas is currently
[
when?
]
completing her memoir, and it will be published by
Agate Publishing
in 2023.
[17]
Personal life
[
edit
]
At 19, Nicholas dropped out of the University of Michigan and signed up with the Free Southern Theater in New Orleans, headed by
Gilbert Moses
, whom she married in May 1964 at the American Theater in New York, and divorced in 1967.
[18]
[6]
Nicholas married soul singer-songwriter
Bill Withers
on January 17, 1973.
[19]
[20]
Their relationship had been volatile prior to their nuptials. In November 1972, Nicholas told authorities that Withers flew to
Tucson, Arizona
, where she was filming
The Soul of Nigger Charley
, and assaulted her in a motel room after she threatened to end their relationship, but she refused to press charges.
[21]
[22]
She filed for divorce in April 1974, and their divorce was finalized in December 1974.
[19]
[23]
In February 1980, Nicholas's younger sister Michele Burgen, a 26-year-old editor for
Ebony
magazine, was shot to death. Her body was found in a locked rental car at
LaGuardia Airport
in New York City. Nicholas and her older brother Otto searched the country for clues, but no suspect was ever taken to trial.
[5]
While coping with the loss of her sister, Nicholas met CBS sports anchor
Jim Hill
at a Sacramento poetry reading in June 1980.
[5]
They married on
Valentine's Day
in 1981.
[24]
[25]
The couple separated in October 1981 and she filed for divorce, before reconciling soon after.
[26]
[27]
Nicholas filed for divorce again in 1984. The divorce was final in 1987.
[5]
[12]
Acting credits
[
edit
]
Films
[
edit
]
Television
[
edit
]
Year
|
Title
|
Role
|
Notes
|
1968
|
It Takes a Thief
|
Toosdhi
|
"To Catch a Roaring Lion"
|
1969
|
The F.B.I.
|
Nora Tobin
|
"Eye of the Storm"
|
1967?1969
|
N.Y.P.D.
|
Mrs. Ward / Ethel
|
6 episodes
Season 1 (2 episodes)
? #1.11 "The Witness" (1967)
? #1.14 "The Bombers" (1967)
Season 2 (4 episode)
? #2.2 "Encounter on a Rooftop" (1968)
? #2.05 "Deadly Circle of Violence" (1968)
? #2.15 "Three-Fifty-Two" (1969)
? #2.20 "Face on the Dart Board" (1969)
|
1969?1974
|
Room 222
|
Liz McIntrye
|
series regular (113 episodes)
|
1971
|
Five Desperate Women
|
Joy
|
TV Movie
|
1971
|
Night Gallery
|
Kyro (segment Logoda's Heads)
|
"The Different Ones/Tell David/Logoda's Heads"
|
1971
|
Day of Absence
|
Second Operator
|
TV Movie
|
1972
|
Love, American Style
|
unknown role (segment Love and the Split-Up)
|
"Love and the Alibi/Love and the Instant Father/Love and the Lovely Evening/Love and the Split-Up"
|
1975
|
Police Story
|
Candy Priest
|
"A Community of Victims"
|
1975
|
Rhoda
|
Denise Culp
|
"The Party"
|
1975
|
Marcus Welby, M.D.
|
Myrna Kelland
|
"The Strange Behavior of Paul Kelland"
|
1977?1978
|
Baby... I'm Back!
|
Olivia Ellis
|
series regular (13 episodes)
|
1978
|
Rick of Passion
|
Marva Trotter Louis
|
TV Movie
|
1979
|
The Paper Chase
|
Donna Scott
|
"A Matter of Anger"
|
1980
|
Benson
|
Carol Walker
|
"Just Friends"
|
1980
|
Different Strokes
|
Sondra Williams
|
"Substitute Mother"
|
1980?1982
|
The Love Boat
|
Jenny Brooks/Maura Belloque
|
3 episodes
Season 3 (2 episodes)
? #3.18 "Kinfolk/Sis & and the Slicker/Moonlight & Moonshine/Too Close for Comfort/The Affair: Part 1" (1980)
? #3.19 "Kinfolk/Sis & the Slicker/Moonlight & Moonshine/Too Close for Comfort/The Affair: Part 2" (1980)
Season 5 (1 episode)
? #5.26 "Pal-I-Mony-O-Mine/Does Father Know Best?/An 'A' for Gopher" (1982)
|
1981
|
The Big Stuffed Dog
|
Nurse Riley
|
TV Movie
|
1981
|
Aloha Paradise
|
Carrie
|
"Letter from Broadway/Letter from Cyrano/Letter from a Secret Admirer"
|
1981
|
The Sophisticated Gents
|
Pat Henderson
|
Miniseries (3 episodes)
|
1981
|
Jacqueline Susann's Valley of the Dolls
|
Connie
|
Miniseries (2 episodes)
credited as Denise Nicholas Hill
|
1981
|
Secrets of Midland Heights
|
Julie Hammond
|
2 episodes
? #1.06 "The Race"
? #1.09 "Reunion of Strangers"
|
1983
|
One Day at a Time
|
Susan Bryant
|
"Baby Love: Part 2"
|
1983
|
Masquerade
|
Sheila Walters
|
"Pilot"
|
1984
|
Magnum, P.I.
|
T.C.'s Date
|
"I Witness" credited as Denise Nicholas-Hill
|
1985
|
And the Children Shall Lead
|
Mother
|
TV Movie
|
1987
|
Hotel
|
Mrs. Blake
|
"And Baby Makes Two"
|
1988
|
227
|
Jeannie Smith
|
"Shall We Dance?"
|
1988
|
Amen
|
Mrs. Kirby
|
"The Widow"
|
1988
|
Supercarrier
|
unknown role
|
"Deadly Enemies" (alternate title "Pilot")
|
1989
|
The Cosby Show
|
Lorraine
|
"Birthday Blues"
|
1989
|
Heart and Soul
|
Jean Kincaid
|
TV Movie
|
1989
|
Mother's Day
|
Elizabeth Sturgis
|
TV Movie
|
1989?1995
|
In the Heat of the Night
|
Harriet DeLong / Harriet Delong Gillespie
|
recurring role (Season 3?5; 19 episodes)
series regular (Season 6?7; 46 episodes)
guest role (Season 8; 4 episodes)
Writer (6 episodes)
Season 5 (1 episode)
? "#5.15 "Odessa" (written by)
Season 6 (2 episodes)
? #6.10 "Flowers from a Lady" (written by)
? #6.19 "Legacy" (written by)
Season 7 (3 episodes)
? #7.11 "Little Girl Lost" (written by)
? #7.12 "Your Own Kind" (written by)
?#7.21 "Poor Relations" (written by)
|
1990
|
A Different World
|
Carol Garrison
|
"Here's to Old Friends"
|
1990
|
B.L. Stryker
|
Darlene Carter
|
"Plates"
|
1990
|
On Thin Ice: The Tai Babilonia Story
|
Cleo Babilonia
|
TV Movie
|
1992
|
Hangin' with Mr. Cooper
|
Mrs. Walker
|
"My Dinner with Mark"
|
1995
|
The Parent 'Hood
|
Miss Hicks
|
"A Kiss Is Just a Kiss"
|
1997
|
Living Single
|
Lilah James
|
2 episodes
|
1997
|
The Rockford Files: Shoot-Out at the Golden Pagoda
|
Leddy Hutch
|
TV Movie
|
2002
|
My Wife and Kids
|
Ann Kyle
|
"Failure to Communicate"
|
Theatre
[
edit
]
Year
|
Production
|
Role
|
Theatre(s)
|
Notes
|
1982
|
Dame Lorraine
|
Angela Moulineaux
|
Los Angeles Actors Theatre
|
|
1968
|
Song of the Lusitanian Bogey
[28]
|
|
St. Mark's Playhouse
|
Revival of earlier production.
|
Daddy Goodness
[29]
|
Lena
|
St. Mark's Playhouse
|
|
Kongi's Harvest
[30]
|
Praise Singer
|
St. Mark's Playhouse
|
|
Song of the Lusitanian Bogey
[31]
|
|
St. Mark's Playhouse
|
|
1967
|
One Last Look
[32]
|
April Baylor
|
Old Reliable Theater Tavern
|
|
1966
|
Viet Rock
[33]
|
|
Martinique Theatre
|
|
Awards and nominations
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
Nicholas, Denise (2007, May 19). The HistoryMakers® Video Oral History Interview with Denise Nicholas. by Julieanna L. Richardson
- ^
TV in the USA: A History of Icons, Idols, and Ideas
- ^
McCann, Bob (October 30, 2009).
Encyclopedia of African American Actresses in Film and Television
.
McFarland & Company
. p. 250.
ISBN
9781476691404
.
- ^
a
b
Johnson, John H., ed. (November 27, 1969).
Jet
.
37
(8). Chicago, Illinois: Johnson Publishing Company Inc.: 56?58.
{{
cite journal
}}
: CS1 maint: untitled periodical (
link
)
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
Park, Jeannie; Armstrong, Lois (May 7, 1990).
"In the Heat of the Night's Eerie Parallels to Her Sister's Murder Allow Actress Denise Nicholas to Finally Conquer Her Grief"
.
People
. Vol. 33, no. 18
. Retrieved
July 8,
2012
.
- ^
a
b
Nicholas, D. (2007, May 19). The HistoryMakers® Video Oral History Interview with Denise Nicholas. by Julieanna L. Richardson (9 Betacam SP videocassettes (4:23:50)). Identification:
A2007_177. The HistoryMakers, Chicago, Illinois.
- ^
Jacobs, H. (1966, July 31). Setting: A Ghetto Named Desire.
New York Times,
pp. 87.
- ^
Paisley, Laura.
"The Civil Rights Experience of Novelist Denise Nicholas Inspired Her Artistry: The alumna's involvement with social causes led to a successful career as an actress and writer
". Los Angeles, California: University of Southern California, April 5, 2016.
- ^
Barnes, C. (1968, January 3). Theater: 'Lusitanian Bogey' Opens: Peter Weiss Denounces Portugal in Africa.
New York Times,
p. 52.
- ^
Barnes, C. (1968, June 5). Theater: 'Daddy Goodness' Has St. Marks Premiere: Negro Troupe Essays a Religious Theme.
New York Times,
p. 37.
- ^
Ward, D.T. (1968, September 1). 'Being Criticized Was To Be Expected...': Criticism Was Expected'
New York Times,
p. D1.
- ^
a
b
Benson, J. (1989, May 13). NO GUIDANCE NEEDED FOR DENISE NICHOLAS - NOW AWARD-WINNING PLAYWRIGHT, 'ROOM 222' STAR HAS LEAD ROLE IN CBN'S 'MOTHER'S DAY.' Daily News of Los Angeles (CA), pp. L25.
- ^
"Three Big Surprises Mark NAACP Image Awards Show"
.
Jet
.
49
(22). February 26, 1976.
- ^
Smith, C. (1978, January 26). Denise Nicholas and Sitcoms: She Is Back: Denise Nicholas: Back to a Sitcom.
Los Angeles Times,
p. E1.
- ^
Neal, Mark Anthony (April 4, 2020).
"Bill Withers' Legacy Is So Much Deeper Than The Hits We All Know"
.
NPR Music
. Retrieved
December 26,
2020
.
- ^
Mendoza, N.F. (1994, January 16). WITH AN EYE ON . . . 'In the Heat of the Night's' Denise Nicholas finds the positive in past and present: [Orange County Edition].
Los Angeles Times,
p. 80.
- ^
"Publishers Marketplace: Log In"
.
www.publishersmarketplace.com
. Retrieved
March 7,
2022
.
- ^
Wiltz, Teresa (October 25, 2005).
"Denise Nicholas, Mind, Body and Soul"
.
The Washington Post
.
- ^
a
b
"Divorce Action Splits Singer Bill Withers, Actress Denise Nichols"
.
Jet
.
46
(6): 15. May 2, 1974.
- ^
Greene, Andy (April 14, 2015).
"Bill Withers: The Soul Man Who Walked Away"
.
Rolling Stone
. Retrieved
October 20,
2019
.
- ^
"Room 222 star refuses to charge singing artist in alleged beating"
.
Indianapolis Recorder
. November 12, 1972.
- ^
"
'Not Denying It,' TV Star Says Of Alleged Beating"
.
Jet
.
43
(9): 58. November 23, 1972.
- ^
Petitioner: Denise Nicholas Withers vs. Respondent: William Harrison Withers. Case Number: D 844 387. Superior Court of California, County of Los Angeles. Final Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage entered in Judgment Book Number 6981, Page 34, on December 18, 1974
- ^
County of Los Angeles, Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk Local Registrar's Number: 3721. State File Number: 9715. Groom: Jim W. Hill. Bride: Denise Nicholas. Marriage: February 14, 1981. Ancestry.com. California, Marriage Index, 1960-1985 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2007. Original data: State of California. California Marriage Index, 1960-1985. Microfiche. Center for Health Statistics, California Department of Health Services, Sacramento, California.
- ^
(1981, March 5). Actress Denise Nicholas Marries TV Sportscaster in Story Book Wedding. "Jet." 59 (25). p. 62(2).
- ^
"Denise Nicholas Files For Divorce From Sportscaster"
.
Jet
.
61
(9): 61. November 19, 1981.
- ^
"Actress Denise Nicholas Reconciles With Husband"
.
Jet
.
61
(13): 26. December 17, 1981.
- ^
"Song of the Lusitanian Bogey (Revival)"
.
New York, New York
: Lortel Archives: The Internet Off-Broadway Database. Archived from
the original
on September 14, 2007
. Retrieved
December 5,
2009
.
- ^
"Daddy Goodness"
. New York, New York: Lortel Archives: The Internet Off-Broadway Database. Archived from
the original
on October 7, 2012
. Retrieved
December 5,
2009
.
- ^
"Kongi's Harvest"
. New York, New York: Lortel Archives: The Internet Off-Broadway Database. Archived from
the original
on September 17, 2007
. Retrieved
December 5,
2009
.
- ^
"Song of the Lusitanian Bogey (Original Production)"
. New York, New York: Lortel Archives: The Internet Off-Broadway Database. Archived from
the original
on September 11, 2007
. Retrieved
December 5,
2009
.
- ^
Carter, Steve (1986).
Plays by Steve Carter
. New York, New York: Broadway Play Publishing, Inc. pp.
81?104
.
ISBN
0-88145-043-X
.
- ^
"Viet Rock"
. New York, New York: Lortel Archives: The Internet Off-Broadway Database. Archived from
the original
on October 7, 2012
. Retrieved
December 5,
2009
.
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0629370/?ref_=nmbio_ov
https://denisenicholas.net/actress/
External links
[
edit
]
|
---|
International
| |
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National
| |
---|
Other
| |
---|