Ruby Dee


Actor
Ruby Dee

About

Also Known As
Ruby Ann Wallace
Birth Place
Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Born
October 27, 1922
Died
June 11, 2014

Biography

Academy Award-nominated actress Ruby Dee was, by all accounts, an American icon. Her career spanned no fewer than three major movements in African-American culture - from the post-Harlem Renaissance era to the black pride voice of the 1970s to the commoditization of urban black culture in the 1990s. Throughout it all, the intellectual, smoky-voiced actress appeared on stage and screen in...

Family & Companions

Frank Dee
Husband
Distillery promoter. Briefly married; divorced in 1945.
Ossie Davis
Husband
Actor, writer, director. Married on December 9, 1948.

Bibliography

"With Ossie and Ruby: In This Life Together"
Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, William Morrow (1998)
"My Last Good Nerve"
Ruby Dee (1998)
"Glowchild"
Ruby Dee (1972)
"My One Good Nerve"
Ruby Dee, Third World Press

Notes

Ruby Dee has been Emmy nominated for the "Express Stop From Lenox Avenue" episode on "The Nurses" (best single performance by leading actress; 1963/64), for "Roots: The Next Generation" (best supporting actress in limited series or special; 1978/79), for "Gore Vidal's Lincoln" (best supporting actress in a mini-series or special; 1987/88), and for the "Skylark" episode on "China Beach" (outstanding guest actress in a drama series; 1989/90).

Received a honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degree from Fairfield University, honorary doctorate from Iona College and Virginia State University.

Biography

Academy Award-nominated actress Ruby Dee was, by all accounts, an American icon. Her career spanned no fewer than three major movements in African-American culture - from the post-Harlem Renaissance era to the black pride voice of the 1970s to the commoditization of urban black culture in the 1990s. Throughout it all, the intellectual, smoky-voiced actress appeared on stage and screen in dramas that explored the black experience and celebrated its finest wordsmiths. Off-screen, Dee and husband/frequent collaborator, Ossie Davis, were devoted civil rights activists, whose career choices did as much to further the cause as their presence at pivotal moments in African-American history. During the 60-plus years of her career, Dee witnessed the fruits of her labor, as the civil rights movement ushered in a new era of respect and dignity for African-American actors who were afforded broad outlets to showcase the breadth of their talent. A dramatic orator and enthusiast of the African-American storytelling genre, Dee was also a published poet and author, as well as screenwriter. In every field that the impassioned and multi-talented Dee fearlessly pursued, she ensured that her children and grandchildren would enjoy greater opportunities than the world into which she was born. Her death on June 11, 2014 was mourned by fans and civil rights leaders worldwide.

Ruby Dee was born Ruby Ann Wallace in Cleveland, OH, on Oct. 27, 1924. Just shy of her first birthday, she and her siblings relocated to Harlem with her father and stepmother. Her birthmother, who had a reputation of instability and had given birth to three children while still in her teens, had left her young family to follow a charismatic preacher. Young Dee thrived in Harlem in the midst of its booming Renaissance, when the neighborhood was a magnet for a new generation of African-American artists and thinkers. While her father was gone for long stretches at a time with his job on the Pennsylvania Railroad, her stepmother - who had studied at Atlanta University under renowned historian W.E.B. Dubois - fostered a creative and academic environment at home. Dee was tutored in classical piano and violin, introduced to world literature, and she and her sister Angelina wrote p ms, which their stepmother would promptly submit to literary magazines. The family rented out a spare bedroom to travelers, so Dee was further exposed to African-American musicians and traveling professionals who were barred from staying in all-white New York hotels at the time.

At Hunter High school, Dee - being both an avid writer and a budding orator - began to combine these talents in school dramatic productions. After graduation, she went on to Hunter College, and while earning a Bachelors degree in romance languages, she became active with Harlem's fledgling American Negro Theater, appearing alongside up-and-comers like Sidney Poitier and Harry Belafonte. In addition to her academic and creative pursuits, Dee was also married at the age of 17 to her first husband, actor Frankie Dee Brown who reportedly would have been the only black Munchkin in "The Wizard of Oz" (1939), had his footage not been cut. His wife, meanwhile, established her presence with several off-Broadway plays, before hitting Broadway in 1943 in a short-lived postwar drama called "South Pacific" - not to be confused with the later musical of the same name. Dee graduated from Hunter College the following year and landed a day job as a translator, while continuing to train on the dramatic stage at night. She returned to Broadway in 1946 in "Jeb," a play by a young actor and playwright named Ossie Davis. Dee's young marriage had ended the previous year, and during the play's short production, she and Davis began to fall in love. Later that year, they toured together in an American Negro Theater production of the Broadway hit, "Anna Lucasta," for which Dee earned considerable notice for her portrayal of the title character.

Dee maintained a solid presence on New York stages throughout the remainder of the 1940s, spending one of her rare days off in 1948 visiting a justice of the peace to marry Davis. Dee expanded her dramatic training at The Actor's Studio and began to break into film work, appearing in a number of black features before landing the breakout portrayal of Rachel Robinson, wife of the African-American baseball star, in "The Jackie Robinson Story" (1950). During the 1950s, Dee appeared regularly on the daytime soap "The Guiding Light" (CBS, 1952-2009) and was underused in her share of "maid" roles in forgettable films, but she also landed meatier work in quality dramas including "Edge of the City" (1958) and the W.C. Handy biopic, "St. Louis Blues" (1958), starring Nat King Cole as the great American songwriter and featuring Cab Calloway, Eartha Kitt and Ella Fitzgerald.

Earlier in the decade, Dee had become increasingly inspired by the role of the creative arts in furthering political and human rights causes. In 1953, she and Davis lent their voices to protest the controversial execution of suspected "Communist spies" Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, and throughout the decade, they were active with civil rights groups including the NAACP, SNCC (the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee) and the SCLC (the Southern Christian Leadership Conference).

Dee returned to Broadway with resounding success in 1959, winning acclaim as Ruth Younger, the quiet, supportive wife in Lorraine Hansberry's ground-breaking family drama, "A Raisin in the Sun" (1959). She was tapped to recreate the role in the 1961 film, for which she earned a National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actress. That same year, Dee co-starred off-Broadway in Davis' race relations satire, "Purlie Victorious," reprising her role in the big screen adaptation entitled "Gone are the Days!" (1963). That same year, she and Davis served as emcees at the infamous civil rights march on Washington D.C., where Martin Luther King Jr. gave his historic "I Have a Dream" speech. By this time, the couple was friends with King and had also become associated with Malcolm X through Dee's brother Edward, one of his earliest disciples.

Year after year, Dee was successfully breaking through to new territory for black actors, earning a daytime Emmy in 1964 for her appearance on "The Nurses" (CBS, 1962-65) and the following year, becoming the first African-American woman to appear in a major role at the American Shakespeare Festival with her role in "King Lear." In 1966, she wowed audiences in a staging of Aristophanes' ancient work, "The Birds" and returned to the big screen in the gripping urban drama, "The Incident" (1967). In 1968, the woman who had begun her career in an era that relegated black women to walk-on parts as maids, joined the cast of the serial "Peyton Place" (ABC, 1966-69) as the wife of an affluent black doctor. She went on to co-author and star in the feature "Up Tight" (1968), a fictionalized but stirring chronicle of events following the death of Martin Luther King Jr. Months earlier, Dee had stood by as husband Ossie Davis gave the eulogy at Martin Luther King Jr.'s funeral, having done the same for Malcolm X several years earlier.

A new wave of African-American cultural pride had been building, and by the 1970s, had exploded with a barrage of new screen and stage works that examined the black experience. Dee returned to Broadway, where she earned OBIE and Drama Desk Awards for her starring role in "B sman and Lena," Athol Fugard's play about apartheid-era South Africa. In 1972, she played a spirited frontier woman in Sidney Poitier's "Buck and the Preacher" (1972) and also appeared in the Davis- directed "Black Girl" and an adaptation of Lorraine Hansberry's play "To Be Young, Gifted, and Black" (1972). Her winning streak continued with another Drama Desk Award for "The Wedding Band" and a well-received book of p try, Glowchild and Other P ms. Dee remained visible on television throughout the decade, most notably in historic miniseries like the top-rated "Roots: The Next Generations" (1979) and an adaptation of Maya Angelou's "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" (CBS, 1979).

Now considered an elder stateswoman of 20th century African-American theater, Dee was increasingly in demand for her stately, sage-like presence. She and Davis co-starred in their own short-lived children's series, "Ossie and Ruby!" (PBS, 1980-81) before the pair headlined an all black production of "Long Days Journey into Night" (PBS, 1983). Public television remained an ideal outlet for Dee's sophisticated taste, so she next appeared in an adaptation of James Baldwin's landmark novel "Go Tell it on the Mountain" (1985). The following year, Dee and Davis' production company, Emmalyn Enterprises, produced the documentary "Martin Luther King: A Dream and a Drum" (PBS). After a Broadway run in "Checkmates" alongside Denzel Washington and a production of "The Glass Menagerie" in Washington D.C., Dee was introduced to younger audiences via filmmaker Spike Lee in his breakout 1989 film "Do the Right Thing." Dee earned a NAACP image award for her portrayal of Mother-Sister, the prickly, stern neighborhood watchdog wo d by Da Mayor (Davis), another neighborhood fixture who holds court outside the corner store with his drinking buddies. Following that mainstream success, Dee took "Zora is My Name" - her one-woman show about African-American author and folklorist Zora Neale Hurston - to public television, before an Emmy Award-winning turn in the Hallmark Hall of Fame production, "Decoration Day" (1990).

Dee released the children's book Two Ways to Count to Ten: A Liberian Folktale in 1990 and rejoined Lee for "Jungle Fever" (1991), where she played the soft-hearted mother of two very different sons - one a successful architect (Wesley Snipes), the other, a crack addict (Samuel L. Jackson). She continued to surface regularly in supporting roles in TV movies, including her memorable turn as Mother Abagail in the miniseries "Stephen King's The Stand" (1994). In 1995, Dee and Davis were awarded the Presidential Medal for Lifetime Achievement in the Arts, though it was clear that neither one considered their body of work anywhere near complete. After Dee appeared in the Sean Connery thriller "Just Cause" (1995) and the Academy Award- nominated short film "Tuesday Morning Ride" (1995), in 1996, Dee and Davis received NAACP Image Awards for the Emmalyn production "Promised Land" (PBS). In 1999, Dee had one of her best career roles as the centenarian physician Bessie Delany in the TV production "Having Our Say: The Delany Sisters' First 100 Years" (CBS, 1999).

The same year Dee turned a collection of her own memoirs and stories, My One Good Nerve: Rhythms, Rhymes, and Reasons into a one-woman stage show, chronicling her own 70-plus years. Dee and husband Davis also found time to publish Ossie and Ruby: In This Life Together (2000), a memoir of their years together in theater, the civil rights movement, and as lifelong lovers and parents. They were recognized with Lifetime Achievement Awards from the Screen Actors Guild in 2000, and followed up by co-starring in the Showtime original movie "Finding Buck McHenry" (2001). Later that year, Dee starred in the well-received off-Broadway production, "St. Lucy's Eyes," in which she played an amateur abortion provider trying to work her way out of poverty in 1960s Memphis. Dee co-starred in notable TV films, including "Taking Back Our Town" (Lifetime, 2001) and "Oprah Winfrey Presents: Their Eyes Were Watching God" (2005), adapted from the Zora Neale Hurston book. She and Davis recorded a wildly entertaining CD version of "In This Life Together," before flying to New Zealand to shoot the family drama "Naming Number Two" (2006). While on location, she received word that Davis had died of a heart attack while filming in Florida.

Dee remarkably soldiered on, and the following year, released Life Lit by Some Large Vision, Selected Speeches and Writings from Dee and her revered husband. The following year, the 83-year-old actress hit a career high point when she earned a Screen Actor's Guild Award and an Oscar nomination for her portrayal of the conflicted mother of a New York drug kingpin (Denzel Washington) in "American Gangster" (2007). She continued her late-in-life success by earning another Screen Actors Guild Award nomination for her performance in "America" (Lifetime Television, 2009), which focused on a 16-year-old biracial boy (Philip Johnson) who underg s psychological counseling after growing up with a crack-addicted mother and suffering sexual abuse at various foster homes. Dee continued working steadily in small films even as she entered her 90s, At the time of her death on June 11, 2014, she was filming the drama "King Dog," a drama in which she co-starred with Ice-T, Coco Austin and Akon.

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

Betty and Coretta (2013)
Narrator
Mumia: Long Distance Revolutionary (2012)
Herself
Video Girl (2011)
Politics of Love (2011)
The Perfect Age of Rock 'n' Roll (2011)
America (2009)
Steam (2008)
All About Us (2007)
American Gangster (2007)
Taking Back Our Town (2006)
Naming Number Two (2006)
Oprah Winfrey Presents: Their Eyes Were Watching God (2005)
Finding Buck McHenry (2000)
Mrs Henry
A Storm in Summer (2000)
Time to Dance: The Life and Work of Norma Canner (1999)
Narrator
Baby Geniuses (1999)
Having Our Say: The Delany Sisters' First 100 Years (1999)
Passing Glory - Part 1 (1999)
Passing Glory (1999)
Passing Glory - Part 2 (1999)
The Wall (1998)
A Simple Wish (1997)
Captive Heart: The James Mink Story (1996)
Indigo
Mr. and Mrs. Loving (1996)
Tuesday Morning Ride (1996)
Just Cause (1995)
Evangeline Ferguson
Cop And A Half (1993)
Rachel
Jungle Fever (1991)
Color Adjustment (1991)
Narrator
Love At Large (1990)
Corinne Dart
Decoration Day (1990)
Rowena
The Court-martial Of Jackie Robinson (1990)
Do the Right Thing (1989)
Making "Do the Right Thing" (1989)
Herself
Go Tell It on the Mountain (1984)
Mrs Grimes
Wild Style (1983)
Cat People (1981)
All God's Children (1980)
Irene Whitfield
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sing (1979)
Grandmother Baxter
Countdown at Kusini (1976)
Leah Matanzima
It's Good to Be Alive (1974)
Ruthe Campanella
Black Girl (1972)
Netta's mother
Buck and the Preacher (1972)
Ruth
The Sheriff (1971)
King: A Filmed Record ... Montgomery to Memphis (1970)
Uptight (1968)
Laurie
The Incident (1967)
Joan Robinson
Gone Are the Days! (1963)
Lutiebelle
The Balcony (1963)
Thief
A Raisin in the Sun (1961)
Ruth Younger
Take a Giant Step (1960)
Christine
Virgin Island (1960)
St. Louis Blues (1958)
Elizabeth
Edge of the City (1957)
Lucy Tyler
Go Man Go (1954)
Irma Jackson
The Tall Target (1951)
Rachel
No Way Out (1950)
Connie
The Jackie Robinson Story (1950)
Rae Robinson [earlier known as Rae Isum]
The Fight Never Ends (1948)
Janey
What a Guy (1947)
Hotel owner, maybe [Mrs. Ruby Dawson]
That Man of Mine (1946)
Joan

Writer (Feature Film)

Uptight (1968)
Screenwriter

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

Making "Do the Right Thing" (1989)
Other

Director (Special)

A Letter to Booker T. (1987)
Director
The 85-Year-Old Swinger (1987)
Director
My Man Bovanne (1987)
Director

Cast (Special)

Unchained Memories: Readings From the Slave Narratives (2003)
Intimate Portrait: Rosa Parks (2001)
Freedom Never Dies: The Legacy of Harry T. Moore (2001)
Narrator
Civil Rights Heroes (2001)
Amsterdam News: Stories of Black New York (2000)
America's Millennium (1999)
SAG Awards Show (1999)
Small Steps, Big Strides: The Black Experience in Hollywood (1998)
NYTV: By the People Who Made It (1998)
An Evening of Stars: A Celebration of Educational Excellence Benefiting The United Negro College Fund (1998)
The Rise of Christianity: The First Thousand Years (1998)
Narrator
God's Gonna Trouble the Water (1998)
Narration
Porgy and Bess: An American Voice (1998)
Narrator
Sidney Poitier: The Defiant One (1997)
Mississippi, America (1996)
Narration
Edgar Allan Poe: Terror of the Soul (1995)
Narration
After Goodbye: An AIDS Story (1994)
Narration
The 48th Annual Tony Awards (1994)
Presenter
Lady Day: The Many Faces of Billie Holiday (1993)
The 24th Annual NAACP Image Awards (1992)
Performer
Guiding Light: The Primetime Special (1992)
Diamonds on the Silver Screen (1992)
Zora Is My Name! (1990)
The 22nd Annual NAACP Image Awards (1990)
Performer
Nigerian Art: Kindred Spirits (1990)
Narration
Crown Dick (1987)
Johnson'S Mother
Crazy Hattie Enters the Ice Age (1987)
Hattie Perkins
A Letter to Booker T. (1987)
Host ("Ossie & Ruby"), Mary Terrell
Alice in Wonder (1987)
Alice Weatherscott
Martin Luther King: The Dream and the Drum (1986)
Treemonisha (1986)
Narrator
Windows on Women (1985)
Host
D.H.O. (1973)
To Be Young, Gifted and Black (1972)

Writer (Special)

Zora Is My Name! (1990)
Writer
Zora Is My Name! (1990)
Play As Source Material
Crazy Hattie Enters the Ice Age (1987)
Writer

Producer (Special)

Alice in Wonder (1987)
Producer
Crown Dick (1987)
Executive Producer
The 85-Year-Old Swinger (1987)
Producer
A Letter to Booker T. (1987)
Producer
My Man Bovanne (1987)
Producer
Refrigerator (1987)
Producer
Mama (1987)
Producer
Crazy Hattie Enters the Ice Age (1987)
Producer
Martin Luther King: The Dream and the Drum (1986)
Executive Producer

Special Thanks (Special)

Zora Is My Name! (1990)
Writer
Zora Is My Name! (1990)
Play As Source Material
Crazy Hattie Enters the Ice Age (1987)
Writer

Misc. Crew (Special)

James Baldwin: The Price of the Ticket (1989)
Assistant

Cast (TV Mini-Series)

The Feast of All Saints (2001)
Whitewash (1994)
Voice Of Mrs Calloway
Stephen King's The Stand (1994)
The Ernest Green Story (1993)
Gore Vidal's Lincoln (1988)
Windmills Of The Gods (1988)
The Atlanta Child Murders (1985)
Roots: The Next Generations (1979)

Life Events

1941

Worked as apprentice at American Negro Theater (classmates included Sidney Poitier and Harry Belafonte)

1943

First Broadway role as a native in "South Pacific"

1946

First starring role on Broadway as title character in "Anna Lucasta"

1946

Had a featured role in "Jeb"; first Broadway appearance with Ossie Davis

1950

Feature acting debut opposite Sidney Poitier in "No Way Out"

1950

Portrayed the ballplayer's wife in "The Jackie Robinson Story"

1952

Had regular role on TV daytime soap, "The Guiding Light" (CBS)

1957

Appeared in "Edge of the City"

1959

Portrayed Ruth Younger in the Broadway presentation of Lorraine Hansberry's "A Raisin in the Sun"

1960

Featured in "Seven Times Monday" on "Play of the Week"

1961

Co-starred in the stage production "Purlie Victorious"

1961

Reprised stage role in feature version of "A Raisin in the Sun"

1963

Co-starred in the film version of Genet's "The Balcony"

1964

Earned first Emmy nomination for guest appearance on the ABC series "The Nurses"

1966

Cast in the lead role of a black woman who marries a white man in "The Wedding Band"

1967

Acted in the big screen drama "The Incident"

1968

Screenwriting debut as co-author of "Uptight"; also co-starred

1968

Had regular role on the ABC primetime serial "Peyton Place"

1972

Portrayed Leslie Uggams' mother in the feature "Black Girl"; directed by husband Ossie Davis

1972

Reprised role of black woman in an interracial marriage in the Off-Broadway production "Wedding Band" (filmed for TV)

1974

Once again played a baseball player's wife in the TV biopic "It's Good to Be Alive" (CBS)

1979

Portrayed Alex Haley's grandmother Queen in "Roots: The Next Generation" (ABC)

1979

Wrote play, "Twin-Bit Gardens"; laster revised and presented as "Take It from the Top"; also made stage directing debut

1980

Co-hosted and starred in the series "Ossie & Ruby" (with husband Ossie Davis), also produced and directed episodes

1980

Co-starred with Ossie Davis in "All God's Children"

1983

With Davis, headlined an all-black TV production of "Long Day's Journey Into Night"

1985

Appeared in "The Atlanta Child Murders" (CBS)

1988

Returned to Broadway alongside Denzel Washington and Paul Winfield in "Checkmates"

1989

Portrayed Amanda Winfield in a staging of "The Glass Menagerie" in Washington, DC

1989

Played supporting role of a mystical neighborhood resident in Spike Lee's "Do the Right Thing"

1990

Portrayed famed Harlem Renaissance author Zora Neale Hurston in "Zora Is My Name!" (PBS), also wrote teleplay

1991

With husband, played the parents of Wesley Snipes in Lee's "Jungle Fever"

1994

Portrayed Mother Abagail in the TV adaptation of "Stephen King's The Stand" (ABC)

1995

Co-starred in the Academy Award nominated short "Tuesday Morning Ride"

1999

Provided the voice of Alice the Great in the Nickelodeon animated series "Little Bill" starring Bill Cosby

1999

Wrote and starred in the stage production "My One Good Nerve: A Visit With Ruby Dee"

1999

Portrayed Bessie Delany in the TV presentation "Having Our Say: The Delany Sisters' First 100 Years"

2000

Cast in the Showtime movies, "A Storm in Summer" and "Finding Buck McHenry"; co-starred with husband Ossie Davis

2001

Returned to the NY stage in "St. Lucy's Eyes"

2006

With husband Ossie Davis, created the spoken word album, "With Ossie And Ruby: In This Life Together" (released after Ossie's death)

2007

Played Frank Lucas' (Denzel Washington) mother in "American Gangster"; earned an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress

2009

Co-starred with Rosie O'Donnell in the Lifetime movie, "America"; earned a SAG nomination for Best Actress in a TV Movie

Videos

Movie Clip

Raisin In The Sun, A (1961) -- (Movie Clip) I Wasn't No Rich White Woman We’ve just met Claudia McNeil, in the role she played on Broadway, as mother Lena, conferring with her daughter-in-law Ruth (Ruby Dee), returning to her Chicago apartment, discussing her grandson, her son, and the $10,000 insurance check she’s expecting following her husband’s death, in A Raisin In The Sun, 1961.
Raisin In The Sun, A (1961) -- (Movie Clip) That Check Coming Today? Opening, Daniel Petrie directing from Lorraine Hansberry’s screenplay based on her New York Drama Critics’ Circle Best-Play winner, Sidney Poitier and Ruby Dee as Walter and Ruth, in their Broadway roles, Stephen Perry their son Travis, in A Raisin In The Sun, 1961, also starring Claudia McNeil and Diana Sands.
Raisin In The Sun, A (1961) -- (Movie Clip) That Was My Biggest Mistake Having committed to invest in a liquor store, frustrated Chicago chauffeur Walter (Sidney Poitier) returns home, interested only in the insurance check his mother (Claudia McNeil) just received for his father’s death, unaware that his wife (Ruby Dee) is pregnant, and has visited an abortionist, in A Raisin In The Sun, 1961.
Raisin In The Sun, A (1961) -- (Movie Clip) Get Married And Shut Up! Scrapping with neighbors over the bathroom, Diana Sands is introduced as Beneatha, sister of frustrated Walter (Sidney Poitier), who’s been fighting with his wife Ruth (Ruby Dee) about the insurance check their mother is about to receive after their father’s death, in playwright Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin In The Sun, 1961.
Edge Of The City (1957) -- (Movie Clip) With Nine College Degrees First scene for Ruby Dee as Lucy, wife of Tommie (Sidney Poitier), hosting his increasingly close new friend and colleague Axel (John Cassavetes), who is surprised to learn schoolteacher Ellen (Kathleen Maguire) is also invited, in Martin Ritt's Edge Of The City, 1957.
Buck And The Preacher (1972) -- (Movie Clip) Wave To Your Man Wagon master Buck (director and star Sidney Poitier) headed home to Ruth (Ruby Dee), until he detects that she's being held by Deshay (Cameron Mitchell) and fellow "night riders," in Buck And The Preacher, 1972.
Tall Target, The -- (Movie Clip) About Mr. Lincoln Slave Rachel (Ruby Dee), finally convinced of a plot against president-elect Lincoln, tells policeman Kennedy (Dick Powell) what she knows, then her owner (Paula Raymond) intrudes, in Anthony Mann's The Tall Target, 1951.
Do The Right Thing (1989) -- (Movie Clip) Cleanest Sidewalk In Brooklyn Writer-director Spike Lee (as "Mookie") with Mother-Sister (Ruby Dee), and at work with Sal (Danny Aiello) and sons Pino and Vito (John Turturro, Richard Edson) and "Da Mayor," (Ossie Davis) early in Do The Right Thing, 1989.

Trailer

Promo

Family

Edward Nathaniel Wallace
Father
Railroad porter.
Gladys Hightower
Mother
Abandoned family to run off with a preacher.
Emma Wallace
Step-Mother
Former teacher.
Nora Davis
Daughter
Educator. Born c. 1950.
Guy Davis
Son
Musician. Born c. 1952.
Hasna Davis
Daughter
School principal. Born c. 1957.

Companions

Frank Dee
Husband
Distillery promoter. Briefly married; divorced in 1945.
Ossie Davis
Husband
Actor, writer, director. Married on December 9, 1948.

Bibliography

"With Ossie and Ruby: In This Life Together"
Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, William Morrow (1998)
"My Last Good Nerve"
Ruby Dee (1998)
"Glowchild"
Ruby Dee (1972)
"My One Good Nerve"
Ruby Dee, Third World Press
"Two Ways to Count to Ten"
Ruby Dee
"The Tower to Heaven"
Ruby Dee

Notes

Ruby Dee has been Emmy nominated for the "Express Stop From Lenox Avenue" episode on "The Nurses" (best single performance by leading actress; 1963/64), for "Roots: The Next Generation" (best supporting actress in limited series or special; 1978/79), for "Gore Vidal's Lincoln" (best supporting actress in a mini-series or special; 1987/88), and for the "Skylark" episode on "China Beach" (outstanding guest actress in a drama series; 1989/90).

Received a honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degree from Fairfield University, honorary doctorate from Iona College and Virginia State University.

She received (with husband) Frederick Douglass Award from NYC's Urban League for "bringing a sense of fervor and pride to countless millions" in 1970.

Given the Martin Luther King, Jr. Award from Operation Push (1972).

Named to the Theater Hall of Fame in 1988.

Received National Medal of Arts in 1995.