Viola Davis


Tony-winning actress Viola Davis’ powerful and emotional performances in such plays as “Intimate Apparel” and “King Hedley II” made her a formidable presence on the American theater scene in the late 1990s and 2000s. Her profile in film and on television was somewhat lower, though she worked steadily in bit and supporting parts for directors ranging from Steven Soderbergh with “Out of Sight” (1998) and “Solaris” (2002) and Oliver Stone with “World Trade Center (2006), as well as in countless television series. Her turn as the morally ambiguous mother of a sexually abused student in “Doubt” (2008) gained near universal acclaim from critics, and signaled that the considerable talents she had shown in theaters would now gain wider exposure in films, as well.

Born Aug. 11, 1965 in St. Matthews, SC, she moved with her parents and three siblings to the predominately white neighborhood of Cedar Falls, RI for the majority of her childhood. The period was a difficult one for Davis and her family; father Dan’s work as a horse groomer at local race tracks could not keep them from struggling with abject poverty, and in later interviews, Davis recalled experiencing racial prejudice from members of the community. Her participation in such programs as Upward Bound and Student Support Services did much to direct her energies on academic achievements. Frequent trips to movie theaters also helped to soothe her soul, as well as foster an interest in acting, which became her main focus by her late teens.

Davis immersed herself in theater at the prestigious Julliard School, which afforded her extensive training and a ticket out of Cedar Falls. She later graduated from Rhode Island College with a degree in theater in 1988, and launched her career as a professional actor on stage and in films and on television. Her first on-screen role came with a bit part in the 1996 feature “The Substance of Fire.” By 2001, she had worked her way up to a semi-recurring role on the short-lived medical drama “City of Angels” (CBS, 2000) for Steven Bochco. Cast frequently as an authority figure – Davis counted numerous police officers, lawyers and medical professionals among her TV and film characters - her feature work grew slowly in stature, most notably a series of fruitful collaborations with director Steven Soderbergh that began with “Out of Sight” (1998) and eventually included “Traffic” (2000) and “Solaris” (2003).

Her theater career followed a similar path, with rave reviews for her turn in August Wilson’s “Seven Guitars” on Broadway in 1996 preceding a Tony win for Wilson’s “King Hedley II” in 2001. Her performance as an unwed mother struggling to earn her right to an abortion also earned her a Drama Desk Award, and she would net a second one in 2004 as a shy, turn-of-the-century seamstress who gambles with love in the off-Broadway play “Intimate Apparel.”

The increased exposure from Davis’ multiple awards seemed to help her standing in films and television; “Antwone Fisher” (2002) gave her screen time opposite Denzel Washington and an Independent Spirit Award nomination, and she was a regular cast member of the science fiction-themed law drama “Century City” (CBS, 2004) There were also recurring appearances in Tom Selleck’s “Jesse Stone” mysteries for CBS with “Stone Cold,” (2005) and as attorney Donna Emmett on “Law and Order: Special Victims Unit” (NBC, 1999- ), as well as supporting turns in big-screen features like “Get Rich or Die Tryin’” (2005), “World Trade Center” (2006) and “Disturbia” (2007).

In 2008, Davis was cast as Mrs. Miller in the film adaptation of John Patrick Shanley’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play “Doubt.” The mother of a young Catholic school student who was believed to have been molested by a popular priest, Miller casts doubt on the suspicions of Sister Aloysius (Meryl Streep) by suggesting that the relationship was not entirely one-sided. Her performance wowed critics across the country and earned Davis’ numerous nominations and awards, including the Breakthrough Award (Female) from the National Board of Review and a Golden Globe nomination for Best Supporting Actress. But her greatest honor came when she was nominated for her first Academy Award.

  • Born:
    August 11, 1965 in St. Matthews, South Carolina, USA
  • Job Titles:
    Actress
Family
  • Father: Dan Davis. Worked at Rhode Island s Narragansett Trotting Park and Lincoln Downs for 25 years
  • Mother: Mae Alice Davis.
  • Sister: Anita Davis. Champion of welfare reform in Central Falls
Significant Others
  • Husband: Julius Tennon. Married in 2003; they have two children together
  • Companion: Julius.
Education
  • The Juilliard School, New York, NY, drama
  • Rhode Island College, Providence, RI
Milestones
  • 1996 First TV role, had a small part in a episode of NYPD Blue (ABC)
  • 1996 Made Broadway debut in August Wilson s Seven Guitars ; earned a Tony nomination
  • 1996 Played a nurse in her film debut, The Substance of Fire
  • 1998 Cast as Cary Elwes secretary in the HBO film The Pentagon Wars
  • 1998 Featured in Steven Soderbergh s Out of Sight
  • 2000 Played Nurse Lynnette Peeler in the short-lived CBS drama City of Angels
  • 2000 Re-teamed with director Soderbergh to play a social worker in Traffic
  • 2001 Appeared in the ABC telecast of Oprah Winfrey s Amy & Isabelle, an adaptation of Elizabeth Strout s acclaimed debut novel
  • 2001 Portrayed Tonya in the Broadway production of August Wilson s King Hedley II
  • 2002 Cast in Denzel Washington s directorial debut, Antwone Fisher
  • 2002 Featured in the Todd Haynes directed Far from Heaven starring Julianne Moore
  • 2002 Third collaboration with director Soderbergh, Solaris
  • 2003 Had a recurring role on the NBC drama Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
  • 2004 Cast in the short-lived CBS show Century City as lawyer Hannah Crane
  • 2004 Starred in the Off-Broadway production of Intimate Apparel
  • 2005 Played the grandma in Get Rich or Die Tryin directed by Jim Sheridan and starring 50 Cent
  • 2006 Played Fantasia s mother in the Lifetime TV-movie Life Is Not a Fairytale: The Fantasia Barrino Story
  • 2007 Cast in the short-lived ABC series, Traveler, as Agent Jan Marlow
  • 2008 Cast as Mrs. Miller in John Patrick Shanley s film adaptation of his play Doubt
  • 2008 Nominated for the 2008 Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress In A Supporting Role in a Motion Picture (“Doubt”)
  • 2008 Nominated for the 2008 Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role (“Doubt”)
  • 2009 Appeared as a minister in Tyler Perry s Medea Goes to Jail
  • 2009 Cast as a pathologist in the thriller, State of Play
  • 2009 Nominated for the 2008 Academy Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role (“Doubt”)

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