Tina Andrews
Tina Andrews | |
---|---|
Born |
Tina Yvonne Andrews April 23, 1951 Chicago, Illinois, United States |
Occupation | Actress, producer, author, playwright |
Years active | 1971–1989 |
Spouse(s) | Stephen Gaines |
Tina Yvonne Andrews (born April 23, 1951) is an American actress, television producer, screenwriter, author and playwright. She is known for writing the TV mini-series, Sally Hemings: An American Scandal (2000), which was the first time that the Jefferson-Hemings relationship had been explored on TV, and with Hemings portrayed as a fully realized woman. In 2001, Andrews was the first African American to win the Writers Guild of America award for Original Long Form, for her script for this mini-series.[1] Andrews had earlier explored her interest in Hemings with a play, The Mistress of Monticello, which was read at a workshop in Chicago in 1985.
Biography
Tina Yvonne Andrews was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois. She attended New York University, where her major studies were in Drama.[1]
She spent many years acting in such series as Days of Our Lives, where she played the character Valerie Grant from 1975 to 1977. Her character was part of the first interracial romance shown on daytime television.[1] She also acted in the influential TV mini-series, Roots (1977), as Aurelia, the girlfriend of the character Kunta Kinte.
From this role, she met and became professional partners with Alex Haley, the author of the book on which it was based and the screenplay for the series. Haley hired Andrews to work with him on the miniseries Alex Haley's Great Men of African Descent, which aired on PBS. Haley also mentored Andrews' literary work.[1]
Andrews is married to Stephen Gaines, an award-winning producer in theatre, and documentary filmmaker.[2]
Writing career
Tina Andrews had been long interested in the story of Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson. She wrote a play, The Mistress of Monticello, which was produced in Chicago in 1985 to good notices.[3] About ten years later, her play was brought to the notice of producer Craig Anderson, and he started working with Andrews on developing it as a script for TV.[3] Her play was produced in staged readings at the Southampton Cultural Center in February 2013.[4]
Andrews ended up working on the Hemings project for nearly 16 years. She did research, both on Hemings, about whom little is known, and Jefferson. Craig Anderson had optioned the rights to historian Fawn McKay Brodie's 1974 biography of Jefferson, which had explored the possibility of the long-rumored relationship with Hemings. She concluded that they did have a liaison and children. While Andrews was working on her script, a DNA study in 1998 demonstrated a match between the male lines of descendants of Hemings and Jefferson, which shifted the consensus of major historians of Jefferson, such as Joseph Ellis. He announced that he believed that Jefferson had a long-term relationship with Hemings and fathered all her children. Andrews completed her script, and the team took it to production.[3]
In 2000, CBS aired Sally Hemings: An American Scandal. It was directed by Charles Haid and starred Carmen Ejogo as Hemings and Sam Neill as Jefferson.[5]
As PBS noted of the mini-series in a Frontline program, Jefferson's Blood (2000), about the Jefferson-Hemings controversy, "Though many quarrelled with the portrayal of Hemings as unrealistically modern and heroic, no major historian challenged the series' premise that Hemings and Jefferson had a 38-year relationship that produced children."[6]
Andrews has also written screenplays, including the movie, Why Do Fools Fall in Love (1998).
Other literary works
Following the production of the mini-series in 2000, Andrews published the non-fiction book Sally Hemings: An American Scandal: The Struggle to Tell the Controversial Truth (2001). It recounts her work over 16 years to bring Hemings' story to a larger audience. The book was published by Malibu Press.
She wrote an essay for The First Time I Got Paid For It: Writers Tales From the Hollywood Trenches (2002).
- Andrews novel, The Hollywood Dolls (2009), was published by Malibu Press.[1]
- Her Charlotte Sophia: Myth, Madness and the Moor (2010) is a historical novel about Charlotte of Mecklenburg, the wife of King George III of England. A paperback edition was published in 2013. She explores the life of the queen, building on a 21st theory that she had a black ancestor in the 13th century. Historians do not agree on this theory, and also argue that an ancestor so far removed means little, as Charlotte was raised in Germanic culture.[7]
- Andrews has adapted the Charlotte novel as a play called Buckingham, which premiered at the Southampton Cultural Center in May 2013.[8]
Awards and nominations
- 1999 nomination at the Acapulco Black Film Festival for Best Screenplay, for the 1998 movie Why Do Fools Fall in Love.
- 2001, Andrews was the first African American to win the Writers Guild of America award for Original Long Form, for her script for the 2000 miniseries Sally Hemings: An American Scandal.[1] She shared the award with Phil Alden Robinson and Stanley Weiser, who won for the 2000 movie Freedom Song.
- That year Andrews also won the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding TV Movie, Miniseries or Special.[1]
- 2002, she won two awards for her book about developing the Hemings story as a TV mini-series: the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Achievement in Literary Nonfiction[9] and the Literary Award of Excellence from the Memphis Black Writers Conference.[1]
- 2003, Andrews won the MIB/Prism Filmmaker Image Award, and she received a proclamation from the City Council of New York that year.[1]
Acting credits
Andrews played Valerie Grant in the hit soap opera series Days of Our Lives from 1975 to 1977. She also played Angie Wheeler in The Sanford Arms, in 1977, Aurelia in Roots, and Valerie on Falcon Crest in 1983. She played Josie in the TV movie Born Innocent with Linda Blair. She has also made guest appearances as characters on many shows, including The Odd Couple, Love Story, Sanford and Son, Good Times and The Brady Bunch. She also performed in films such as Conrack and Carny.
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Official Tina Andrews website". Tina Andrews. Retrieved 2008-11-12.
- ↑ "The Tina Andrews Picture Pages". www.superiorpics.com. Retrieved 2008-11-12.
- 1 2 3 Executive Producer Craig Anderson, Writer Tina Andrews, Director Charles Haid and Julia Jefferson Westerinen (Jefferson-Hemings descendant), "CONNECTING THE DOTS OF HISTORY: The Research and Points of View behind SALLY HEMINGS: AN AMERICAN SCANDAL", (part of CBS press kit for the mini-series), hosted at ibiblio, Sam Neill films, 2001
- ↑ The Mistress of Monticello, Southampton Cultural Center, accessed 24 September 2014
- ↑ "Review: 'Sally Hemings: An American Scandal'". Variety.com. February 10, 2000. Retrieved August 22, 2014.
- ↑ "The History of a Secret", Frontline: Jefferson's Blood, PBS, 1995–2011, accessed 5 May 2011
- ↑ Stuart Jeffries, 'Was this Britain's first black queen?', The Guardian, 11 March 2009, accessed 9 October 2014
- ↑ Dawn Watson, 'Bravo To 'Buckingham, The East Hampton Press & The Southampton Press, 11 May 2013, accessed 9 October 2014
- ↑ "Tina Andrews.(Black Issues Book Review)". Black Issues Book Review. 2002-05-01. Retrieved 2008-11-14.
Further reading
- Sally Hemings An American Scandal: The Struggle to Tell the Controversial Truth (autobiography), Malibu Press, 2001. ISBN 0970129548/ISBN 9780970129543
- Her essay in First Time I Got Paid for It: Writers Tales from the Hollywood Trenches, pp. 4–8 (autobiography), Di Capo Press, 2002. ISBN 0306810972/ISBN 9780306810978