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did whoopi goldberg pass away

American actor, comedian, and television personality (born 1955)

Whoopi Goldberg
Whoopi Goldberg (2011).jpg

Goldberg in 2011

Nativity proper noun Caryn Elaine Johnson
Born (1955-eleven-thirteen) Nov 13, 1955 (historic period 67)
New York City, New York, U.South.
Medium
  • Stand-upward
  • moving-picture show
  • television
  • theater
  • books
Years active 1982–nowadays
Genres
  • Observational comedy
  • blackness comedy
  • surreal humor
  • character comedy
  • satire
Subject(s)
  • African-American civilization
  • American politics
  • race relations
  • racism
  • marriage
  • sexual activity
  • everyday life
  • popular culture
  • current events
Spouse
  • Alvin Martin

    (yard. 1973; div. 1979)

  • David Claessen

    (m. 1986; div. 1988)

  • Lyle Trachtenberg

    (thou. 1994; div. 1995)

Partner(southward) David Schein (1980–1985)
Frank Langella (1995–2000)
Children Alexandrea Martin
Signature Whoopi Goldberg's signature.svg

Caryn Elaine Johnson (born November xiii, 1955),[i] [two] [3] known professionally as Whoopi Goldberg (), is an American actor, comedian, author and television personality.[iv] [v] A recipient of numerous accolades, she is i of eighteen entertainers to win the EGOT, which includes an Emmy Award, a Grammy Award, an University Award ("Oscar"), and a Tony Award. In 2001, she received the Mark Twain Prize for American Sense of humor.

Goldberg began her career on stage in 1983 with her one-adult female show, Spook Show, which transferred to Broadway under the title Whoopi Goldberg, running from 1984 to 1985. She won a Grammy Award for Best Comedy Album for the recording of the bear witness. Her moving-picture show breakthrough came in 1985 with her role as Celie, a mistreated woman in the Deep South, in Steven Spielberg's menstruation drama film The Color Purple, for which she won the Gold Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Moving-picture show – Drama. For her role as an eccentric psychic in the romantic fantasy motion picture Ghost (1990), she won the University Honour for Best Supporting Extra and a 2nd Gold Globe Honor. She starred in the one-act Sister Human action (1992) and its sequel Sister Human action two: Back in the Habit (1993), condign the highest-paid actress at the time. She also starred in Jumpin' Jack Flash (1986), Clara'southward Heart (1988), Soapdish (1991), Ghosts of Mississippi (1996), and Till (2022). She also is known for voicing roles in The Lion King (1994), and Toy Story 3 (2010).

On phase, Goldberg has starred in the Broadway revivals of Stephen Sondheim's musical A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum and August Wilson's play Ma Rainey's Black Bottom. She won a Tony Honour every bit a producer of the musical Thoroughly Modern Millie. In 2011 she received her third Tony Honour nomination for the stage adaptation of Sister Act (2011). On idiot box, Goldberg portrayed Guinan in the science fiction series Star Expedition: The Next Generation (1988-1993), and Star Trek: Picard (2022). Since 2007, she has co-hosted and moderated the daytime talk show The View, for which she won the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Talk Show Host. She has hosted the Academy Awards ceremony iv times.

Early life

Caryn Elaine Johnson was built-in in Manhattan, New York City,[half-dozen] on November thirteen, 1955,[1] [2] [3] the daughter of Emma Johnson (née Harris; 1931–2010),[vii] a nurse and teacher,[8] and Robert James Johnson Jr. (1930–1993), a Baptist[nine] clergyman. She was raised in a public housing project, the Chelsea-Elliot Houses, in New York City.[10]

Goldberg described her mother as a "stern, strong, and wise woman" who raised her equally a single mother with her brother Clyde (c.  1949 – 2015).[11] [12] She attended a local Catholic school, St Columba's. Her more recent forebears migrated n from Faceville, Georgia; Palatka, Florida; and Virginia.[13] She dropped out of Washington Irving High School.[14] [xv]

She has stated that her stage forename ("Whoopi") was taken from a whoopee cushion: "When yous're performing on phase, you never really take fourth dimension to go into the bathroom and shut the door. So if you get a little gassy, you've got to permit it get. So people used to say to me, 'Y'all're like a whoopee absorber.' And that's where the name came from."[16]

Nearly her phase surname, she claimed in 2011, "My mother did not name me Whoopi, merely Goldberg is my name—it's part of my family, part of my heritage, just like being blackness," and "I just know I am Jewish. I practice nothing. I don't go to temple, just I exercise recall the holidays."[17] She has stated that "people would say 'Come on, are y'all Jewish?' And I always say 'Would you ask me that if I was white? I bet not.'"[17] One account suggests that her female parent, Emma Johnson, thought the family's original surname was "not Jewish enough" for her girl to become a star.[17] Researcher Henry Louis Gates Jr. found that all of Goldberg'southward traceable ancestors were black, that she had no known German or Jewish beginnings, and that none of her ancestors were named Goldberg.[xiii] Results of a Deoxyribonucleic acid test, revealed in the 2006 PBS documentary African American Lives, traced part of her ancestry to the Papel and Bayote people of mod-24-hour interval Guinea-bissau of West Africa.[18] The show identified her not bad-great-grandparents William and Elsie Washington, who had acquired belongings in northern Florida in 1873, and mentions they were among a very small number of black people who became landowners through homesteading in the years following the Civil War. The testify also mentions that her grandparents were living in Harlem and that her granddad was working as a Pullman porter.[19]

According to an chestnut told by Nichelle Nichols in Trekkies (1997), a young Goldberg was watching Star Trek, and on seeing Nichols'due south character Uhura, exclaimed, "Momma! There's a black lady on television and she own't no maid!"[xx] This spawned Goldberg's lifelong Star Expedition fandom. Goldberg lobbied for — and was eventually cast — in a recurring invitee starring role every bit Guinan on Star Trek: The Next Generation.

In the 1970s, Goldberg moved to San Diego, California, where she became a waitress, and so to Berkeley,[21] where she worked odd jobs, including as a depository financial institution teller, a mortuary cosmetologist, and a stonemason.[22] She joined the avant-garde theater troupe the Blake Street Hawkeyes[22] and gave comedy and acting classes; Courtney Love was ane of her acting students.[23] Goldberg was also in a number of theater productions.[24] In 1978, she witnessed a midair collision of two planes in San Diego, causing her to develop a fear of flight and post-traumatic stress disorder.[25] [26]

Acting career

1980s

Goldberg trained nether acting teacher Uta Hagen at the HB Studio[27] in New York City. She first appeared onscreen in Citizen: I'one thousand Not Losing My Mind, I'g Giving It Away (1982), an avant-garde ensemble characteristic by San Francisco filmmaker William Farley.

In 1983[28] and 1984, she "kickoff came to national prominence with her i-woman show"[29] in which she portrayed Moms Mabley, Moms, first performed in Berkeley, California, then at the Victoria Theatre in San Francisco; the Oakland Museum of California preserves a affiche advertising the show.[30]

She created The Spook Show, a one-woman show composed of unlike character monologues in 1983. Managing director Mike Nichols "discovered" her when he saw her perform.[31] In an interview, he recalled that he "flare-up into tears", and that he and Goldberg "roughshod into each other's artillery" when they first met backstage.[32] Goldberg considered Nichols her mentor.[33] Nichols helped her transfer the testify to Broadway; where it was retitled Whoopi Goldberg and ran from October 24, 1984, to March 10, 1985. Information technology was taped during this run and broadcast by HBO as Whoopi Goldberg: Direct from Broadway in 1985.[34]

Goldberg's Broadway functioning defenseless the heart of managing director Steven Spielberg while she performed in The Belly Room at The One-act Shop.[35] Spielberg gave her the lead function in his film The Color Imperial, based on the novel past Alice Walker. It was released in tardily 1985 and was a critical and commercial success. Film critic Roger Ebert described Goldberg's performance as "one of the most astonishing debut performances in movie history".[36] It was nominated for 11 Academy Awards, including a nomination for Goldberg every bit All-time Extra.[37]

Betwixt 1985 and 1988, Goldberg was the busiest female star, making seven films.[38] She starred in Penny Marshall's directorial debut Jumpin' Jack Flash (1986) and began a relationship with David Claessen, a director of photography on the set; they married afterward that year. The film was a small-scale success, and during the next two years, iii additional motion pictures featured Goldberg: Burglar (1987), Fatal Beauty (1987), and The Telephone (1988). Though they were not as successful, Goldberg garnered awards from the NAACP Image Awards. Goldberg and Claessen divorced after the poor box function operation of The Telephone, in which she was contracted to perform. She tried unsuccessfully to sue the film'south producers. Clara'southward Heart (1988) did poorly at the box role, though her ain performance was critically acclaimed. Equally the 1980s concluded, she hosted numerous HBO specials of Comic Relief with beau comedians Robin Williams and Billy Crystal.[39]

1990s

In January 1990, Goldberg starred with Jean Stapleton in the situation comedy Bagdad Cafe (inspired past the 1987 film of the same proper name). The sitcom ran for 2 seasons on CBS. Simultaneously, she starred in The Long Walk Home, portraying a woman in the US civil rights motility. She played a psychic in the film Ghost (1990) and became the offset black adult female to win the University Award for Best Supporting Actress in nearly 50 years, and the 2nd black adult female to win an Academy Award for interim (the first being Hattie McDaniel for Gone with the Wind in 1940). She as well won the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role and the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Extra – Motion Picture. Premiere named her character Oda Mae Brown in its list of Summit 100 best film characters.[40]

Goldberg starred in Soapdish (1991) and had a recurring office on Star Expedition: The Adjacent Generation betwixt 1988 and 1993 as Guinan, a character she reprised in two Star Trek films. She made a cameo in the Traveling Wilburys 1991 music video "Wilbury Twist".[41] On May 29, 1992, the film Sister Act was released. Information technology grossed well over Us$200 million, and Goldberg was nominated for a Gilt Earth Award. That year, she starred in The Player and Sarafina!. She besides hosted the 34th Annual Grammy Awards, receiving praise from the Sun-Sentinel 'due south Deborah Wilker for bringing to life what Wilker considered "stodgy and stale" ceremonies.[42] During the next year, Goldberg hosted a tardily-night talk prove, The Whoopi Goldberg Show, and starred in 2 more than films: Made in America and Sis Act ii: Dorsum in the Addiction. With an estimated salary of $seven–12 1000000 for Sis Act 2: Back in the Addiction (1993), she was the highest-paid actress at the time.[43] [44] From 1994 to 1995, she appeared in Corrina, Corrina, The King of beasts King (voice), Theodore Rex, The Little Rascals, The Pagemaster (vocalism), Boys on the Side, and Moonlight and Valentino, and guest-starred on Muppets This evening in 1996.

In 1994, Goldberg became the first blackness adult female to host the Academy Awards anniversary starting with the 66th Oscar telecast.[45] She hosted it again in 1996, 1999, and 2002, and has been regarded as one of the show's best hosts.[46] [47]

Goldberg starred in four move pictures in 1996: Bogus (with Gérard Depardieu and Haley Joel Osment), Eddie, The Associate (with Dianne Wiest), and Ghosts of Mississippi (with Alec Baldwin and James Wood). During the filming of Eddie, she began dating co-star Frank Langella, a relationship that lasted until early 2000. In October 1997, she and ghostwriter Daniel Paisner cowrote Book, a collection featuring Goldberg'south insights and opinions.[48]

Too in 1996, Goldberg replaced Nathan Lane as Pseudolus in the Broadway revival of Stephen Sondheim'south musical comedy A Funny Matter Happened on the Way to the Forum.[49] Greg Evans of Variety regarded her "thoroughly modernistic way" as "a welcome invitation to a new audience that could find this 1962 musical as dated as ancient Rome".[50] The Washington Post 's Fleck Crews accounted Goldberg "a pip and a pro", and that she "ultimately [...] steers the testify past its crude spots".[51]

From 1998 to 2001, Goldberg took supporting roles in How Stella Got Her Groove Back with Angela Bassett, Girl, Interrupted with Winona Ryder and Angelina Jolie, Kingdom Come, and Rat Race with an all-star ensemble cast. She starred in the ABC-Idiot box versions of Cinderella, A Knight in Camelot, and Call Me Claus. In 1998 she gained a new audition when she became the "Centre Square" on Hollywood Squares, hosted by Tom Bergeron. She as well served as executive producer, for which she was nominated for iv Emmy Awards.[52] She left the series in 2002. In 1999, she voiced Ransome in the British animated children'due south bear witness Foxbusters by Cosgrove Hall Films. AC Nielsen EDI ranked her every bit the actress appearing in the most theatrical films in the 1990s, with 29 films grossing $1.iii billion in the U.S. and Canada.[53]

2000s

Goldberg hosted the documentary short The Making of A Charlie Brown Christmas (2001). In 2003, she returned to television in Whoopi, which was canceled after one flavor. On her 46th birthday, she was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. She also appeared alongside Samuel L. Jackson and Angela Bassett in the HBO documentary Unchained Memories (2003), narrating slave narratives. During the next ii years, she became a spokeswoman for Slim Fast and produced two boob tube series: Lifetime's original drama Strong Medicine, which ran six seasons; and Whoopi'due south Littleburg, a children's tv serial on Nickelodeon.

Goldberg returned to the stage in 2003, starring every bit blues singer Ma Rainey in the Broadway revival of August Wilson's historical drama Ma Rainey's Black Bottom at the Royale Theatre. She was also one of the show's producers.[54]

Goldberg was involved in controversy at a fundraiser for John Kerry at Radio City Music Hall in New York in July 2004 when she made a sexual joke about President George W. Bush by waving a bottle of wine, pointed toward her pubic area, and said, "We should go on Bush where he belongs, and non in the White House." Equally result, Slim-Fast dropped her from their advertizement campaign.[55] Later that yr, she revived her i-woman show at the Lyceum Theatre on Broadway in honor of its 20th anniversary; Charles Isherwood of The New York Times called the opening dark performance an "intermittently funny simply sluggish evening of comic portraiture".[31] Goldberg made guest appearances on Everybody Hates Chris as elderly character Louise Clarkson.[56]

From August 2006 to March 2008, Goldberg hosted Wake Upward with Whoopi, a nationally syndicated morning radio talk and entertainment programme.[56] In Oct 2007, Goldberg announced on the air that she was going to retire from acting because she was no longer sent scripts, maxim, "You know, in that location'south no room for the very talented Whoopi. There's no room correct now in the market place of cinema".[57] On December 13, 2008, she guest starred on The Naked Brothers Ring, a Nickelodeon stone- mockumentary television series. Before the episode premiered, on February 18, 2008, the band performed on The View and the band members were interviewed by Goldberg and Sherri Shepherd.[58] That same year, Goldberg hosted 62nd Tony Awards.[59]

2010s

In 2010, she starred in the Tyler Perry movie For Colored Girls, alongside Janet Jackson, Phylicia Rashad, Thandie Newton, Loretta Devine, Anika Noni Rose, Kimberly Elise, Kerry Washington, and Macy Grayness. The film received generally good reviews from critics and grossed over $38 million worldwide.[60] The same year, she voiced Stretch in the Disney/Pixar animated movie Toy Story 3. The picture show received critical acclaim and grossed $1.067 billion worldwide.[61]

Goldberg had a recurring function on the television series Glee during its tertiary and fourth seasons equally Carmen Tibideaux, a renowned Broadway performer and opera singer and the dean at a fictional performing arts college NYADA (New York Academy of the Dramatic Arts).[62] In 2011, she had a cameo in The Muppets.[63] In 2012, Goldberg guest starred every bit Jane Marsh, Sue Heck'south guidance advisor on The Heart. She voiced the Magic Mirror on Disney XD'southward The 7D. In 2014, she besides portrayed a character in the superhero film Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2014).[64] She also appeared equally herself in Chris Rock's Acme Five and starred in the romantic comedy flick Big Stone Gap.[65]

In 2016, Goldberg executive produced a reality television set series called Strut, based on transgender models from the modeling agency Slay Model Management in Los Angeles. The series aired on Oxygen.[66] In 2017, she voiced Ursula, the Sea Witch and Uma's mother, in the TV movie Descendants 2.[67] In 2018, she starred in the Tyler Perry'southward picture Nobody's Fool, alongside Tiffany Haddish, Omari Hardwick, Mehcad Brooks, Bister Riley and Tika Sumpter.[68] That same year, she besides starred in the one-act-drama moving picture Furlough, alongside Tessa Thompson, Melissa Leo and Anna Paquin.[69] [lxx]

In 2019, Goldberg's vocalisation was used for the role of the Giant's Wife in the Hollywood Basin production of Into the Wood.[71]

2020s

In an appearance on The View on Jan 22, 2020, Patrick Stewart invited Goldberg to reprise her role as Guinan during the second flavour of Star Trek: Picard.[72] She immediately accepted his offer.[73] Goldberg also starred in The Stand, a CBS All Access miniseries based on the 1978 novel of the same name by Stephen Male monarch, portraying Mother Abagail, a 108-year-old adult female.[74] In 2020, it was announced Goldberg was set to return in Sister Act 3 with Tyler Perry producing. The moving-picture show is slated to debut on Disney+.[75]

Goldberg also stars in the biographical pic Till, written and directed past Chinonye Chukwu, which she also produced.[76] The flick debuted at the 60th New York Picture show Festival.

Goldberg guest starred on the Disney Aqueduct testify Amphibia as the character Mother Olms.[77]

Influences

Goldberg has stated that her influences are Richard Pryor,[78] George Carlin,[79] Moms Mabley,[80] Lenny Bruce,[81] Joan Rivers, Eddie Irish potato, Nib Cosby, Sidney Poitier, and Harry Belafonte.[82]

Other ventures

The View

On September 4, 2007, Goldberg became the new moderator and co-host of The View, replacing Rosie O'Donnell.[83] Goldberg'south debut equally moderator drew three.iv meg viewers, 1 million fewer than O'Donnell'due south debut ratings. Nonetheless, after 2 weeks, The View was averaging 3.v million total viewers nether Goldberg, a 7-percentage increase from iii.3 million under O'Donnell the previous flavour.[84]

Goldberg has made controversial comments on the program on several occasions.[85] One of her first appearances involved defending Michael Vick's participation in dogfighting equally a result of "cultural upbringing".[86] [87] In 2009, she opined that Roman Polanski's rape conviction of a thirteen-yr-old in 1977[88] [89] was not "rape-rape".[90] [91] [92] She subsequently clarified that she had intended to distinguish between statutory rape and forcible rape.[93] The following twelvemonth, in response to declared comments by Mel Gibson considered racist, she said: "I don't like what he did here, but I know Mel and I know he's not a racist".[94]

In 2015, Goldberg was initially a defender of Beak Cosby from the rape allegations made against him, questioning why Cosby had never been arrested or tried for them.[95] [91] She later on changed her stance, stating that "all of the information that'southward out in that location kinda points to 'guilt'."[96] After learning that the statute of limitations on these allegations had expired and thus Cosby could not be tried, she likewise stated her back up for removing the statute of limitations for rape.[97]

On January 31, 2022, Goldberg drew widespread criticism for stating on the show that the Holocaust was not based on race but "nigh human being's inhumanity to man",[98] telling her co-hosts: "This is white people doing it to white people, so you going to fight among yourselves."[99] She apologized on Twitter later that mean solar day.[100] She maintained that the Nazis' event was with ethnicity and not race on The Late Evidence with Stephen Colbert that aforementioned 24-hour interval, which drew further criticism.[101] Goldberg issued another apology on air the post-obit day.[102] She was subsequently suspended from The View for two weeks over the comments.[103]

Media appearances

Goldberg performed the part of Califia, the Queen of the Island of California, for a theater presentation called Golden Dreams at Disney California Adventure Park, the second gate at the Disneyland Resort, in 2000. The show, which explains the history of the Golden State (California), opened on February 8, 2001, with the residual of the park. Golden Dreams closed in September 2008 to brand mode for the upcoming Little Mermaid ride planned for DCA. In 2001, Goldberg co-hosted the 50th Anniversary of I Love Lucy.[104]

In July 2006, Goldberg became the chief host of the Universal Studios Hollywood Studio Tour, in which she appears multiple times in video clips shown to the guests on monitors placed on the trams.[105]

She fabricated a guest appearance on the situation comedy 30 Rock during the series' fourth season, in which she played herself, counseling Tracy Jordan on winning the "EGOT", the coveted combination of Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony Awards.[106] On July 14, 2008, Goldberg announced on The View that from July 29 to September 7, she would perform in the Broadway musical Xanadu.[107] On November xiii, 2008, Goldberg's birthday, she announced live on The View that she would be producing, along with Stage Entertainment, the premiere of Sis Deed: The Musical at the London Palladium.[108] [109]

She gave a short bulletin at the starting time of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2008 wishing all the participants good luck, and stressing the importance of UNICEF, the official charity of the Junior Eurovision Vocal Competition.[110] Since its launch in 2008, Goldberg has been a contributor for wowOwow.com, a new website for women to talk culture, politics, and gossip.[111]

Goldberg has been a frequent invitee narrator at Disney's Candlelight Processional at Walt Disney World.[112] She made a guest appearance in Michael Jackson's short film for the song "Liberian Girl". She also appeared on the 7th season of the cooking reality series Hell's Kitchen equally a special guest. On January 14, 2010, Goldberg fabricated a one-night-only advent at the Minskoff Theatre to perform in the mega-hit musical The Panthera leo Male monarch.[113] That same yr, she attended the Life Ball in Austria.

Goldberg made her West End debut every bit the Mother Superior in a musical version of Sister Human activity for a limited engagement set for August 10–31, 2010,[114] but prematurely left the cast on Baronial 27 to be with her family; her mother had had a astringent stroke.[115] However, she later returned to the cast for five performances.[116] The show airtight on Oct xxx, 2010.[117]

Entrepreneurship

Goldberg co-founded Whoopi & Maya, a visitor that made medical cannabis products for women seeking relief from menstrual cramps.[118] Goldberg says she was inspired to go into business past "a lifetime of difficult periods and the fact that cannabis was literally the but thing that gave me relief".[119] The company was launched in April 2016 but announced in February 2020 that it was ceasing operations.[119] [120] In 2021, Goldberg appear the launch of a new line of cannabis products, "Emma & Clyde", named for her tardily mother and blood brother.[121] [122]

Philanthropy and activism

Goldberg (lower right) on the Spring 2003 cover of Ms. mag

In 2006, Goldberg appeared during the 20th anniversary of Comic Relief.[123] Goldberg is an abet for human rights, moderating a panel at the Alliance of Youth Movements Summit on how social networks can be used to fight violent extremism in 2008,[124] [125] and likewise moderating a panel at the Un on human rights, children and armed disharmonize, terrorism, and reconciliation in 2009.[126] On an episode of The View that aired on May nine, 2012, Goldberg stated she is a fellow member of the National Rifle Association.[127] [128]

On April 1, 2010, Goldberg joined Cyndi Lauper in the launch of her Requite a Damn entrada to bring a wider awareness of bigotry of the LGBT community and to invite straight people to ally with the gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender community.[129] Her high-profile support for LGBT rights and AIDS activism dates from the 1987 March on Washington, in which she participated.[130] In May 2017, she spoke in support of transgender rights at the 28th GLAAD Media Awards.[131]

Goldberg is on the Board of Selectors of Jefferson Awards for Public Service.[132] She also serves on the National Council Advisory Lath of the National Museum of American Illustration.[133] She was a speaker at the 2017 Women'due south March in New York City and was such over again at the following yr'south outcome.[134] [135]

On Jan 24, 2021, Goldberg appeared with Tom Everett Scott as guests on the Amairican Grabbuddies marathon fundraising episode of The George Lucas Talk Show, where she spoke of her time working on Snow Buddies and raised coin for the ASPCA.

Personal life

Goldberg has been married iii times. She was married to drug counselor Alvin Martin from 1973 to 1979;[136] [137] to cinematographer David Claessen from 1986 to 1988;[137] [138] and to union organizer Lyle Trachtenberg from 1994 to 1995.[137] She has had live-in relationships with actor Frank Langella[139] and playwright David Schein.[140] Her other ex-boyfriends include businessman Michael Visbal,[141] orthodontist Jeffrey Cohen,[142] camera operator Edward Gold[143] and actors Timothy Dalton[144] and Ted Danson.[145] Danson controversially appeared in blackface during his 1993 Friars Club roast; Goldberg wrote some of his jokes for the issue and defended Danson after a media furor.[146]

She has stated that she has no plans to ally again: "Some people are not meant to be married and I am non meant to. I'one thousand sure information technology is wonderful for lots of people."[137] In a 2011 interview with Piers Morgan, she explained that she was never in love with the men she married[147] and commented: "You have to really exist committed to them...I don't have that delivery. I'm committed to my family."[136]

On May nine, 1974, Goldberg gave birth to a girl, Alexandrea Martin, who also became an actress and producer.[148] Through her daughter, Goldberg has iii grandchildren and a dandy-granddaughter.[149] On August 29, 2010, Goldberg's mother, Emma Johnson, died after having a stroke.[150] She left London at the time, where she had been performing in the musical Sis Act, but returned to perform on October 22, 2010. In 2015, Goldberg'south brother Clyde died of a brain aneurysm.[151]

In 1991, Goldberg spoke out about her abortion in The Choices Nosotros Fabricated: Twenty-V Women and Men Speak Out Near Abortion. In that book, she spoke near using a coat hanger to terminate a pregnancy at age xiv.[152] She said she had had six or seven abortions past the age of 25 and that nascency control pills failed to stop several of her pregnancies.[153] After the 2022 Kansas abortion plebiscite, Goldberg claimed that God would back up ballgame rights because he gave women freedom of pick.[154]

Goldberg has stated that she was once a "functioning" drug addict.[155] She has stated that she smoked marijuana before accepting the All-time Supporting Extra laurels for Ghost in 1991.[156] [157]

Goldberg has dyslexia.[158] She has lived in Llewellyn Park, a neighborhood in West Orange, New Bailiwick of jersey, saying she moved there to exist able to be exterior in private.[159] She maintains an additional summer residence on the coast of Sardinia.[160] She has expressed a preference for defining herself by the gender-neutral term "actor" rather than "actress", saying: "An actress tin can only play a woman. I'm an actor–I tin can play anything."[5] In March 2019, Goldberg revealed that she had been battling pneumonia and sepsis, which caused her to accept a leave of absence from The View.[161]

Acting credits

Awards and honors

Having acted in over 150 films, Goldberg is i of the 17 people to achieve the EGOT, having won the four major American awards for professional entertainers: an Emmy (Television), a Grammy (Music), an Oscar (Film), and a Tony (Theater).[162] [163] [164] She is the first black woman to have achieved all iv awards.[165]

Goldberg has received two Academy Accolade nominations, for The Color Royal and Ghost, winning for Ghost.[166] [167] She is the first African-American histrion to have received Academy Award nominations for both Best Extra and Best Supporting Actress. She has received three Gilded Globe nominations, winning two (All-time Actress in 1986 for The Color Purple, and All-time Supporting Extra in 1991 for Ghost). For Ghost, she also won a BAFTA Accolade for Best Actress in a Supporting Office in 1991.[168] [169]

She won a Grammy Award for Best One-act Recording in 1985 for "Whoopi Goldberg: Direct from Broadway", condign only the second solo woman performer—not part of a duo or team—at the time to receive the honor, and the offset African-American woman. Goldberg is one of only iii single women performers to receive that honor.[170] [171] She won a Tony Award in 2002 as a producer of the Broadway musical Thoroughly Mod Millie. She has received viii Daytime Emmy nominations, winning ii. She has received nine Primetime Emmy nominations. In 2009, Goldberg won the Daytime Emmy Honor for Outstanding Talk Testify Host for her work on The View. She shared the accolade with her and then co-hosts Joy Behar, Sherri Shepherd, Elisabeth Hasselbeck, and Barbara Walters.

Goldberg is the recipient of the 1985 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding One-Person Show for her solo functioning on Broadway. She has won 3 People's Choice Awards. She has been nominated for v American One-act Awards with two wins (Funniest Supporting Actress in 1991 for Ghost and Funniest Actress in 1993 for Sis Act). She was the three-time (and inaugural) winner of the Kids' Selection Honor for Favorite Movie Actress.[172] In 2001, she became the commencement African-American female to receive the Marking Twain Prize for American Humour.[173]

In 1990, Goldberg was officially named an honorary member of the Harlem Globetrotters exhibition basketball team past the members.[174] In 1999, she received the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation Vanguard Accolade for her connected work in supporting the gay and lesbian community, as well every bit the Women in Film Crystal Award for outstanding women who, through their endurance and the excellence of their work, take helped to expand the function of women inside the entertainment industry.[175] In July 2010, the Ride of Fame honored Goldberg with a passenger vehicle tour bus in New York City for her life's achievements.[176] In 2017, Goldberg was named a Disney Legend for her contributions to the Walt Disney Visitor.[177]

Discography

  • 1985: Original Broadway Recording (Geffen/Warner Bros. Records)
  • 1985: The Color Imperial (Qwest/Warner Bros. Records)
  • 1988: Fontaine: Why Am I Straight? (MCA Records)
  • 1989: The Long Walk Home (Miramax Films)
  • 1992: Sarafina (Qwest/Warner Bros. Records)
  • 1992: Sister Act – Soundtrack (Hollywood/Elektra Records)
  • 1993: Sister Deed 2: Back in the Habit – Soundtrack (Hollywood/Elektra Records)
  • 1994: Corrina Corrina (New Line Cinema)
  • 2001: Call Me Claus (One Ho Productions)
  • 2005: Live on Broadway: The 20th Anniversary Show (DRG Records)

Bibliography

Children'southward books

  • Goldberg, Whoopi (2006). Whoopi's Large Volume of Manners. New York: Hyperion Books for Children. ISBN0-7868-5295-X.
  • Goldberg, Whoopi (2008). Sugar Plum Ballerinas #1: Plum Fantastic. New York: Hyperion Books for Children. ISBN978-1-4231-1173-iii.
  • Goldberg, Whoopi (2009). Sugar Plum Ballerinas #2: Toeshoe Problem . New York: Hyperion Books for Children. ISBN978-1-4231-1913-5.
  • Goldberg, Whoopi (2010). Sugar Plum Ballerinas #3: Perfectly Prima. New York: Hyperion Books for Children. ISBN978-ane-4231-2054-4.
  • Goldberg, Whoopi (October 2010). Sugar Plum Ballerinas #4: Terrible Terrel. New York: Hyperion Books for Children. ISBN978-1-4231-2082-7.
  • Goldberg, Whoopi (March 2011). Sugar Plum Ballerinas #v: Catastrophe . New York: Hyperion Books for Children. ISBN978-1-4231-2083-four.
  • Goldberg, Whoopi (October 2012). Sugar Plum Ballerinas #6: Dancing Divas. Los Angeles: Little People Books. ISBN978-one-4231-2084-1.

Non-fiction

  • Goldberg, Whoopi (1992). Alice. New York: Bantam Books. ISBN0-553-08990-0.
  • Goldberg, Whoopi (1997). Book. New York: R. Weisbach Books. ISBN0-688-15252-X.
  • Goldberg, Whoopi (October 2010). Is It Just Me? Or Is It Basics Out There?. New York: Hyperion. ISBN978-1-4013-2384-4.
  • Goldberg, Whoopi (October 2015). Whoopi's Large Book of Relationships: If Someone Says "You Complete Me," RUN!. New York: Hachette. ISBN978-0-316-30200-5.

Encounter also

  • Circulate journalism
  • List of people who accept won Academy, Emmy, Grammy, and Tony Awards
  • List of black University Award winners and nominees
  • List of black Golden World Award winners and nominees
  • New Yorkers in journalism

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Farther reading

  • Adams, Mary Agnes (1993). Whoopi Goldberg: From Street to Distinction. New York: Dillon Press. ISBN0-87518-562-2.
  • Antic, William (1999). Whoopi Goldberg: Comedian and Film Star. Springfield, NJ: Enslow Publishers. ISBN0-7660-1205-0.
  • DeBoer, Judy (1999). Whoopi Goldberg. Mankato, MN: The Creative Company. ISBN0-88682-696-9.
  • Gaines, Ann (1999). Whoopi Goldberg. Philadelphia: Chelsea House. ISBN0-7910-4938-8.
  • Parish, James Robert (1997). Whoopi Goldberg: Her Journey from Poverty to Megastardom. Secaucus, NJ: Carol Publishing Group. ISBN1-55972-431-5.

External links

  • Whoopi Goldberg at IMDbEdit this at Wikidata
  • Whoopi Goldberg at the Internet Broadway Database Edit this at Wikidata
  • Whoopi Goldberg at the Net Off-Broadway Database Edit this at Wikidata
  • Whoopi Goldberg at the TCM Movie Database Edit this at Wikidata
  • Whoopi Goldberg at AllMovie Edit this at Wikidata
  • Whoopi Goldberg at Emmys.com
  • Whoopi Goldberg at The Interviews: An Oral History of Boob tube
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Interview with The Sun Telegraph, May 2009
  • Whoopi Goldberg interview with KVUE-Idiot box in 1987 about her movie Burglar from Texas Archive of the Moving Prototype.
  • Whoopi Goldberg, on Enciclopedia Britannica, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
  • Whoopi Goldberg, on Discogs, Zink Media
  • Whoopi Goldberg, on Billboard
  • Whoopi Goldberg, on Rotten Tomatoes, Flixster Inc
  • Whoopi Goldberg, on Memory Alpha, Fandom
Media offices
Preceded by

Rosie O'Donnell

The View co-host
2007–present
Incumbent

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whoopi_Goldberg

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