Photo Flash: Remembering Tony Winner Roger Robinson

By: Oct. 01, 2018
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As BroadwayWorld reported last week, Tony Award-winning actor Roger Robinson died Wednesday, September 26, 2018 in Escondido, California from a complicated heart condition. He was 78.

Mr. Robinson was born May 2, 1940 in Seattle Washington to Roger Robinson, a musician and Naomi Robinson, an educator. He attended school in Bellevue Washington, where he graduated from Bellevue High School in 1958. He briefly attended Everett Junior College in Everett Washington. Eager to begin a career as an actor, he moved to Los Angeles California in 1959. During his time in Los Angeles he worked a variety of jobs before joining the United States Navy in September of 1960. He did his military basic training at the San Diego Naval Base and upon completion was sent to the Naval School of Music and then received orders to join the third Naval District Band in Brooklyn, New York, where he played the oboe and tenor saxophone.

He began studying acting with renowned director and teacher Lloyd Richards. In 1963, while still in the Navy, he auditioned and was hired for the role of a soldier in the Off-Broadway play, A Walk in Darkness. This marked his New York professional (Equity) theater debut. He continued to study acting with Mr. Richards and upon his discharge from active-duty, he took an acting job in a Summer Stock Theatre based in Cape May, New Jersey.

Mr. Robinson made his Broadway debut in 1969 in Does a Tiger Wear a Necktie? Subsequent Broadway appearances include: Ain't Suppose to Die a Natural Death, The Amen Corner (Musical), The Iceman Cometh, Drowning Crow, The Miser, and Seven Guitars, which garnered him his first Tony Award nomination. In 2009, he won the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play for the revival of Joe Turner's Come and Gone.

He also appeared in over 30 Off Broadway plays and has played major roles in most of the prestigious regional theaters in the US. At the Royal National Theatre in London, he played the role of Becker in August Wilson's Jitney (Olivier Award winner). Robinson's final stage performance was in the Off Broadway production of Some Old Black Man. He is the first African American to receive the Richard Seff Award, presented annually by the Actors' Equity Foundation to an actor fifty years of age or older for his performance in a supporting role in a Broadway or off-Broadway production.

We remember the late actor below...

Photo Credit: Walter McBride

Photo Flash: Remembering Tony Winner Roger Robinson
Roger Robinson in the Press Room at the 63rd Annual Antoinette Perry Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall in New York City on June 7, 2009.

Photo Flash: Remembering Tony Winner Roger Robinson
Roger Robinson attending the Opening Night Broadway performance for the Broadway Revival of August Wilson's "FENCES", Cort Theatre, New York City. April 26, 2010

Photo Flash: Remembering Tony Winner Roger Robinson
Roger Robinson attending the Opening Night Performance After Party for the Lincoln Center Theater's Production of August Wilson's "JOE TURNER'S COME AND GONE" at the Millenium Hotel in New York City. April 16, 2009

Photo Flash: Remembering Tony Winner Roger Robinson
Afton C. Williamson & Roger Robinson attending the Opening Night Performance After Party for the Lincoln Center Theater's Production of August Wilson's "JOE TURNER'S COME AND GONE" at the Millenium Hotel in New York City. April 16, 2009

Photo Flash: Remembering Tony Winner Roger Robinson
Roger Robinson attending the American Theatre Wing's 2009 Tony Award Meet the Nominees Press Reception at the Millenium Hotel in New York City. May 6, 2009

Photo Flash: Remembering Tony Winner Roger Robinson

Photo Flash: Remembering Tony Winner Roger Robinson
Roger Robinson attending the Opening Night Broadway performance for the Broadway Revival of August Wilson's "FENCES", Cort Theatre, New York City. April 26, 2010



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