Actress Theresa Harris once shared with a reporter that her “greatest  ambition was to be known someday as a great Negro actress.” Harris was  born in 1911 in Houston, Texas to Anthony and Ina Harris. Her father was  a construction worker and her mother was a well-known dramatic reader  and school teacher. In the late 1920s, her family relocated to Southern  California, where Harris graduated from Jefferson High School with  scholastic honors and then studied music at the University of Southern  California Conservatory of Music and Zoellner’s Conservatory of Music.  She briefly pursued a career in theatre, gaining her most acclaimed role  as the title character in the Lafayette Player’s musical production of Irene.
In 1933, Harris married John Robinson, a prominent Los Angeles  physician. The same year, she received her first credited film role as a  domestic in the drama Baby Face and subsequently became one of RKO’s  most visible stock players. Although routinely donned in apron and head  wrap, Harris refused to comply with the mammy stereotype and parlayed  her dignified style in a plethora of Hollywood’s most classic films.  Under RKO, Harris later graduated to glamorous film roles,  semi-frequently showcasing her vocal abilities in solo segments.  Recognition as one of the industry’s leading African American actresses  followed rave reviews of  her role as comedian Eddie “Rochester”  Anderson’s costar in Buck Benny Rides Again (1940), which earned Harris a two-year, multi-picture contract with Paramount Studios.
While the majority of her appearances remained minor or uncredited,  Harris maintained visibility in more than 60 films and offered on-screen  companionship to many of Hollywood’s greatest icons – including Bette  Davis, Marlene Dietrich, Ginger Rogers, and Barbara Stanwyck. 
As one of the industry’s first sable-toned actresses to receive  credited and speaking roles, Harris also broke barriers by serving as a  member of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG), where she lobbied for dignified  roles for African American actors. In 1974, Harris was inducted into  the Black Filmmaker's Hall of Fame. She died in Englewood, California in  1985.
And so....continuing in the series of giving due respect to under appreciated talents of yore....I dedicate this afternoon pictorial to Ms. Theresa Harris.
 












There's a rich history of African-American actresses/actors and film artists with African ancestry who are featured in classic films. However, they're not shown that much on television, except occasionally on Turner Classic Movies. We film buffs need to see more of them like the so-called "race movies" which have a negative name but are really interesting. I saw Theresa Harris in "Baby Face" and she was great! Thanks for this gem of a web site!
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