Sharon Washington (actress)

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Born
Sharon Washington

(1960-09-12) September 12, 1960 (age 65)
Occupations
  • Actress
  • playwright
Sharon Washington
Born
Sharon Washington

(1960-09-12) September 12, 1960 (age 65)
EducationDartmouth College (BA)
Yale University (MFA)
Alma materThe Dalton School
Occupations
  • Actress
  • playwright
Years active1987–present
Notable workFeeding the Dragon (2018)
New York, New York (2023)
Spouse
Chuck Schultz
(m. 2002)
AwardsTony Award (nomination)
Outer Critics Circle Award (nomination)
Lucille Lortel Award (nomination)
Drama League Award (nomination)

Sharon Washington (born September 12, 1960) is an American actress and playwright, best known for her work on stage.[1] In 2018, her one-woman show Feeding the Dragon was produced Off-Broadway by Primary Stages, earning nominations for the Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Solo Show and the Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Solo Performance. The play was subsequently published by Oberon Modern Plays[2] and adapted as an Audible Original.[3]

In 2023, Washington co-authored the book for New York, New York with David Thompson. The musical, which features music by John Kander, and lyrics by Fred Ebb and Lin-Manuel Miranda, premiered on Broadway at the St. James Theatre. Loosely based on the 1977 film of the same name by Martin Scorsese,[4] the production earned nine Tony Award nominations, including Best Musical and Best Book of a Musical.[5]

A veteran stage performer, Washington has appeared on Broadway in The Scottsboro Boys at the Lyceum Theatre,[6] as well as numerous Off-Broadway productions at The Public Theater, Manhattan Theatre Club, Roundabout Theatre Company, Lincoln Center Theater, Second Stage Theater, Vineyard Theatre, and New York City Center Encores!, among others.[7] Her film roles include Debra Kane in Joker (2019) and its sequel Joker: Folie à Deux (2024).[8] On television, she is best known for playing Joyce Thomas in the Starz original series Power Book III: Raising Kanan (2021–2025).[9]

The St. Agnes branch of the New York Public Library where Washington lived as a child.

Washington was born on September 12, 1960, in New York City to Connie and George King Washington. Her mother was a New York native who worked as a church secretary. Her father was a South Carolina native who served in the Navy, and later worked as a custodian for the New York Public Library.[10]

Due to her father's work, Washington grew up in an apartment inside the St. Agnes branch of the New York Public Library on Manhattan's Upper West Side.[11] She graduated from The Dalton School on the Upper East Side. She later matriculated to Dartmouth College, earning a B.A. in Government and African American Studies in 1981. After college, she worked as an assistant to Barry Grove, the Executive Producer of Manhattan Theatre Club.[12] She subsequently earned an M.F.A. in Acting from the Yale School of Drama in 1988.[13]

Career

Acting

Washington began her professional career in 1987 while still a student at Yale Drama School, appearing as Grace in the World Premiere of August Wilson's The Piano Lesson at the Yale Repertory Theatre, directed by Lloyd Richards.[14] The following year she understudied the role of Frosine in Molière's The Miser at the Yale Rep, directed by Andrei Belgrader.[15] After graduating from Yale, Washington made her Off-Broadway debut as Valeria in William Shakespeare's Coriolanus at The Public Theater, appearing opposite Christopher Walken in the title role. The production was directed by Steven Berkoff.[16] In 2010, Washington made her Broadway debut as The Lady in the Kander and Ebb musical The Scottsboro Boys at the Lyceum Theatre, directed by Susan Stroman. The production received a record 12 Tony Award nominations, including for Best Musical.[17]

Washington's early Off-Broadway roles include Helen in Shakespeare's Cymbeline at The Public Theater's Shakespeare in the Park (1989) directed by JoAnne Akalaitis, appearing opposite Joan Cusack as Imogen;[18] Anne Neville in Shakespeare's Richard III at The Public Theater (1990) directed by Steven Berkoff, appearing opposite Denzel Washington as Richard;[19] and Natella Abashwili (The Governor's Wife) in Bertolt Brecht's The Caucasian Chalk Circle at The Public Theater (1990) directed by George C. Wolfe, appearing opposite Charlayne Woodard as Gresha.[20]

Her additional Off-Broadway credits as an actress, include Cheryl West's Before It Hits Home at The Public Theater/Second Stage Theater (1992) directed by Tazewell Thompson;[21] Catherine Butterfield's Joined at the Head at Manhattan Theatre Club (1992) directed by Pamela Berlin;[22] Arthur Laurents' The Radical Mystique at Manhattan Theatre Club (1995) directed by Laurents; Kia Corthron's Seeking the Genesis at Manhattan Theatre Club (1997) directed by Kaia Calhoun;[23] Alan Ayckbourn's House & Garden plays at Manhattan Theatre Club (2002) directed by John Tillinger;[24] Michele Lowe's String of Pearls at Primary Stages (2004) directed by Eric Simonson;[25] David Hare's Stuff Happens at The Public Theater (2006) directed by Daniel J. Sullivan;[26] J. T. Rogers's The Overwhelming at Roundabout Theatre Company (2007) directed by Max Stafford-Clark;[27] Patrick Barnes's Let Me Put It This Way at The Public Theater (2008) directed by Maria Manuela Goyanes;[28] Kander and Ebb's The Scottsboro Boys at Vineyard Theatre (2010) directed by Susan Stroman;[29] Kurt Weill & Maxwell Anderson's Lost in the Stars at New York City Center Encores! (2011) directed by Gary Griffin;[30] Colman Domingo's Wild With Happy at The Public Theater (2012) directed by Robert O'Hara, for which she was nominated for the 2013 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Play;[31] JC Lee's Luce at Lincoln Center Theater (2013) directed by May Adrales;[32] Billy Porter's While I Yet Live at Primary Stages (2014) directed by Sheryl Kaller;[33][better source needed] Colman Domingo's Dot at Vineyard Theatre (2016) directed by Susan Stroman;[34] Washington's own one-woman play, Feeding the Dragon at Primary Stages (2018) directed by Maria Mileaf;[35] Queen Margaret in Shakespeare's Richard III at The Public Theater (2022) directed by Robert O'Hara;[36] and Harvey Fierstein's La Cage aux Folles at New York City Center Encores! (2026) directed by Robert O'Hara.[37]

Washington made her Off-Broadway debut at The Public Theater, where she's appeared in productions Coriolanus, Cymbeline, Richard III, The Caucasian Chalk Circle, Before It Hits Home, and Stuff Happens, among others.

Washington's Regional theatre credits include George Bernard Shaw's Man and Superman at Baltimore Center Stage (1989) directed by Stan Wojewodski Jr.;[38] David Feldshuh's Miss Evers' Boys at Philadelphia Theatre Company (1992) directed by Kent Gash;[39] William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night at Arena Stage (1993) directed by Douglas C. Wager;[40] Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet at Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey (1994) directed by Jimmy Bohr;[40] Lonne Elder III's Ceremonies in Dark Old Men at Long Wharf Theatre (1995) directed by Kenneth L. Richardson;[41] Kia Corthron's Digging Eleven at Hartford Stage (1999) directed by Reggie Montgomery;[42] Cheryl West's Jar the Floor at the Seattle Repertory Theatre (2000) directed by Gilbert McCauley;[43] Michele Lowe's String of Pearls at City Theatre (2003) directed by Eric Simonson;[44] Tracey Scott Wilson's The Story at Long Wharf Theatre (2004) directed by Loretta Greco;[13] Lynn Nottage's Intimate Apparel at the Guthrie Theatre (2005) directed by Timothy Bond;[45] Shakespeare's King Lear at Denver Center Theatre Company (2007) directed by Kent Thompson;[46] Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor at Denver Center Theatre Company (2008) directed by David Ivers;[47] Kander and Ebb's The Scottsboro Boys at the Guthrie Theatre (2010) directed by Susan Stroman;[48] Billy Porter's While I Yet Live at Powerhouse Theater (2012) directed Ed Sylvanus Iskandar;[49] Colman Domingo's Dot at the Actors Theatre of Louisville's 39th annual Humana Festival of New American Plays (2015) directed by Meredith McDonough;[50] August Wilson's Seven Guitars at the Actors Theatre of Louisville (2015) directed by Colman Domingo;[51] and Washington's own one-woman play, Feeding the Dragon at City Theatre (2016)[52] and Hartford Stage (2018) directed by Maria Mileaf.[53]

Washington made her small screen debut in 1988 in an episode of the short lived ABC action series A Man Called Hawk. Her other television appearances include the NBC soap opera Guiding Light (1992); the ABC miniseries North and South (1994); the NBC procedural Law & Order (1994–2006); the Fox science fiction series Space: Above and Beyond (1995); the Fox police drama New York Undercover (1996); the CBS sitcom Cosby (1997); the ABC sitcom Soul Man (1998); the ABC family drama Trinity (1998); the NBC procedural Law & Order: SVU (2000–2016); the FX legal thriller Damages (2009); the USA medical comedy-drama Royal Pains (2009); the NBC procedural Law & Order: Criminal Intent (2009); the CBS police procedural NYC 22 (2012); the Blip.tv comedy-drama Hustling (2012–2014) for which she won an Indie Series Award for Best Supporting Actress; the USA police procedural White Collar (2012); the CBS crime drama Golden Boy (2013); the NBC crime thriller The Blacklist (2013); the Fox superhero crime drama Gotham (2014–2015); the Hulu miniseries The Looming Tower (2018); the CBS military drama The Code (2019); the Showtime crime drama City on a Hill (2019); the CBS political drama Madam Secretary (2019); the ABC legal drama For Life (2020); the CBS legal drama Bull (2021); and the Starz crime drama Power Book III: Raising Kanan (2021–2025).[9]

Washington made her big screen debut as Estelle in the 1992 Spike Lee film Malcom X. Her other film appearances include Die Hard with a Vengeance (1995); The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996); The Confession (2000); Waking the Dead, Enslavement: The True Story of Fanny Kemble, and Lisa Picard is Famous (2000); 3 A.M. (2001) School of Rock (2003); Half Nelson and Freedomland (2006); Michael Clayton and The Life Before Her Eyes (2007); Taking Chance (2009); An Invisible Sign and Rocksteady (2010); The Bourne Legacy (2012); Torn (2013); Mistress America (2015); Wiener-Dog (2016); Seaside and On the Basis of Sex (2018); The Kitchen and Joker (2019); Sing Sing (2023); and Joker: Folie à Deux (2024).[8]

Feeding the Dragon

In December 2009, a feature article in The New York Times entitled "Stoking the Furnace, and a Love for Books," chronicled Washington's unique childhood growing up within the walls of the New York Public Library.[54] Her mailbox was subsequently inundated with people "wanting to write her story." Washington ultimately opted to write her own story, which eventually took the form of her one-woman play, Feeding the Dragon.[55]

Feeding the Dragon had its world premiere at City Theatre in Pittsburgh, PA in October 2016.[52] The play was later premiered Off-Broadway at Primary Stages in March 2018,[56] in association with Jamie deRoy and Hartford Stage. All three productions starred Washington, and were directed by Maria Mileaf.[53] While developing the script, Washington was a 2017-18 Tow Foundation Playwright-in-Residence at Primary Stages.[57] The play received critical acclaim, holding a score of 82% on the review aggregator Show-Score.[58] Pete Hempstead, in a review for TheaterMania praised the production, writing "Washington has a storyteller's gift for animating her tale with lively and distinct impersonations of people from her past, and her easygoing delivery has a way of making us feel like we're taking part in a story-time hour. That endearing aspect of the show makes Washington a pleasure to watch."[59]

Feeding the Dragon was nominated for the Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Solo Show and the Outer Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Solo Performance. The play was subsequently published by Oberon Modern Plays[2] and adapted as an Audible Original.[3] As an audio play, Feeding the Dragon was selected as an "Audible Essentials Top 100 pick" and has been optioned for development into a live-action/animated YA series. Washington is currently working on a picture book adaptation of the play, entitled The Little Girl Who Lived in the Library for Scholastic. Washington's creative journey working on the play is chronicled in the award-winning documentary film When My Sleeping Dragon Woke directed by Chuck Schultz and Judah Lev-Dickstein.[60]

New York, New York

New York, New York premiered on Broadway at the St. James Theatre, running from March 24 through July 30, 2023.

In 2023, alongside David Thompson, Washington co-authored the book for New York, New York, a musical with music by John Kander, lyrics by Fred Ebb and Lin-Manuel Miranda. Inspired by and loosely based on the 1977 film of the same name by Martin Scorsese,[4] the musical premiered on Broadway at the St. James Theatre with the first preview occurring on March 24, 2023. The cast, which was announced on February 1 of the same year, included Clyde Alves, Emily Skinner, and Janet Dacal.[61] It officially opened on April 26, 2023,[62] and closed on July 30, 2023, having played 33 previews and 110 regular performances.[63]

Despite receiving mixed reviews and becoming a commercial disappointment, the Broadway production, directed and choreographed by Susan Stroman, received nine Tony Awards at the 76th Tony Awards including Best Musical and Best Book of a Musical, winning the award for Best Scenic Design in a Musical.[64] Additionally, the production received six Drama Desk Award nominations, four Drama League Award nominations, and twelve Outer Critics Circle Award nominations, including for Outstanding New Broadway Musical.[65]

Personal life

Washington has been married to documentary filmmaker Chuck Schultz since 2002. The couple lives together in Millbrook, New York.[12]

Washington serves on the board of overseers for the Hopkins Center for the Arts at her alma mater, Dartmouth College. She previously served on the National Board of Directors for SAG-AFTRA.[12]

Credits

Film

Year Title Role Notes Ref.
1992 Malcolm X Augusta [8]
1993 Blind Spot Donna TV movie [8]
1995 Die Hard With a Vengeance Officer Jane [8]
1996 The Long Kiss Goodnight Fran Henessey [8]
1999 The Confession Hospital Administrator [8]
2000 Waking the Dead Kelly [8]
Enslavement: The True Story of Fanny Kemble Psyche TV movie [8]
Lisa Picard is Famous Anna Chenier [8]
2001 3 A.M. Mother [8]
2003 School of Rock Alicia's Mother [8]
2006 Half Nelson Suzanne [8]
Freedomland Rose [8]
2007 Michael Clayton Pam [8]
The Life Before Her Eyes Nurse [8]
2009 Taking Chance Mortuary Nurse TV movie [8]
2010 An Invisible Sign Levan's Mom [8]
Rocksteady Winnie Cook [8]
2012 The Bourne Legacy C-Team [8]
2013 Torn Agent Reese [8]
2015 Mistress America Professor [8]
2016 Wiener-Dog Phillips [8]
2017 Approaching a Breakthrough Professor Spiegel Short film [8]
2018 Seaside Angela [8]
On the Basis of Sex Pauli Murray [8]
2019 The Kitchen Estelle [8]
Joker Debra Kane [8]
2021 Down with the King Darlene [8]
2022 88 Principal [8]
2023 Sing Sing Clemency Hearing Chair [8]
2024 Joker: Folie à Deux Debra Kane [8]

Television

Year Title Role Notes Ref.
1989 A Man Called Hawk Carol Episode: "Poison" [9]
Guiding Light Karen Kennedy Episode: #1.11482 [9]
1994 North and South Jane 3 episodes [9]
1994–2006 Law & Order Various 4 episodes [9]
1995 Space: Above and Beyond Crew Chief Episode: "Hostile Visit" [9]
1996 One Life to Live Dr. Laurie Phillips Recurring, Season 28 [9]
New York Undercover Dr. Brown Episode: "Blue Boy" [9]
1997 Cosby Beth Edwards Episode: "I'm OK, You're Hilton" [9]
1998 Soul Man Summer Kincaid Episode: "Grabbed by an Angel" [9]
Trinity Lily Episode: "In a Yellow Wood" [9]
2000–2016 Law & Order: SVU Various 7 episodes [9]
2009 Damages Monique Bryant 2 episodes [9]
Law & Order: Criminal Intent Hillis Episode: "Folie a Deux" [9]
Royal Pains Nancy 2 episodes [9]
2012 NYC 22 Kia Episode: "Schooled" [9]
White Collar Lawyer Episode: "Compromising Positions" [9]
2012–2014 Hustling Lena 9 episodes [9]
2013 Golden Boy Rosemary Clay Episode: "Pilot" [9]
The Blacklist Prosecutor Episode: "The Stewmaker" [9]
2014 Blue Bloods Dorris Cooper Episode: "Manhattan Queens" [9]
2014–2015 Gotham Molly Mathis 2 episodes [9]
2018 The Looming Tower Judith 7 episodes [9]
2019 The Code Tiffany Dixon Green 2 episodes [9]
City on a Hill Shirley Hanlon 3 episodes [9]
Madam Secretary Chelsea Weldon Episode: "Deepfake" [9]
2020 For Life Barbara 3 episodes [9]
2021 Bull Olivia Powell 3 episodes [9]
2021–2024 Power Book III: Raising Kanan Joyce Thomas 12 episodes [9]
2023 Great Performances Queen Margaret Episode: "Richard III" [9]

Music videos

Year Title Role Artist
1988 "Plaything" Dancer Rebbie Jackson

Stage

Year Title Role Playwright Venue Ref.
1987 The Piano Lesson Grace August Wilson Yale Repertory Theatre [66][67]
1988 The Miser Frosine (u/s) Molière [66][67]
1989 Man and Superman Violet Robinson George Bernard Shaw Baltimore Center Stage [66][67]
Coriolanus Valeria William Shakespeare The Public Theater [66][67]
Cymbeline Lady Helen/Soldier [66][67]
1990 Richard III Lady Anne [66][67]
The Caucasian Chalk Circle Natella Abashwili Bertolt Brecht [66][67]
1991 The Dramatic Circle Alice Alexander Adrienne Kennedy WNYC [66][67]
Miss Evers' Boys Eunice Evers David Feldshuh Philadelphia Theatre Company [66][67]
1992 Before It Hits Home Simone/Miss Peterson Cheryl West Second Stage Theater &
The Public Theater
[66][67]
Joined at the Head Political Woman/Doctor Catherine Butterfield Manhattan Theatre Club [66][67]
1993 Twelfth Night Viola William Shakespeare Arena Stage [66][67]
1994 Romeo and Juliet Lady Capulet William Shakespeare Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey [66][67]
1995 Ceremonies in Dark Old Men Adele Eloise Parker Lonne Elder III Long Wharf Theatre [66][67]
The Radical Mystique Janice Catlett Arthur Laurents Manhattan Theatre Club [66][67]
1997 Seeking the Genesis Teacher Kia Corthron [66][67]
1999 Digging Eleven Ray Hartford Stage [66][67]
2000 Jar the Floor Maydee Cheryl West Seattle Repertory Theatre [66][67]
2002 House & Garden Fran Briggs Alan Ayckbourn Manhattan Theatre Club [66][67]
2003 String of Pearls Woman #4 Michele Lowe City Theatre [66][67]
2004 The Story Pat Tracey Scott Wilson Long Wharf Theatre &
The Public Theater
[66][67]
2004 String of Pearls Woman #4 Michele Lowe Primary Stages [66][67]
2005 Intimate Apparel Esther Lynn Nottage Guthrie Theater [66][67]
2006 Stuff Happens Condoleezza Rice David Hare The Public Theater [66][67]
2007 The Overwhelming Élise Kayitesi J. T. Rogers Roundabout Theatre Company [66][67]
King Lear Goneril William Shakespeare Denver Center Theatre Company [66][67]
2008 Let Me Put it This Way Sara Patrick Barnes The Public Theater [66][67]
Merry Wives of Windsor Mistress Page William Shakespeare Denver Center Theatre Company [66][67]
2010 The Scottsboro Boys The Lady Kander and Ebb Vineyard Theatre [66][67]
Guthrie Theater [66][67]
Lyceum Theatre [66][67]
2011 Lost in the Stars Grace Kumalo Maxwell Anderson & Kurt Weill New York City Center Encores! [66][67]
2012 Wild With Happy Adelaide/Aunt Glo Colman Domingo The Public Theater [66][67]
2013 Luce Harriet JC Lee Lincoln Center Theater [66][67]
2014 While I Yet Live Eva Billy Porter Primary Stages [66][67]
2015 Dot Shelly Colman Domingo Actors Theatre of Louisville [66][67]
Seven Guitars Louise August Wilson [66][67]
2016 Dot Shelly Colman Domingo Vineyard Theatre [66][67]
Feeding the Dragon Various Sharon Washington City Theatre [66][67]
2018 Hartford Stage [66][67]
2018 Primary Stages [66][67]
2022 Richard III Queen Margaret William Shakespeare The Public Theater [66][67]
2026 La Cage aux Folles Marie Harvey Fierstein New York City Center Encores! [66][67]

Awards and nominations

References

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