Tommie Moore (December 2, 1917 – August 17, 2004) was an actress in theater, film, and television.[1] She was born Pretty Tomiwitta Moore and shortened her name, though she was sometimes credited as Tomiwitta Moore.
Early life
Moore was a native of Pasadena, California, where she performed on the stage as a child.[2] She was given the name "Tomiwitta" because her father had wanted a boy to name "Thomas".[3]
Career
She traveled to New York to go to dramatic school, but instead became a page girl at the Cotton Club. One of her job duties was to escort W.C. Handy on and off the stage.[4]
Moore toured in the starring role in a touring production of Claudia in 1946.[5][6] She left Claudia[7] for the original theatrical production of Beggar's Holiday the same year[8][9] playing Tawdry Audrey.[10] In the production, she had to run across the stage in a two-handkerchief bathing suit.[11]
She performed as part of the chorus of three (with Eartha Kitt and Helena Hughes) in Orson Welles' production of The Blessed and the Damned in Paris in 1950.[12][13][14] Both Beggar's Holiday and The Blessed and the Damned in Paris had music by Duke Ellington.
In her film career, she received positive notice for her role in The Green-Eyed Blonde (1957);[15] a Variety review called her a "standout"[16] and Ebony magazine profiled her around the time of the film's release.[3]
^ ab"Movie Features Blossoming Star: Tommie Moore gets 'gratifying' role in film story of modern correction school." Ebony. Nov 1957, Vol. 13, Issue 1, p 93-96.