|
|
|
Lugar y fecha de nacimiento. Cathy Tyson (1965 - ) Actress Born: c. 1965, Kingston-on-Thames, Surrey, England Education: St. Winifred's Roman Catholic School for Girls This strikingly attractive Black English performer made a memorable feature debut playing an enigmatic high-class call girl with a secret or two in Neil Jordan MONA LISA (1986). As the mysterious love-object of her driver, a short, dull-witted but good-hearted ex-con (Bob Hoskins), Tyson projected what the New York Times hailed as a magical screen personality
beautiful, intelligent, and hard as nails. The press hype of the day selected her for future film stardombut something subsequently went awry with her movie career. Raised in Liverpool as the only daughter of a Black Trinidadian barrister father and white Irish-descended social worker mother, Tyson boasted an intriguing biracial beauty. She was also serious about acting as she demonstrated in a stint on the London stage with the Royal Shakespeare Company. Tyson worked her way up the theatrical ranks before landing her high-profile role in Jordan's breakthrough dark romance. Perhaps her type was deemed too exotic but, whatever the reason, the promising actress never really followed up on her early film success. Tyson resurfaced in the ensemble for NEGOCIOS COMUNES (1987), an earnest drama of the British working class, playing a sexually harassed dress shop worker. The following year, she made an inauspicious American screen debut playing a progressive Haitian psychiatrist trying to battle the effects of superstition on her people in Wes Craven voodoo thriller LA SERPIENTE Y EL ARCO IRIS (1988). Tyson received some positive notices but the uneven film was generally dismissed as exploitation fare. Her next feature appearance in TURBULENCE (1991), a drama about child sexual abuse, never emerged from the Canadian festival circuit. American film audiences did not see Tyson again until she played a small but powerful part in the Brit import PRIEST (1994), released in US in 1995, as a proud housekeeper having an affair with a corrupted priest. Tyson largely retreated to British TV in the early 90s, only to be utterly wasted playing a friend of the young gay protagonist of The Lost Language of Cranes (BBC, 1992). Tyson had more to do later that year in the fantasy drama ANGELS but a return to American TV found her mired in the melodramatic miniseries BARBARA TAYLOR BRADFORD'S 'REMEMBER' (NBC, 1993). Tyson fared far better, once again playing a prostitutethis time a working motherin BAND OF GOLD (HBO, 1995), a well-received six-part UK miniseries that aired on US cable. Daily Variety commended her masterful performance.
|
|
|