 Robert GuillaumeTwo-time Emmy® Award Winner
Winner of Four NAACP Image Awards
Grammy® Award Winner
Tony® Nominated Musical Performer
Robert Guillaume is best known
for his work in television where he has earned two Emmy® Awards and four NAACP Image
Awards. He has had a distinguished career as a dramatic film actor and an accomplished
musical performer.
He garnered a Tony
nomination for his Broadway performance in Guys and Dolls and received rave
reviews during his eight months as the star of the Los Angeles production of Phantom
of the Opera.
But is was as Benson DuBois that Guillaume won his Emmy® Awards. The first for Best
Supporting Actor for Soap in 1979; the second as Best Actor in 1985, after the
Benson character moved on to the series bearing his name. He guided the character through
the positions of butler, state budget director, and finally Lieutenant Governor, a
transformation that is rarely seen in characters on television today.
Raised in St. Louis by his maternal grandmother, Jeannette, Guillaume interrupted his
education with a stint in the United States Army. After discharge, he attended St. Louis
University as a business administration major, and Washington University as a voice manor;
for a while burying his true ambition of becoming the first African-American to sing tenor
at the Metropolitan Opera. Born with the makings of a brilliant classical voice,
Roberts talent was recognized by Washington Universitys Leslie Chabay, who
arranged a scholarship for him at the Aspen (Colorado) Music Festival. This appearance led
to a major turning point, Guillaumes apprenticeship at Clevelands Karamu
Theatre. There, under the tutelage of Russel and Rowina Jellife, he made his
semi-professional debut in both opera and musical comedy. It wasnt long after
Guillaume moved from Cleveland to New York City that he became one of the stages
best reviewed young actors. His critical triumphs included Kwamina,
Bambouche, Tambourines to Glory, Othello, Porgy
and Bess, Apple Pie, and Jacques Brel. He went on to even
greater acclaim playing leads in Purlie and Golden Boy, and of
course, Guys and Dolls, for his Tony-nominated performance as Nathan Detroit.
As a singer, hes also received critical raves and standing ovations;
from the showrooms of Las Vegas, Atlantic City, and Lake Tahoe to concert
stages across the United States.
Guillaume has also starred in theatrical films, including Disneys The Lion
King, Meteor Man, Wanted: Dead or Alive, Seems Like
Old Times, Lean on Me, Death Warrant, and Fish.
His work in television has included John Grins Christmas, The
Penthouse, The Kid with the Broken Halo, The Kid with the 200
IQ, Greyhounds, Children of the Dust, Panic in the
Skies, His Bodyguard, and Silicon Towers. As a television performer on Soap, Benson, The Robert
Guillaume Show, and Pacific Station, I sought consciously to avoid the
stereotypical sociological traps, says Guillaume. I always wanted kids of any
background to understand the characters Ive portrayed were real, that the solutions
they found were true and possible. It has always been important to me to stress that there
was no diminution of power or universality just because my characters are
African-Americans.
Guillaume has also been the recipient of the prestigious Grammy Award
for his reading of
The Lion King book (on audiotape) in the voice of the beloved character,
"Rafiki". Roberts voice is featured as the narrator of each episode
of the award-winning animated HBO television series, Happy Ever
After: Fairy Tales for Every Child as well as the Confetti Enterprises's
read along books, tapes, and CDs.
In addition to his work as a performer, Robert Guillaume has generously
given both time and resources to numerous charitable and social organizations,
among them, TransAfrica, AmFar, Sickle Cell Disease Association of
American, Artists for a New South Africa, and California Association
for the Education of Young Children.
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