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Ethel was the first black woman to perform on radio.
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Ethel was born after her mother was raped as a teenager.
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Ethel Waters was the author of two autobiographies -- His Eye Is On The Sparrow (1951) and To Me It's Wonderful (1972).
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Her final theatrical film role was in "The Sound and the Fury" (1957).
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Her first dramatic role on Broadway was in the play "Mamba's Daughter."
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As a child, she worked as a chambermaid for $4.75 a week.
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The songwriter Irving Berlin cast her in his 1933 musical revue "As Thousands Cheer" where she introduced the hit songs "Heat Wave", "Harlem On My Mind", and "Supper Time".
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Her first film appearance was in the 1929 Warner Bros. musical "On With the Show".
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She died at age 80 in the Chatsworth, Ca. home of a young couple that was caring for her.
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She married the first of her three husbands at the age of 12.
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She headlined at Harlem's famous Cotton Club.
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She starred in the popular Broadway Negro revues: "Africana" (1927), "Blackbird" (1930), and "Rhapsody in Black" (1931).
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One of the most popular jazz/blues singers of the 1920s, she introduced such classic songs as "Dinah", "Am I Blue," and "Stormy Weather."
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She won the New York Drama Critic's Circle Award for her performance in "A Member of the Wedding" (1952).
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The U.S. Postal Service issued an Ethel Waters commemorative stamp in 1994.
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A deeply religious woman, she spent her later years traveling with the Rev. Billy Graham.
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She appeared on Broadway for the first time in the musical revue "Africana" (1927).
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In her younger days, she toured on the black vaudeville circuit under the name "Sweet Mama Stringbean."
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She posthumously won a Grammy Hall of Fame Award in 1998.
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Ethel Water's name was placed in the Gospel Music Hall of Fame (1984).
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She was the second African-American actress to ever be nominated for an Academy Award when she appeared in the film "Pinky." (1949)
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Ethel Waters became the first African-American actress to be nominated for an Emmy for her 10/6/1961 appearance on "Good Night, Sweet Blues" on the series Route 66.
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Ethel Waters appeared on television in 1939 when she made two experimental programs for NBC: Mamba's Daughters and The Ethel Waters Show.