Tamara Tunie
Award-Winning Actress - Stage, Television & Film
Tamara Tunie has a distinguished body of work that encompasses stage, television, and the silver-screen. She recently was seen in the role of Cissy Houston, mother of the great American icon, Whitney Houston, in I WANNA DANCE WITH SOMEBODY, which reunited her with her CAVEMAN’S VALENTINE & EVE’S BAYOU director, Kasi Lemmons.
Ms. Tunie followed the filming, with a critically acclaimed turn on the London Stage as US Vice President, Kamala Harris, in The Old Vic Production of THE 47TH, which transports audiences to a near future where Harris goes toe to toe with Donald Trump in the next US election. One of the distinct hallmarks of this remarkable career is a long examination of American culture and its unique social and power dynamics. Beginning with such films as Oliver Stone’s WALL STREET with Michael Douglas, Harold Becker’s CITY HALL with Al Pacino, Taylor Hackford’s DEVIL’S ADVOCATE with Keanu Reeves and Charlize Theron, to Robert Zemeckis’ FLIGHT opposite Denzel Washington, with whom she also starred on Broadway as “Calpurnia” in JULIUS CAESAR, Ms. Tunie’s attraction to content with depth and meaning is apparent.
This thread continues with the Sundance TV series THE RED ROAD, where Tamara starred as the challenged Native-American tribal chief “Marie Van Der Veen” opposite Jason Momoa, the BBC/Netflix international drama BLACK EARTH RISING which scrutinizes the West’s complicity in the destabilization of Africa; portraying “Under-Secretary of State, Eunice Clayton”, and AMC’s DIETLAND where she explored the underbelly of the American Beauty-Industrial Complex as“Julia”, manager of the mysterious “beauty closet”.
Her award-winning stage works include the World Premiere of AMERICAN SON, a searing examination of race and class where she originated the role of “Kendra Ellis-Connor” and was honored with the Berkshire Theatre Award, her Obie-Award winning turn as “Marvelous” in Danai Gurira’s FAMILIAR, which grapples with identity, assimilation, tradition, and the clashing of ideals of an African-Immigrant family, and most recently she starred in the world premiere of BERNARDA’S DAUGHTERS, where she portrayed matriarch “Florence Delva” with “oracular grandeur”; another contemporary play that “mines” the effects of gentrification, police brutality and what it means to be “American”, on a Haitian-American family in Brooklyn.
Ms. Tunie first gained an international following in the role of “Medical Examiner, Dr. Melinda Warner”, with 23 seasons on Dick Wolf’s legendary NBC series LAW AND ORDER: SVU. Tamara is a series regular on the Netflix cult favorite, COWBOY BEBOP, and the second season of the Apple-TV hit, futuristic-drama SEE, as “The Bank”, with Jason Momoa and Alfre Woodard.
Recurring guest starring roles include such hit shows as ALMOST FAMILY, EMERGENCE, BETTER CALL SAUL, BLUE BLOODS, BILLIONS, ‘ALPHA HOUSE, 24, ELEMENTARY, THE GOOD WIFE & SURVIVOR’S REMORSE.
Ms. Tunie is a Founder of Black Theatre United. She is Chair Emerita of the Board of Directors of Figure Skating in Harlem, a non-profit organization that supports academic excellence and instills life skills to young girls in the Harlem community through the art and discipline of figure skating, to ensure they are champions “off the Ice”! She serves on the Board of Directors at Harlem Stage/The Gatehouse, City Theatre Company in Pittsburgh, and is on the Advisory Board of Hearts of Gold, a not for profit that supports women and their children in New York City shelters, and helps them transition out of the system.
In 2005, Mayor Bloomberg awarded Ms. Tunie the “Made in New York Award” from the City of New York, for her support and commitment to Film, Television and Theater. Ms. Tunie holds a BFA in Musical Theatre from Carnegie-Mellon University, and now serves on the Executive Board of Trustees.