
Tonya Pinkins was born in Chicago, Illinois. She has four children. Her father was a police officer and insurance salesman and her mother is a former postal worker. She has two brothers, Eric Swoope and Thomas Swoope and a sister Tamera Swoope from whom she is estranged. She was interested in the arts from a young age. In high school, she studied acting at the Goodman Theatre Young People's Program. Aged 18, she briefly attended college and decided to pursue an acting career instead. She later returned to college, earning an undergraduate degree from Columbia College in Chicago, followed by graduate work at Carnegie Mellon's music theater program, and a year at California Western School of Law in San Diego. Pinkins is probably most admired for her stage work. She won a Tony Award for her performance as Sweet Anita in Jelly's Last Jam. She was nominated for her roles in Play On! and in Caroline, or Change, where she played the title role. Her additional Broadway credits include Merrily We Roll Along, Chronicle of a Death Foretold, The Wild Party, House of Flowers, Radio Golf, A Time To Kill and Holler If Ya Hear Me. Pinkins has performed in several Off Broadway productions, including the comic role of Mopsa, the Shepherdess, in The Winter's Tale produced by the Riverside Shakespeare Company at The Shakespeare Center in 1983. In 2011, Pinkins starred in the world premiere of Kirsten Greenidge’s Milk Like Sugar at La Jolla Playhouse, and received a 2012 Craig Noel nomination for Best featured Actress in a Play. She reprised her role in the Playwrights Horizons in the Peter Jay Sharp Theater, and garnered a 2012 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Play. In 2012 Pinkins starred in Katori Hall's play Hurt Village, the gritty drama about life and change in a Memphis housing project made its world-premiere at Off-Broadway's Signature Theatre Company as part of the theatre's inaugural season. The play also Marsha Stephanie Blake, Ron Cephas Jones, Saycon Sengbloh, Lloyd Watts, Charlie Hudson III, Nicholas Christopher, Corey Hawkins, Ron Cephas Jones and Joaquina Kalukango. In 2014, Pinkins appeared in New Federal Theatre's revival of Ed Bullins' The Fabulous Miss Marie opposite Roscoe Orman; in the Broadway production of Holler If Ya Hear Me; and the world premiere of Branden Jacobs-Jenkins' War at Yale Repertory. She has also had a prolific television career making guest appearances on such television shows as Army Wives, 24, Law & Order, The Cosby Show, Cold Case, Criminal Minds, and The Guardian among others. During the mid-1980s Pinkins created the role of Heather Dalton on the CBS soap, As the World Turns. In 1991 she was cast as Livia Frye in All My Children. Pinkins left All My Children in 1995 but returned to her role in 2003. She was later put on contract with the show from March 2004 until June 2006, when she was downgraded to recurring status. She has played Amala Motobo on the popular television show 24. She has appeared in several films in supporting roles, including Newlyweeds, Home, Fading Gigolo opposite Woody Allen, Enchanted, Premium, Romance & Cigarettes, Noah's Arc: Jumping The Broom and Above the Rim among others.

クリミナル・マインド

ウータン・クラン:アメリカン・サーガ

Jammin': Jelly Roll Morton on Broadway

Crime Story

クローザー

コールドケース 迷宮事件簿

24 -TWENTY FOUR-

11.22.63

God Friended Me

フィアー・ザ・ウォーキング・デッド

エレメンタリー ホームズ&ワトソン in NY

ゴッサム

ベスト・ワースト・ストーリー

ザ・ブック・オブ・ヘンリー

Army Wives

ストレイン 沈黙のエクリプス

LAW&ORDER

My Days of Mercy

スキャンダル

East New York

BULL / ブル 法廷を操る男

ビート・オブ・ダンク

堕ちた弁護士 -ニック・フォーリン-

コスビー・ショー

マダム・セクレタリー

魔法にかけられて

Run the World

See No Evil, Hear No Evil

Home

Women of the Movement

All My Children

Collective: Unconscious

Noah's Arc: Jumping the Broom

Red Pill

HOSTAGES ホステージ

Romance & Cigarettes

Great Performances

Against Their Will

The Artist's Wife

Everybody Dies!

Aardvark

Newlyweeds

Random Acts of Flyness

The Surrogate

The Hunt for the Chicago Strangler

The School for Wives

An Act of Terror

The Evolution of Horror Cinema Worldwide

American Dream

The Life of Peter Gottlieb

Mr. Talented

Rasheeda Speaking

Black in the 80s