Frances Elizabeth Williams (September 17, 1905 β January 2, 1995) was an American actress, activist, theatre producer, organizer, and community worker. Williams was the first black woman to run for the California State Assembly in 1948 on the Progressive Ticket and served on the boards of the Screen Actors Guild, Actors' Lab, and Actors Equity. She represented the World Peace Council at the first Angola Independence Celebration in 1975, and co-founded the Art Against Apartheid Movement in Los Angeles in the 1980s. Williams began her acting career in the late 1930s, joining the cast of the play You Can't Take It with You. The company went on tour across the U.S. for two years. She appeared in two of Oscar Micheauxβs films, Lying Lips, 1939, and The Notorious Elinor Lee, 1940. Her first Hollywood film role was as Amy in Magnificent Doll (1946), followed by The Reckless Moment (1949) and Show Boat (1951). While she appeared on stage, in over forty films, on television shows in minor ...
The Jerk
1979
A Piece of the Action
1977
The Glove
1979
The Reckless Moment
1949
Three Secrets
1950
Queen for a Day
1951
The Ambush Murders
1982
Magnificent Doll
1946
Rented Lips
1988
The Family Secret
1951
A Dream for Christmas
1973
Father of Hell Town
1985
Sister, Sister
1982
Her Sister's Secret
1946
Together Brothers
1974
Week-End with Father
1951
Midnight Ramble
1994
Lying Lips
1939
The Black Klansman
1966
Baby Needs a New Pair of Shoes
1974