Sunday, April 6, 2025

Marlene Warfield obit

Marlene Warfield, Actress in ‘Network’ and ‘The Great White Hope,’ Dies at 83

Trained on the New York stage — she worked with Cicely Tyson in ‘The Blacks’ — she also played Victoria Butterfield, one of Bea Arthur’s maids, on ‘Maude.’ 

She was not on the list.


Marlene Warfield, the New York actress known for her feisty turns as the prostitute ex-girlfriend of James Earl Jones’ boxer in The Great White Hope on Broadway and the big screen and as a young revolutionary in Network, has died. She was 83.

Warfield died April 6 of lung cancer at a hospital in Los Angeles, her sister, Chequita Warfield, told The Hollywood Reporter.

Warfield also recurred as Maude’s third and last regular housekeeper, the Jamaica-born Victoria Butterfield, on the sixth and final season (1977-78) of the famed Norman Lear-created CBS sitcom that starred Bea Arthur.

After appearing in the East Village at St. Mark’s Playhouse in French dramatist Jean Genet’s The Blacks — where she understudied for Cicely Tyson and also worked alongside the likes of Jones, Godfrey Cambridge and Maya Angelou — Warfield made it to Broadway in October 1968 when she was cast as Clara in The Great White Hope, written by Howard Sackler.

She received Theatre World and Clarence Derwent prizes for her powerful performance, then accompanied Tony winners Jones and Jane Alexander to Hollywood, where all three reprised their roles in the 1970 film directed by Martin Ritt at 20th Century Fox.

In Paddy Chayefsky and Sidney Lumet’s Network (1976), nominated for best picture, Warfield sparkled in a scene in which her Laureen Hobbs, an Angela Davis type, meets with Faye Dunaway’s Diana Christensen, a UBS executive who wants to do a weekly series revolving around the Ecumenical Liberation Army.

After Diana introduces herself as a “racist lackey of the imperialist ruling circles,” Hobbs introduces herself as “a bad-ass Commie nigger.”

The second of the three kids, Marlene Ronetta Warfield was born in Queens on June 19, 1941, and raised in Brooklyn. His father, Sidney, sold tokens for the New York City Transit Authority, and her mother, Ruth, was a homemaker.

Warfield took tap, ballet and acrobatic lessons as a kid, and while attending the High School of Performing Arts in Manhattan did summer stock, appearing in a 1957 production of Take a Giant Step in the Catskills.

Later, she studied opera at the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music and acting at the American Institute of Theater and TV Arts.

She replaced Thelma Oliver in The Blacks in 1962 and worked onstage in A Matter of Life and Death, Elektra, Volpone, Who’s Got His Own and The Taming of the Shrew at Lincoln Center before landing on The Great White Hope.

Around this time, she also was showing up on such TV shows as The Nurses, The Defenders, For the People and Dave Garroway’s Wide Wide World and doing commercials for Fab detergent.

Represented by pioneering Black talent agent Ernestine McClendon, Warfield moved to California in 1977 to join the cast of Maude, on which she made her first appearance late in the fifth season. She succeeded Esther Rolle (as Florida Evans) and Hermione Baddeley (as Nell Naugatuck) as maids in the suburban Findlay household.

Her Victoria Butterfield was “not stupid, she is not uneducated, she’s very ambitious and stands on her own two feet,” Warfield told Jet magazine in August 1977.

Warfield’s résumé also included the films Joe (1970), Across 110th Street (1972) and Richard Pryor’s Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling (1986) and guest spots on such TV series as The Name of the Game, Lou Grant, The Jeffersons, Little House on the Prairie, Hill Street Blues, Cagney & Lacey, In the House, ER, The West Wing, The Shield, Law & Order and Cold Case.

In 2000, she returned to the stage in Pittsburgh for a starring role in August Wilson’s King Hedley II.

In addition to her sister, survivors include her son, Keith; her grandson, Demetrius; and a cousin, percussionist Vivian Warfield. She was married to William Horsey from 1967 until his 1993 death. Her brother, Earl, died in January 2024.

 

Actress

Aurora Borealis (2011)

Aurora Borealis

Short

Mrs. Parker

2011

 

Cold Case (2003)

Cold Case

7.6

TV Series

Samuela Robbins

2003

1 episode

 

Michael Chiklis in The Shield (2002)

The Shield

8.7

TV Series

Dottie Cummings

2002

1 episode

 

Dead Last (2001)

Dead Last

7.3

TV Series

Woman

2001

1 episode

 

So Weird (1999)

So Weird

8.3

TV Series

Mrs. Clemens

2000

1 episode

 

Rob Lowe, Martin Sheen, Allison Janney, Dulé Hill, Moira Kelly, Janel Moloney, Richard Schiff, John Spencer, and Bradley Whitford in The West Wing (1999)

The West Wing

8.9

TV Series

Maid

1999

1 episode

 

Anthony Edwards, Julianna Margulies, Ming-Na Wen, Noah Wyle, Laura Innes, Alex Kingston, Eriq La Salle, Kellie Martin, Paul McCrane, Michael Michele, Erik Palladino, Maura Tierney, and Goran Visnjic in ER (1994)

ER

7.9

TV Series

Babs Chenovert

1997

1 episode

 

LL Cool J, Alfonso Ribeiro, Maia Campbell, and Kim Wayans in In the House (1995)

In the House

6.9

TV Series

Grandma Hill

1996

1 episode

 

Sarah Jessica Parker, Debrah Farentino, James Wilder, George DiCenzo, Jane Kaczmarek, Kathleen Lloyd, Barry Miller, Joe Morton, and Jon Tenney in Equal Justice (1990)

Equal Justice

6.2

TV Series

Judge Evelyn Kass

1990

1 episode

 

Freddy's Nightmares (1988)

Freddy's Nightmares

6.2

TV Series

Helen Woodman

1990

1 episode

 

How I Got Into College (1989)

How I Got Into College

5.8

Librarian

1989

 

Perry Mason: The Case of the Lethal Lesson (1989)

Perry Mason: The Case of the Lethal Lesson

7.3

TV Movie

Prosecutor

1989

 

Richard Pryor in Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling (1986)

Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling

6.3

Sonja

1986

 

Peter Coyote, Taliesin Jaffe, and Lindsay Wagner in Child's Cry (1986)

Child's Cry

6.2

TV Movie

Maxine

1986

 

Cagney & Lacey (1981)

Cagney & Lacey

6.9

TV Series

Detective #2

1984

1 episode

 

Robert Clohessy, Michael Warren, and Bruce Weitz in Hill Street Blues (1981)

Hill Street Blues

8.2

TV Series

Ada Baxter

1983

1 episode

 

Melissa Sue Anderson, Melissa Gilbert, Michael Landon, Karen Grassle, Richard Bull, Sidney Greenbush, Jonathan Gilbert, Rachel Lindsay Greenbush, and Katherine MacGregor in Little House on the Prairie (1974)

Little House on the Prairie

7.5

TV Series

Mattie Ledoux

1981

1 episode

 

The Sophisticated Gents (1981)

The Sophisticated Gents

8.1

TV Mini Series

Lil Joplin

1981

3 episodes

 

Sherman Hemsley and Isabel Sanford in The Jeffersons (1975)

The Jeffersons

7.5

TV Series

Mrs. Owens

1979

1 episode

 

Bea Arthur in Maude (1972)

Maude

7.3

TV Series

Victoria Butterfield

1977–1978

8 episodes

 

Lou Grant (1977)

Lou Grant

7.3

TV Series

Joanne Bartlett

1978

1 episode

 

The Andros Targets (1977)

The Andros Targets

7.1

TV Series

Nikkie Duval

1977

1 episode

 

Network (1976)

Network

8.1

Laureen Hobbs

1976

 

Beacon Hill

7.2

TV Series

1975

1 episode

 

Pomroy's People

TV Movie

1973

 

Anthony Quinn, Paul Benjamin, and Anthony Franciosa in Across 110th Street (1972)

Across 110th Street

7.0

Mrs. Jackson

1972

 

Richard Widmark in Madigan (1972)

Madigan

7.2

TV Series

Clara

1972

1 episode

 

Cutter (1972)

Cutter

5.0

TV Movie

Susan Macklin

1972

 

Mia Farrow and Hal Holbrook in Goodbye, Raggedy Ann (1971)

Goodbye, Raggedy Ann

5.8

TV Movie

Louise Walters

1971

 

The Name of the Game (1968)

The Name of the Game

7.6

TV Series

Sdhari

1970

1 episode

 

James Earl Jones and Jane Alexander in The Great White Hope (1970)

The Great White Hope

6.9

Clara

1970

 

Peter Boyle in Joe (1970)

Joe

6.8

Bellevue Nurse

1970

 

Thanks

A Century of Black Cinema (2003)

A Century of Black Cinema

6.1

Video

acknowledgment

2003

 

Self

A Century of Black Cinema (2003)

A Century of Black Cinema

6.1

Video

Self

2003


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