Seret Scott (/səˈrɛt/; born September 1, 1949) is an American actress, director, and playwright, best known for her roles in the films Losing Ground and Pretty Baby, as well as guest appearances on the televisions shows The Equalizer, Miami Vice, and Cosby. She is also known for her theatrical roles on Broadway and the many plays she has directed on national and regional stages.

Seret Scott directed The Old Settler by John Henry Redwood at The Studio Theatre in Washington, D.C., in 1997.

Early life

Scott was born on September 1, 1949, in Washington D.C. She has referred to herself as “a child of the 60's,” as her youth in D.C. was marked by segregation and civil rights turmoil. She began her career as an actress in 1969 when she left New York University, where she was studying, to join the Free Southern Theater, a community theater group allied with the civil rights movement that sought to introduce free, socially incisive theater for African Americans in the South.

Career

Stage

When she returned to New York City, Scott continued to participate in activist theatre, including anti-Vietnam performances and performances for inmates at Rikers and Sing Sing prisons. She also began her off-Broadway career, appearing in the 1970 play Slave Ship at Theatre-in-the-Church in New York City. In 1974, Scott appeared on Broadway as Sue Belle in Ray Aranha's play My Sister, My Sister, for which she received a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Performance.

Following her Broadway success, Scott went on to work as an actress for decades in New York City and around the country, including another appearance on Broadway in Ntozake Shange's 1976 play For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide / When the Rainbow Is Enuf.

In 1989, Scott made her directorial debut with Some Sweet Day, written by Nancy Fales Garrett, which was reviewed favorably in the New York Times. After this success, Scott transitioned full time into a career as a director and directed scores of plays off-Broadway and in regional theater productions, including at San Diego's Old Globe Theatre, the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, and Chicago's Court Theatre.

Film

Scott's first screen role was as “Flora” in Pretty Baby, a 1978 drama directed by Louis Malle, starring Brooke Shields, Keith Carradine, and Susan Sarandon.

Scott's most seminal role was as “Sara,” a professor of French philosophy navigating complicated relationships with her artist husband, her work, and other artists in the 1982 film Losing Ground, written and directed by Kathleen Collins. The film was one of the first feature films ever directed by an African American woman. Although it won first prize at the Figueroa International Film Festival in Portugal, Losing Ground did not receive widespread attention until its rediscovery decades later.

In 2015, New York Times film critic A.O. Scott called Losing Ground “a puzzle and a marvel,” and wrote that it “casts a highly individual spell.” In 2019, The New Yorker film critic Richard Brody wrote that the film “reveals Collins to be one of the most accomplished and original filmmakers of her time.” Scott's role in the film followed her starring role in another of Collins’ productions, the play The Brothers, at the American Place Theater in New York City in April 1982.

Scott went on to appear in various television series throughout the 1980s and 1990s, including Miami Vice and Cosby while continuing her career as a stage actress, director and playwright.

Filmography

Theatre actress

YearTitleRoleTheater
1970Slave Ship, LeRoi Jones playwrightNoliweTheatre-in-the-Church, New York City
1974My Sister, My Sister, Ray Aranha playwrightSue BelleLittle Theatre, New York City
1976For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide / When the Rainbow Is Enuf, Ntozake Shange playwrightUnderstudyBooth Theatre, New York City
1981Weep Not for Me, Gus Edwards playwrightCrissie AdamsTheater Four, New York City
1981Meetings, Mustapha Matura playwrightElsaMarymount Manhattan, New York City
1982Brothers, Kathleen Collins playwrightCaroline EdwardsAmerican Place Theatre, New York City
1983Puppetplay, Pearl Cleage playwrightWoman OneTheater Four, New York City
1985Eyes of the American, Samm-Art Williams playwrightRoberta Ottley/VeldaTheater Four, New York City
1988A Burning Beach, Eduardo Machado playwrightMariaAmerican Place Theatre, New York City
1996The Alexander Plays...Suzanne in Stages, Adrienne Kennedy playwrightunnamed characterJoseph Papp Public Theater/ Susan Stein Shiva Theater, New York City

Films and television actress

Seret Scott film and television credits
YearTitleRoleNotes
1978Pretty BabyFloraFilm
1982Losing GroundSara RogersFilm. Written and directed by Kathleen Collins. Also starred Bill Gunn, Duane Jones.
1987Miami ViceEsther Nevin1 episode
1988The EqualizerElena RodriguezEpisode: "Sea of Fire"
1991The Days and Nights of Molly DoddLouise1 episode
1991MathnetProsecutor1 episode
1991Murder in MindSarah Bendix1 episode
1993TribecaPlain-clothed Cop1 episode
2000Cosbyuntitled role1 episode

Playwright

YearTitleTheater
2008Second LineATLAS – Lab Theatre II, Washington, D.C.

Theatre director

YearTitleTheater
1989Some Sweet DayLong Wharf Theater, New York City
1994Zooman and the SignMcGinn-Cazale Theatre, New York City
1999Mujeres Y HombresNew Victory Theatre, New York City
2005Birdie BlueSecond Stage Theatre, New York City
2005StarvingWoolly Mammoth, Washington, D.C.
2005The Piano LessonArena Stage, Washington, D.C.
2006YohenWest End Theatre, New York City
2011Richard IIIOregon Shakespeare Festival, Ashland, Oregon
2013A Raisin in the SunThe Don and Ann Brown Theatre, West Palm Beach, Florida
2014Native Son (World Premiere)Court Theatre, Chicago, Illinois
2015Autumn (World Premiere)Crossroads Theatre, New Brunswick, New Jersey
2019For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide / When the Rainbow Is EnufCourt Theatre, Chicago, Illinois

Personal life

Scott has been a resident of Teaneck, New Jersey.

External links

  • at IMDb
  • Theatre History Episode # 32 (podcast), Seret Scott Looks Back on the Free Southern Theater, 22 May 2017