Melba Moore is a renowned American singer and actress, born Beatrice Melba Smith on October 29, 1945, in New York City.
She rose to prominence through her powerful five-octave vocal range and contributions to R&B, soul, and Broadway theater.
Growing up in a musical household, her early life was shaped by her parents’ careers in entertainment, her biological mother was the R&B singer Bonnie Davis, and her father was the noted saxophonist and big band leader Teddy Hill.
After her mother’s remarriage to jazz pianist Clement Leroy Moorman when Melba was nine years old, the family relocated to Newark, New Jersey, where she was immersed in a larger blended family environment that included step-siblings.
Siblings
Moore has one sibling, Gwendolyn Louise Hill.
However, information about Hill remains limited in public records, with most biographical sources focusing primarily on her parents and stepfather.
Career
Moore’s career spans over five decades, beginning in the late 1960s with her breakthrough on Broadway.
She gained early recognition for her role in the musical Hair, where she stepped into a lead position, but it was her starring role as Lutiebelle in the 1970 production of Purlie that catapulted her to fame.
This performance showcased her vocal prowess and acting ability on major stages.
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Transitioning into music, she released her debut single “Lean on Me” in the early 1970s under Mercury Records, which became a hit and led to her first album.
Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, she delivered a string of successful R&B and soul tracks, including “This Is It,” “Love’s Comin’ At Ya,” “Keepin’ My Lover Satisfied,” and “When You Love Me Like This,” many of which charted highly on Billboard.
Her work extended to albums like Peach Melba and collaborations that blended R&B with pop and rock elements.
Beyond recording, Moore appeared in television, films, and additional Broadway shows such as Timbuktu! and Les Misérables.
She also made history as the first female artist to perform a non-operatic solo concert at New York’s Metropolitan Opera House and has continued performing, releasing music, and engaging in community work into recent years, including a memoir reflecting on her journey.
Accolades
In 1970, Moore won the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical for her role in Purlie, marking her as the first African American woman to receive a Tony in that category.
She also received a Theatre World Award and a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Performance that same year.
Her recording career brought multiple Grammy nominations: Best New Artist in 1971, Best Rhythm & Blues Vocal Performance – Female for “Lean on Me” in 1976, Best Female Rock Vocal Performance for “Read My Lips” in 1986, and additional nods over the years, totaling four Grammy nominations.
In 2012, she was honored with the Atlanta Black Theatre Festival Theatre Legend Award.
Further distinctions include her 2015 induction into the Official R&B Hall of Fame in Detroit, a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2023, and the Joseph R. Biden Lifetime Achievement Award.
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