T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh
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T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh (born Crystal Walker; October 13, 1962) is an American actress and singer. In addition to her status as an original cast member of the Fox Broadcasting Company, Fox sketch comedy series ''In Living Color'' (1990–1994), Keymáh is also known for her roles as Erica Lucas on the CBS sitcom ''Cosby (TV series), Cosby'' (1996–2000) Tanya Baxter on the Disney Channel sitcom ''That's So Raven'' (2003–2005) and the star and host on the Keymáh Network sketch variety show ''The Cool Crystal Show'' (2020–present).


Early life

Born Crystal Walker on October 13, 1962, in Chicago, Illinois, at Cook County Hospital, Keymáh was raised Catholic Church, Catholic on the city's South Side. Her mother, Arlene Carter, a student at Chicago State University, died when Keymáh was two years old. Keymáh's father, William Walker Sr., was an Illinois state police trooper. He is of Seminole Indian descent from Springfield, Illinois. Keymáh was raised by her maternal grandparents Mary Louis Zeno, a social worker for the Illinois public aid department, and Carneil Carter, an insurance salesperson with Metropolitan Insurance. Keymáh began entertaining her family – singing, dancing, and reciting original poems and stories — at the age of three. Keymáh wrote her first play and her first song in elementary school. For high school, Keymáh is a 1981 graduate of the Academy of Our Lady (Chicago), Academy of Our Lady. Keymáh performed with Ali LeRoi and Lance Crouther in the Mary Wong Comedy Group in high school, and then enrolled in Florida A&M University’s School of Business and Industry. In 1988, she adopted the stage name "T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh" after realizing her last name, Walker, reflected a slave name rather than her African roots. In Hebrew, "T'Keyah" means "mental revival of God's spirit" and "Keymáh" means "to establish oneself."


Career

During college and after graduation, Keymáh taught theater, dance, and mime. She has also done many theater performances, and produced and directed films. One of the original cast members of Fox Television's Emmy winning variety show, ''In Living Color'', for five seasons Keymáh played a number of characters, including Cryssy, the central character of her self-written signature piece, "In Black World". She also sang and danced on the show. After ''In Living Color'', she played contractor Scotti Decker in ''On Our Own (1994 TV series), On Our Own''; played comedy show writer Denise Everett on the 1996 TV series ''The Show''; and provided the voices for Roz, Shavonne, Aki, Mrs. LaSalle, and many others in ''Waynehead''. For four years, Keymáh was a series regular on ''Cosby (TV series), Cosby'', where she played flight attendant-lawyer-pastry chef-teacher Erica Lucas Hall. Following ''Cosby'', she appeared for three seasons on the Disney series ''That's So Raven'' as Raven's mother, Tanya Baxter. In season four, her character was written out of the plot so that Keymáh could care for her ailing grandmother. Keymáh co-wrote and costarred in a two-person stage show with music, called ''Sellout!?!'', with fellow College alumnus Bryan C. Jones, who was also one of the many guests to appear in her hit variety show ''T'Keyah Live!'' They did the first workshop presentation of ''Sellout!?!'' in 2013 at their alma mater. On June 21, 2022, Entertainment Tonight announced that Keymáh would reprise her role as Tanya Baxter on the ''That's So Raven'' spin-off, ''Raven's Home.''


''The Cool Crystal Show'' characters

* Nzinghi Anyemeechi Mbweli Aharanwa (''Cooking with the Queen'') * Mrs. Dr. Eliza Madree Weaver (''Read to Me'') * Jett * Stand up T'Keyah (''Standup Tragedy'') * Nylah * The Sisters * Dr. Melanie Milan (''The Milan Medical Moment'') * Miss Louise and Miss Ethel ("Ladies on the Porch") * Mr. Z and Mr. Washington ("Men on the Porch")


''In Living Color'' characters

* Cryssy (''Black World'') * Hilda Hedley (''Hey Mon'') * LaShawn * Leslie Livingston (''Homey the Clown'') * Mrs. Buttman (''The Buttmans'') * Shawanda Harvey, host of ''List of In Living Color sketches, Go on Girl''


''In Living Color'' impressions

* Shahrazad Ali * Anita Baker * Whoopi Goldberg * Pam Grier * Jackée Harry * Janet Jackson * La Toya Jackson * Eartha Kitt * Joie Lee * Diana Ross * Edith Bunker (''All in the Family'') * Barbra Streisand


Other impressions

* Nell Carter * Ruby Dee * Macy Gray * Katharine Hepburn * Billie Holiday * Harry Lennix * Johnny Mathis * Sidney Poitier * Nancy Wilson (jazz singer), Nancy Wilson


''Don't Get Me Started!''

Keymáh performed a solo stage work titled ''Don't Get Me Started!'' She sang, performed impressions, and talked about the prison industrial complex as well as conspiracy theories. She rewrote pointedly political lyrics to songs by Nina Simone and Eartha Kitt. She debuted the show in 2011 at The Black Academy of Art & Letters (TBAAL) in Dallas, Texas.


''T'Keyah Live!''

''T'Keyah Live!'' is a variety show and is Keymáh's third self-produced theatrical show. It includes witty repartee, musical numbers, endearing characters, audience participation, impressions, video presentations, jokes and guests. She has performed the show across the U.S. since 1999 with a number of different guest performers, including Todd Bridges, T. C. Carson, Ralph Harris (comedian), Ralph Harris, Dawnn Lewis, and Karen Malina White.


''Some of My Best Friends''

''Some of My Best Friends'' is a series of monologues in verse and prose embodied by a dozen diverse but somehow connected characters. In this humorous, tear jerking, thought-provoking theatrical production, Keymáh champions societal issues that are as relevant today as they were when the show debuted to sold out crowds at Chicago's South Shore Cultural Center in 1991. Overcoming obstacles, the devastation of AIDS, the search for love, race relations, and teen promiscuity are just some of the topics explored. The show was chiefly penned by Keymáh but includes pieces written by or in collaboration with Ali LeRoi, Harry Lennix, and poet Angela Jackson (And All These Roads Be Luminous: Poems Selected and New); and includes a dance choreographed by Maurice Hines. About her work in this show critics have said: "Keymáh is a Charismatic Actress... Chameleonic and Effervescent" – Los Angeles Times;"...Beyond Superlatives; She's Phenomenal!" – Earl Calloway, Chicago Defender; "Much More Than Comedy"- Lisa M. Pancia, New York Vignette; "...a Delightful, Multitalented Performer whose ability to create believable characters on stage is a Wonder to Behold"- Nat Colley, Los Angeles Reader; "Keymáh is Magnificent" – Linda Armstrong, Amsterdam News;"...Keymáh's Poignant, Detailed Portrayals are Never Less Than Magnificent"- Randy Trabitz, Los Angeles Weekly. The show garnered an AUDELCO Award nomination for Best Solo Performer, an NAACP Theatre Award nomination for Best Writing, and NAACP Theatre Awards for Best Performance and Best Play.


Personal life

Keymáh is an avid gardener and a vegetarian, as well as an active, Golden Life Member of Delta Sigma Theta sorority. She was initiated into the Beta Alpha chapter at Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University. Keymáh's brother is former Commander of the DC US Army National Guard, current Sergeant at Arms of the United States House of Representatives, the Honorable Major General William J. Walker. Keymáh self-published three books: ''Cycle of Love: 28 Days Rejuvenation and Meditation for of Organization, Inspired Self Care'', an inspirational self-help book with recipes, exercises and meditations; ''Some of My Best Friends: A Collection of Characters'', the book version of the stage show she performed for ten years; and ''Natural Woman / Natural Hair: A Hair Journey – Hairstyles and Hairstories from the Front with Simple, Step-by-Step Instructions on Taking Care of your Natural Hair'', an instructional hair care manual with anecdotes about her experiences with Afro-textured hair. She also contributed essays to "The HBCU Experience Book," "Dining with the Ancestors: When Heroes Come to Dinner," and "The Burden: African Americans and the Enduring Impact of Slavery."


Legacy

Musical artist Flyy Moon pays tribute to Keymáh's iconic "In Black World" performance piece, by including the opening lines in the intro of her 2021 debut song release, "Black." Associated Black Charities operates a donor-advised Keymáh Cultural Fund, which provides tickets to youth groups to attend theatrical performances and funds artistic groups that serve or comprise teens and children. There is a theater scholarship named for Keymáh at her alma mater, Florida A&M University. and medical scholarship named for her at Meharry Medical College.


Educator

T'Keyah Crystal Keymáh served as a K–8 substitute teacher for the Chicago Board of Education for 4 years. She has presented her "Tools of the Trade" actors preparation workshops at theatre festivals and other events in the United States, and she has lectured abroad. In the fall of 2017, Keymáh served as Florida A&M University's first ever W.K. Kellogg Foundation Artist-in-Residence in the College of Social Sciences, Arts, and Humanities Theatre department. Her residency included directing Pearl Cleage's ''The Nacirema Society Requests Your Presence at a Celebration of Their First 100 Years'', teaching an Acting for the Camera course, and providing industry workshops and mentoring students.


Filmography


Film


Television


Video games


Awards


References


External links

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Keymah, T'keyah Crystal 1962 births Actresses from Chicago African-American actresses African-American female comedians American stage actresses American television actresses American voice actresses American women comedians Delta Sigma Theta members Florida A&M University alumni Living people Miss Black America delegates Comedians from Illinois 20th-century American comedians 21st-century American comedians African-American beauty pageant winners Former Roman Catholics 21st-century American actresses 21st-century African-American women 21st-century African-American people 20th-century African-American women 20th-century African-American people 20th-century American actresses