Ruby Dee, an acclaimed actress and civil rights activist
whose versatile career spanned stage, radio television and film, has died at
age 91, according to her daughter.
Nora Davis Day told The Associated Press on Thursday that
her mother died at home in New Rochelle on Wednesday night of "natural
causes."
Dee, who frequently acted alongside her husband of 56
years, Ossie Davis, was with loved ones, she added.
"We have had her for so long and we loved her so
much," Day said. "She took her final bow last night at home
surrounded by her children and grandchildren."
Day added: "We gave her our permission to set sail.
She opened her eyes, closed her eyes and away she went."
Her long career brought her an Oscar nomination at age 83
for best supporting actress for her maternal role in the 2007 film
"American Gangster." She also won an Emmy and was nominated for
several others. Age didn't slow her down.
"I think you mustn't tell your body, you mustn't
tell your soul, 'I'm going to retire,'" Dee told The Associated Press in
2001. "You may be changing your life emphasis, but there's still things
that you have in mind to do that now seems the right time to do. I really don't
believe in retiring as long as you can breathe."
She and her late husband were frequent collaborators.
Their partnership rivaled the achievements of other celebrated acting couples.
But they were more than performers; they were also activists who fought for
civil rights, particularly for blacks.
"We used the arts as part of our struggle," she
said in 2006. "Ossie said he knew he had to conduct himself differently
with skill and thought."
In 1998, the pair celebrated their 50th wedding
anniversary and an even longer association in show business with the
publication of a dual autobiography, "With Ossie and Ruby: In This Life
Together."
Davis died in February 2005. Among those who mourned at
his funeral included former President Bill Clinton, Harry Belafonte and Spike
Lee.
Davis and Dee met in 1945 when she auditioned for the
Broadway play "Jeb," starring Davis (both were cast in it). In
December 1948, on a day off from rehearsals from another play, Davis and Dee
took a bus to New Jersey to get married. They already were so close that
"it felt almost like an appointment we finally got around to
keeping," Dee wrote in "In This Life Together."