Elisabeth Williams-Omilami has been "on the battlefield for her Lord",
for over 30 years. Beginning as a very young girl, she accompanied her
father, noted civil rights leader, Dr.
Hosea Williams on marches and in
movements across the south. Her "jailed for Freedom" record includes,
being the first Black woman in 75 years to spend the night in the
Forsyth County jail during that infamous march in January of 1981. As
an actress, she was able to combine her art with life as she toured in
the play that her mother, State Representative Juanita T. Williams,
co-wrote titled "The Life Of A King". Her parents, both gone home to be
with the Lord in 2000, formed in her from a very early age that we all
are accountable for each other and for the environment that exists on
the planet and responsible to do all that we can to fight for justice
for everyone. While working as an actress and playwright, Omilami had
also worked for over 15 years in the background of her father's "Hosea
Feed The Hungry and Homeless" efforts and, upon his passing in November
of 2000, became the organization's CEO, expanding the organization to
provide an additional 40,000 dinners yearly with the addition of events
on M.L.K. Jr.'s Birthday and Easter Sunday. She is now planning for the
upcoming Thanksgiving and Christmas Dinners while adding to her busy
speaking and touring schedule several international relief efforts in
the Philippines and Uganda.
She is a graduate of Hampton University in Theatre and founder of one
of Atlanta's earliest theatre companies, People's Survival Theater, as
well as the "Summer Artscamp", providing arts programming for
economically challenged youth for over 7 years. She has written several
plays, one of which "There Is A River In My Soul" will be touring in
February 2002. She is a past member of both the Georgia Council For The
Arts and the Fulton County Arts Council and is a passionate advocate
for the arts to be instituted as permanent part of our society. She is
an accomplished actress and can be seen this Christmas at the Alliance
Theatre in "A Christmas Carol" and in early 2002 in "Left Hand Singing"
at the Jewish Theatre of The South. She can also be seen in the HBO
made for television movie,
Boycott (2001), and will be
well remembered by fans of both
In the Heat of the Night (1988)
and the award-winning
I'll Fly Away (1991).
She is the wife of actor
Afemo Omilami,
co-director of "Hosea's Feed The Hungry and Homeless" and has two
wonderful children - Awodele, 21, and Juanita, 16. She is a member of
Abundant Life Church in Lithonia, Ga., where her Pastor is Rev. Woodrow
Walker, II. She is an active member of the Prison, Missions and Drama
Ministries there.