Cute, bubbly, and adorable actress Carol Speed achieved a considerable
amount of cult cinema popularity with her often lively and delightful
contributions to a handful of enjoyably down'n'dirty 1970s
blaxploitation features.
She was born Carolyn Stewart on March 14, 1945, in Bakersfield,
California. She holds the distinction of being the first black
homecoming queen in Santa Clara County and was one of the first black
people to receive a scholarship for the American Conservatory Theatre
in San Francisco. Carol got her start in show business as a back-up
singer for
Bobbie Gentry at Harrah's club
in Reno, Nevada. She made her film debut as a hooker in
The New Centurions (1972).
Speed's most memorable movie roles include sassy prison inmate Mickie
in
Jack Hill's hilarious
babes-behind-bars parody
The Big Bird Cage (1972), pimp
Max Julien's loyal prostitute
girlfriend Lulu in the terrific
The Mack (1973), sarcastic rock groupie
Janyce in
Bummer (1973), club owner
Rockne Tarkington's sweet gal pal
Leslie in the fun
Black Samson (1974) and deaf-mute
Sarah in
Al Adamson's
Dynamite Brothers (1974).
Carol gave an especially inspired and impressive performance as a
minister's innocent wife who becomes possessed by the malevolent spirit
of an evil demon in
William Girdler's
immensely entertaining horror flick
Abby (1974). She had a recurring part on the
daytime soap opera
Days of Our Lives (1965) in
the summer of 1970. Moreover, she made a guest appearance on an episode
of
Sanford and Son (1972), appeared in several TV commercials, and pops up in the made-for-TV
films
The Girls of Huntington House (1973),
Love Hate Love (1971),
Tenafly (1973),
Getting Away from It All (1972),
and
The Psychiatrist (1970).
Outside of acting, Carol was also a successful writer (she's the author
of the books "Inside Black Hollywood" and "The Georgette Harvey
Story"), singer and songwriter (she sang her own compositions "I Can
Make It" in "The Girls of Huntington House" and "My Soul Is A Witness"
in "Abby"). After taking a regrettably lengthy hiatus from acting
following
Disco Godfather (1979)
(she was slated to do a small role in
Quentin Tarantino's
Jackie Brown (1997), but backed out
at the last minute), Speed made a welcome comeback with a supporting
part in the independent thriller
Village Vengeance (2006).
Carol Speed died at age 76 on January 14, 2022 in Muskogee, Oklahoma.