June Angela is an American actress, singer, and dancer. Her best-known role is that of Julie, the mainstay member of the Short Circus band that was featured in the PBS children's television series The Electric Company during its entire six-year run.
Early years
Angela is of Italian and Japanese heritage. Her father met her mother in Osaka, Japan, after the Korean War. She learned to speak Japanese as a child, when visiting her mother's relatives, but eventually forgot the language. She started performing in stage productions at an early age. Her younger brother also worked as a child actor.[1][2][3]
Angela was encouraged to pursue modeling as a young child by an acquaintance of her mother, going on to portray the live version of Remco's "Jan Doll" in a commercial for the toy, part of its Pocketbook line.[3]
The Short Circus
As Julie, Angela grew up on The Electric Company. She was awarded an Emmy of Honor in 1976 for her work on the series.[3][4] Angela sang on the Grammy Award-winning 1971 soundtrack album of The Electric Company as well. Angela said she named her Short Circus character Julie after her idol at the time, Julie Andrews.[4]
Career highlights
When The Electric Company began wrapping production, Angela became a regular on the first Asian American TV comedy series Mr. T and Tina (ABC) where she and her brother played Pat Morita's children.[3] Numerous works in theater and television followed. Most notably she was nominated for Broadway's Tony and Drama Desk Award as Best Leading Actress in a Musical for Shogun: The Musical. In 2017, she starred opposite Danny Glover as his wife in the two-character play Yohen at East West Players in Los Angeles.[4] She also appeared as Madame Xing, Jessica's psychic on the ABC TV series Fresh Off the Boat.
She co-starred as Tuptim with Yul Brynner in the Broadway & London Palladium Revival of The King and I (1977)[3] and starred in many world premieres including Sayonara[5] and Off-Broadway's Cambodia Agonistes at Pan Asian Repertory Theatre.[6] For Velina Hasu Houston's Tea,[7] she won a Theater Guild Award for Best Lead Actress.[4] Additionally, on television, she starred alongside Cloris Leachman and Pat Morita, once again, in a TV drama, Blind Alleys written by David Henry Hwang and Frederic Kimball.
She then went to Kyoto to film the TV movie American Geisha (CBS), which was based on the autobiographical book by Liza Dalby.
Angela holds the distinction of making the youngest solo soprano debut at age 10 as Flora in Benjamin Britten's The Turn of the Screw with the New York City Opera at Lincoln Center.[8] Later, Angela's solo album, released on Original Cast Records, features a full orchestra on songs from shows she has done, which includes a medley from The Electric Company and several jazz numbers.
In 2006, Angela and other cast members of The Electric Company, including Morgan Freeman, Rita Moreno, and Joan Ganz Cooney, were interviewed for the 2006 DVD The Best of The Electric Company.[4]
Angela was levitated atop the World Trade Center by Doug Henning in the "highest levitation in the world".[9] In June 1976, the photo was featured on the cover of The Electric Company Magazine.[10]
She has recorded over 40 audiobook titles using different character voices, primarily for children on Audible.[citation needed]
^ abc"June Angela (visual voices guide)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved June 29, 2024. A green check mark indicates that a role has been confirmed using a screenshot (or collage of screenshots) of a title's list of voice actors and their respective characters found in its credits or other reliable sources of information.