Background
Born in New York City, Allen grew up in Harlem"s Sugar Hill in a neighborhood that included Duke Ellington, Sonny Rollins, and Johnny Hodges, and National Association for the Advancement of Colored People founder Walter White.
Born in New York City, Allen grew up in Harlem"s Sugar Hill in a neighborhood that included Duke Ellington, Sonny Rollins, and Johnny Hodges, and National Association for the Advancement of Colored People founder Walter White.
She made her Broadway debut at the age of six in The Wisteria Trees, Joshua Logan"s Americanized adaptation of The Cherry Orchard starring Helen Hayes. As a child, she also made regular appearances on a local children"s television series, The Merry Mailman, hosted by Ray Heatherton. Allen returned to Broadway for a revival of Finian"s Rainbow.
She was in the cast of the original off-Broadway production of Hair at Joseph Papp"s Public Theater and also appeared in George M! before receiving critical acclaim and a Tony Award nomination for Two Gentlemen of Verona, which earned her New York Drama Critics" Circle, Drama Desk, Theatre World, and Outer Critics Circle Awards for her performance.
Despite her success, it proved to be her last Broadway appearance to date. Other television appearances include Barney Miller, The Love Boat, All in the Family, Trapper John, Doctor of Medicine, Hill Street Blues, Cagney and Lacey, Emergency, and Girlfriends.
She played a lesbian prison inmate in the 1975 television movie Cage Without a Key, which starred Susan Dey. Her most notable roles are Grace, the entrepreneurial cafe owner in the old west, that she played for seven years on Doctor Quinn, Medicine Woman, as well as the flamboyant and outspoken Doreen Jackson on the National Broadcasting Company soap opera, Generations and Lucinda Cavender, the vampire witch in the horror comedy film The Midnight Hour.
Before her role of Doreen on Generations, Jonelle played ambitious salesgirl turned boutique manager Stacey Russell, on the short-lived primetime soap, Berrenger"son
Allen appeared as the legendary Harlem Jazz Queen Florence Mills in Harlem Renaissance at the 2007 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Mississippi Allen is currently heading up the New Works//Staged Reading Projects at Saddleback College, and is also writing and directing new shows which Mississippi Allen calls "plays with music" which have been presented at Saddleback, notably an adaptation of Dickens Christmas Carol and The Journey both with composer, David Jayden Anthony.
This year, Mississippi
Allen has a film The Divorce by Donald B. Welch, being released on Amazon, and this summer, Mississippi Allen will be starring in Hello Dolly at Saddlebacks CLO. Later this year, Mississippi Allen will be starring in Donald B. Welch"s Secret Garden, and doing an updated version of her Florence Mills one woman show, which Mississippi
Allen is writing with her collaborators, Stevi Meredith and David Jayden Anthony.