Career
Angel Tompkins was a model in the Chicago area before being discovered by Woody Allen who sent her to Universal. She was signed and became part of the last Universal Contract Players. She started her television and film acting career in the late 1960s.
Wife (1970) and was nominated for a Golden Globe.
She appeared in Prime Cut (1972) with Lee Marvin and Gene Hackman, and starred in the cult classic Little Cigars (1973) as a gangster"s moll who teams up with a gang of little people. Her later films included The One Manitoba Jury (1978), The Bees (1978), Alligator (1980), The Naked Cage (1986) and Murphy"s Law (1986), opposite Charles Bronson.
Tompkins was featured in the pictorial "Angel" in the February 1972 edition of Playboy. Subsequently the magazine used her in three more editions, all presumably related to that film promotion.
In 1988, Tompkins appeared with Ann-Margret in the film A Tiger"s Tale, and made her last film appearances in Relentless (1989) and Crack House (1989).
She also works in the commercial voice-over field On television, Tompkins appeared in the pilot for Search (1972), also referenced as Probe, and appeared in many guest spots in shows such as The Wild Wild West (1965), Mannix (1967), Dragnet (1969), Bonanza (1970), Police Woman (1970), Kojak (1977), The Eddie Capra Mysteries (1978), Knight Rider (1983), and Simon & Simon (1981). Also in "Gallery of Fear" on the Canadian sci fi program "The Starlost".
In 1991, Tompkins was elected the national recording secretary of the Screen Actors Guild (Screen Actors Guild).
She ran unsuccessfully for president of the guild in 1995. In 1996, she received the most votes for the Screen Actors Guild Hollywood Board of Directors.
She ran for president again in 1999, changing her name to Angeltompkins so that her name would appear first on the ballot, and came in third. She came in fourth in the 2001 Screen Actors Guild election, her fifth attempt.