Caryn Elaine Johnson was born on November 13, 1955, in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan, raised primarily by her mother, Emma Johnson, in New York City Housing Authority apartments in the Hell's Kitchen neighborhood. From early childhood, she struggled with severe dyslexia โ a condition not diagnosed until adulthood โ that made traditional schooling deeply frustrating. She dropped out of high school in the mid-1970s and supported herself through a remarkable range of work: bricklayer, bank teller, beautician at a mortuary, drug counselor for children, and theatrical extra. These early years of economic hardship and unconventional experience gave her an intimate understanding of American life across class and crisis that would define her art.
Her commitment to performance crystallized in California, where she studied with the San Diego Repertory Theatre and developed a series of extraordinary character monologues exploring American identity with unflinching specificity. Her one-woman show 'Whoopi Goldberg: Direct from Broadway' (1984), produced by Mike Nichols, featured six characters โ including a young Black girl who wished she had blonde hair, a disabled woman claiming her sexuality, and a junkie philosopher โ that were simultaneously hilarious and devastating. The show went directly into the most difficult territories of race, disability, addiction, and identity while maintaining deep comedic intelligence. Steven Spielberg saw the production and immediately cast her as Celie in The Color Purple, earning her an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress in 1986.
The decade following The Color Purple established Goldberg as one of the most versatile performers in Hollywood. Ghost (1990) earned her the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress โ only the second Black woman in history to win the award after Hattie McDaniel in 1939 โ with a performance that somehow managed to be simultaneously comedic, moving, and spiritually resonant. Sister Act (1992) proved her commercial viability with a franchise that became one of the highest-grossing comedies of the decade. In 2002, she became only the eleventh person in entertainment history to achieve EGOT status โ winner of an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar, and a Tony โ completing the set with a producer's Tony for the Broadway revival of Thoroughly Modern Millie.
Since 1997, Goldberg has served as co-host and moderator of The View, ABC's daytime roundtable, where her ENTJ qualities operate in their most sustained and public form. Holding a group conversation โ generating consensus where possible, enforcing productive conflict where necessary, and articulating positions with clarity and force under real-time pressure โ is exactly the domain where an ENTJ's combination of intellectual directness and genuine command ability manifests. Her willingness to stake and defend positions on politically contentious topics, her refusal to perform false agreement for social comfort, and her ability to navigate genuine ideological disagreement without dissolving into hostility make her one of television's most compelling institutional personalities. She has been cancelled twice, criticized repeatedly, and remained herself throughout.