Celebrity Coverage
Here’s what happened at the 17th Annual Black Women in Hollywood Awards

ESSENCE’s Black Women In Hollywood Awards are generally known as the premier event of awards season in Los Angeles for a lot of reasons, mainly due to how deeply Black women are celebrated, honored and uplifted at the event. It can be seen as a “family reunion”. This yr was no different, as our esteemed guests and, most significantly, the honored ones felt honored throughout the afternoon. This yr, the 17th edition of the ESSENCE Black Women in Hollywood Awards took place on Thursday, March 7, 2024 at the magnificent Academy Film Museum. Our honorees include Oscar-nominated actress and Grammy winner Danielle Brooks, six-time Grammy-nominated singer Halle Bailey, industry legend Kathryn Busby, president of original programming at STARZ, and author and showrunner Nkechi Okoro Carroll series. Grammy Award-winning actor and rapper and entrepreneur Cliff “Method Man” Smith served as MC for the ceremony.
After a tumultuous 2023 with Hollywood screenwriters and actors on strike, Black women in the film and tv industry deserve flowers for navigating the ebbs and flows of uncertainty. This yr’s luncheon theme was “Radiant Power” to honor the perseverance and steadfast strength of Black women in an industry that is often fickle and oblivious to their contributions and efforts. During the luncheon, all black women in the industry made a call to take back their power and own their gifts.
ESSENCE has an unwavering commitment to celebrating Black women in all spaces, year-round, but the luncheon was an appropriate time and place to acknowledge the film and tv industry. Ahead of the ceremony, Caroline Wanga, president and CEO of Essence Ventures, commented on why this is essential. “At this point in time, ESSENCE will remain steadfast in its commitment to uplifting those who continue to offer their craft and skills as a lifeline of optimism and hope. So, as the work to democratize wealth continues, we make no apologies for celebrating Black women in the industry who are the providers of the cinematic nutrients that nourish our spirits and souls. As we have done for nearly two decades, we will shine a spotlight on Black women in Hollywood who define the culture of entertainment the world savors, pursue and achieve equality that the establishment seeks to withhold, and commemorate the achievements they have achieved in continually floors peeling off, un-tearing down ladders and ungluing glass ceilings, which is what the Chief Executive Officer for Home, Culture and Community rightly deserves,” Wanga said.
This yr’s luncheon was much more special since it was hosted by Essence Studios and Red Summer TV and aired on OWN: The Oprah Winfrey Network, streaming on MAX and generously sponsored by Coca-Cola® Zero Sugar and smartwater®.
Check out a few of the highlights of the highly anticipated event below!
Star appearances before shows and reports from the red carpet
Before lunch proper, we had a burgundy carpet filled to the brim with black talent. From Danielle Brooks to Tia Mowry, Black Hollywood showed up and showed as much as rejoice themselves and their peers. Pre-show hosts included our own Nandi Howard, VP of Content at ESSENCE Ventures, ESSENCE alum Gia Peppers, and social media personality and actress Pretty Vee.
Notable talent interviews included honorees Danielle Brooks, Kathyrn Busby, Zendaya, Carolina Wanga, MC Lyte, Muni Long and ESSENCE founder Edward Lewis.
Howard asked ESSENCE founder Lewis, “What’s it like to see an event like this come through over the years?” His answer? “It sends shivers down my spine to know that I helped create something, to bring value, intelligence and beauty to Black women.”
Wanga also shared her thoughts on the next generation of ESSENCE: “There’s really something to be said for visionaries, but it’s another thing to create a cultural artifact that Black women wouldn’t be able to see unless someone wore it.”
Gia Peppers held down the rug and chatted with Method Man, Joey Badass and Serayah, Danielle Brooks, Halle Bailey and more.
Efficiency
To cap off this glorious afternoon, Muni Long performed her latest hit “Made For Me,” causing everyone to rise up to synchronize the lyrics.

Honorary speeches
The most vital a part of the afternoon were the moving speeches of the winners. The first honoree was actress, singer and recent mother Halle Bailey. Her sister, Chloe Bailey, tearfully presented the award and reflected on their time together in the industry. “I can’t express how special it is to see everything that my sister showed and worked so hard to make it happen,” she said.

Halle Bailey: “We are Black women in the entertainment industry, and while we have signed up for the spotlight, in the current climate, the spotlight is shining brighter, hotter, and continuously, and analyzing its expansion leaves no hiding,” she said. “I’ve learned from this spotlight over the last eight years. To be honest, it burned me too, like all of us, but it cannot be compared to the greatest joy of my life. And that was becoming a mother to my perfect little angel, Halo. There was no way in hell I was going to share the greatest joy in my world with anyone. Hello was my gift. He is the greatest blessing and I had no obligation to put him, me or my family through this,” she said.
She continued: “Given the state of the world and the place it’s in, where men try to impose their will on our bodies, nobody on social media and definitely nobody in the world was going to inform me what to do with my body and what to share with the world.”
Star Patina Miller was then introduced by director Kathryn Busby.
Catherine Busby: “You have no idea how full my heart is right now. I didn’t stand on the podium alone. I’m lucky to have great role models,” she told the audience.
She continued: “Coming to Hollywood, I always felt like I was working two jobs. One, my job, and two, representing us, fighting the good fight, because I was almost always the only black person in the room. But like the women in my family, I marched forward. The world needs our stories more than ever; we defy expectations, change the industry and influence culture. The spark you see in me is just a reflection of all of you.”
Yvonne Orji presented the award to Nkechi Okoro Carroll.

Nkechi Okoro Carroll: “Thank you so much to ESSENCE for this incredible honor. True story, I used to sneak into this event. I so wanted to hear these inspirational speeches from these stoned Black women. I still have no idea how I got to this point. I want to thank my sisterhood for always being there for me and supporting me. I always say it takes a village to raise a writer.”
At the end of the honorary speeches, Teyonah Parris introduced the incomparable Danielle Brooks. Parris said Brooks knows this, simply because you are in Hollywood doesn’t suggest you are there.
Brooks shitted herself across the room after her speech and exquisite rendition of the gospel song “I Won’t Complain.”

Danielle Brooks: “First of all, thanks God for this moment. Every time I come to this event, I feel moved in spirit and excited. I feel rejuvenated and inspired. I understand it’s since it’s the Essence of Black women in this space that makes me feel this fashion. As I stand before you in this room, I can finally lift my head, as Celie says, roll back my shoulders and look you beautiful black women in the eyes, just as I stand before you today, seeing all the faces in this montage of individuals I actually have had an honor to work.”
She continued, “When I stand before you today, receiving this honor through ESSENCE, while the Black woman who gave birth to me, my mother who raised me to be the woman you see today, can see this moment, it feels like the one of a thousand.”
Celebrity Coverage
Ici: Keke Palmer’s Beauty appearance and more – Essence

ASKRS> Keke Palmer
Time is now for essentially the most fashionable moments in celebrity between Fashion Week, a season of prizes and magazine covers. Meanwhile, some glances required a full GLAM team once we finished a month and Valentine’s Day, sleeping hair and romantic manicures are still strong.
For example Black flexible headband. With an analogous volume Honey Afro Janet Jackson was entwined with a red gel manicure to enhance the golden accents. Then the model Alva Claire attended Baft in a fragile UPDO, which combined her curved, thin eyebrows and a blue-winged insert.
Makeup Artist Dee Carrion was chargeable for the golden lips and teeth in the quilt. Then Coco Jones’s hair was soaked in water – glass lids and lips added to the appearance. As for TEMS? The shiny French manicure was cherry on its siren and hot chocolate gloss.
And those that participated within the NAACP rewards didn’t come either. Keke Palmer has turn into viral not only due to touching speech of “Artist of the Year”, but additionally due to her to knock out beauty: elegant red hair and gothic makeup makeup.
Sheryl Lee Ralph was on her “suit and draw” that night. Saisha Beecham Saisha Beecham worked on shiny magic, as she put it, “Sixty Fine” within the years. Finally, the hair artist Larry Sims gave the Gabrielle Union museum by some means Bobów. He wrote within the signature “It gives a film star”. And we couldn’t agree more.
If you missed this, take a look at the very best moments of beauty from the week.
Celebrity Coverage
Cosmetic school: Expert for additional long nails – essence

“At that time we only had acrylic,” Angie Aguirre says Essence, who puts ESPY-Jones in the primary episode. “We didn’t have a number of things we have today.” Starting the series, in honor of the Black History of the month, Aguirre, nail artist Sha’carri Richardson, resembles a black story for extremely long nails-at the identical time spreading techniques from the past.
From memories of curved acrylics on Flo Jo of the Eighties to the red manicure in Donn Summer, and even the nail of Stiletto from the Nineteen Thirties about Queen Nenzim from the Democratic Republic of Congo, manicure for construction has a wealthy history hidden behind every decorating extension.
Using the attention shadows as a substitute of the airbrush machine (which within the Nineteen Nineties was a big, loud pedal machine), she recreated one of the vital popular styles that has since appeared today as a preferred look.
Often appropriated in popular culture long, loud nails are historically called “ghetto” as an offensive statement after they wear black women. Meanwhile, they are sometimes seen as fashionable after they wear white celebrities.
“We usually set up trends [and] People kick, “says Aguirre within the film while painting about traditional nail art visible within the Nineteen Nineties.” When pop culture gets it, they change what they want to be like that. ” However, “black women wore these nails long before social media.”
Now that the nail industry is to succeed in USD 36.27 billion until 2032Aguirre explains the influence that black women have on beauty and what the longer term of those historical manicures will seem like. “Nail game has become very innovative,” he says, with latest products reminiscent of Gel-X. “[It’s] It is very different from what was during the day. “
Celebrity Coverage
ICEM: Black Love was all over the blue carpet during ABFF HONORS

Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images
On Monday, at the SLS Hotel in Beverly Hills A Who’s Who of New Stars, Hot Talent and Legends was at hand to honor the best in black talent on the screen for the American Black Film Festival awards. Honores for the Night to Aaron Pierre, who received the Rising Star award (while the crowd sang: “Aaron Pierre, to Mufasaaaa”), Essence Black Women in Hollywood Honree Marla Gibbs, who received the Hollywood Legacy award, Keke Palmer caught the Renaissan prize. Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor received the same honor for girls.
Many people got here out to have fun, including presenters Ava DuverNay, Anthony Mackie, Boots Riley, Kelvin Harrison Jr. and Regina King. But in Hollywood there have been many stars and massive names, which also got here out with their partners to enjoy the annual event. They began a blue rug with sweet PDA and good vibrations, able to enjoy an important night.
From Larenz Tate and Tomasina’s wife to Dondre Whitfield and Salla Richardson Whitfield, Loretta Devine and husband Glenn Marshall, Lance and Rebecca Gross, and newlyweds Yvette Nicole Brown and Anthony Davis, Love was in the air. (Another essence of black women in Hollywood Honore, Teyana Taylor, was a supporting Aaron Pierre there, and there are rumors that these two enjoy their company, which, for which we’re here.) More couples appeared to this event than since the prize season. Scroll to see and feel all love.
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