Celebrity Coverage
Mamoudou Athie’s next act – The Essence

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – JUNE 20: Mamoudou Athie attends the New York premiere of “Kinds Of Kindness” on the Museum of Modern Art on June 20, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by Michael Loccisano/GA/The Hollywood Reporter via Getty Images)
Even though his face is already quite well-known, Mamoudou Athie is one step away from becoming a household name.
The Mauritania-born, New Carrolton, MD-raised actor has remained a fixture in high-profile projects since graduating from the Yale School of Drama in 2014. Even in case you don’t know his name yet, you’ve actually seen his work. Whether it’s as Grandmaster Flash in Netflix’s too-soon-dead hip-hop musical, as protagonist Elijah in Prentice Penny’s hit sommelier drama, as Wade Ripple in Disney’s , or as Ramsay Cole within the hit sequel.
“I’m incredibly lucky,” Athie says of his success on this field so soon after launching his acting profession. The classically trained actor, who also got his start on the William Esper Studio in Manhattan, acknowledges that his rapid rise to success was a mixture of exertions, timing and the collaborative efforts of many black actors who got here before him, breaking through established boundaries, stereotypes, industry discrimination and typecasting.
“I graduated in 2014 when the business was kind of taking off. I always think about all the actors of color who have been denied opportunities over the years, since the industry started,” he says. “A lot of people have done a lot of work so that I could have a fair chance at something. [like this]“Which is the real damage.”

The actor, who has already worked with stars like Jamie Foxx within the 2023 film, Neicy Nash and Courtney B. Vance in 2020, and Phylicia Rashad in 2020, also notes that his personal motivations pushed him to concentrate on auditioning for unconventional roles after graduating.
“The student loans were a huge motivator,” he laughs. “A lot of the roles you saw me in, I won’t say they didn’t exist, but I certainly wasn’t the first choice for a lot of those roles.”
You’ll rarely see Athi playing “type” in his roles. Unlike most young black actors starting out, he never needed to don an orange jumpsuit or stand in a police line. He didn’t play a T-shirt-wearing street drug dealer doomed to linger on the corner with few options and even less ambition. Instead, he was a very sensitive Brooklynite who found himself in barely absurd situations while attempting to deny his behavior on FXX, which earned him a Primetime Emmy nomination. He was an area alt-punk graveyard dweller who dreamed of a profession in hard rock recording in 2017. He was a gifted archivist who delved too deeply into an occult mystery long buried in lost footage in Netflix’s too-soon-canceled horror thriller, .
Athie often lands not only projects that tell queer stories, but additionally roles that aren’t necessarily written for a black man to fill. Yet he makes each character distinctly his own—to the purpose where viewers could never imagine anyone else filling those shoes.
“I want to be able to do whatever I want,” Athie said of being consistently solid in roles as people of color. “I went to all of these schools for a reason. Just like anyone else, we’ve earned the right to play things that are outside of our [perceived] life experience. And we can do it as well as or better than anyone else.”

His latest project, , is true to expectations, the most recent absurdist black comedy anthology directed by acclaimed contemporary surrealist, Yorgos Lanthimos.
“He could be a genius,” Athie says of Lanthimos, whose last film, released in 2023, earned 11 Oscar nominations and 4 wins.
“This guy is just so confident and unwavering in his vision of something,” the actor says of his excitement about working on the film. He says that despite not fully understanding the story — under no circumstances shocking given Lanthimos’ dystopian fantasy scenario, which the director famously never talks about — he was committed to growing as an actor and fully immersed himself within the exploration of the film.
“I saw this guy create something so unique and vivid and specific and full and terrifying. It just makes you excited when you see something so refreshingly unique and thoughtful.”
Athie takes on multiple roles within the film, which he says has pushed him to grow as an actor.
The film, which explores themes of control, sacrifice and desperation for acceptance, features wild plot lines and even wilder imagery – the whole lot from wound-licking to fatal self-harm and group sex – each delivered with a healthy dose of dark humor. The latter of those wild images involved Athi, demanding a level of enthusiasm for the role and trust within the director’s vision that he hadn’t tackled before.
“As an actor, you give up a lot of control from the filmmaker—your image, who you are, what you do—there’s a lot of things you don’t have control over. You want to do it with someone you can rely on,” he says. “And the scene isn’t a big deal. When I was shooting it, I was like, ‘Oh, man, what’s this going to look like?’ But then you see it and you’re like, ‘Oh, okay.’”

As he steadily took his acting to latest heights, Athie never overlooked the moment that showed him that this was the trail he would follow for the long haul.
“I did a play called when I was in my third year of graduate school, and it was really important to me,” he reveals. “It was basically about people and greed and money, and it was about humanity in a way that I found really intensely moving and deeply personal.”
“I remember going to Yale Hospital for a checkup and this lady stopped me. And the way she talked about how much art had affected her made me realize that this was a really worthwhile career.”
For Mamadou Athie, moments like this, which he has also experienced while working on projects similar to and , remind him what it’s all about.
“When you feel like there’s something that’s really at stake, that something’s really been said, that something’s really been explored about humanity, or that something can change someone’s mind about something, or open up someone’s perspective, or help someone feel better about something in their own life, you feel like it’s inevitably useful in a way that’s just so fulfilling.”
“Something about that moment made me think, ‘I can do this until I’m 80.’”
Celebrity Coverage
Rihanna Channels Spring Beauty in Barbados – Essence

@Badgalrii / Instagram
Spring Equinox officially begins today, which suggests that it is time to update the sweetness wardrobe to reflect essentially the most anticipated seasonal transition from winter. And for Rihanna it means binding hair with a shawl on a yacht on a barbados.
Returning home just before the subsequent seasons was crucial, especially because the pop star had a busy end last season. With $ AP Rocky, Jumping into her arms After winning a court case, to support his great return to the stage Rolling loudlyAll eyes were on Rihanna. Recently, she returned home on a brand new press trip Fenty X Puma, with wrapped hair scarves and yellow jellies for a ride on a yacht on the island.
Her hair, long, straight and dark, reached her hips, while a shawl with a green dot protected her bands from sweeping through the wind. Her little hair was wet and lived, glancing from her scarf and sitting on what was left of her blush.
Her lips were Brys Businesswoman with a pink pink (because of Fenty Beauty Global Makeup Artist Priscilla), and the nails and fingers on the feet were pink and white enough. Generally? Total ode to the essence of spring.
Celebrity Coverage
Prepare with the shades of the fan before her child’s show – Essence

Thanks to the kindness of Alan Swingen
Part is greater than only a subdued insect hypnotized by a flame. For R&B singer Shades of the fanThis is the name of her latest album and acronym for the deepest “Matters of the Heart”. When he’s preparing to sing his heart on the first stage in history Main route“The appearance is deliberately revealing, naked and layered to reflect the naked nature of my album,” Shores says Essence about her beautifully tonight.
“I have a light makeup routine every night, partly because I do it myself and partly for consistent reasons,” he says. Using nothing but Dior Foundation, Glossier Boy Brow and hybrid eyelash extensions 323 Lash TherapyS alanah Sahaba. “These three things are staples in my glam appearance,” he says, reaching for several other products, equivalent to pink and concealer, when you feel.
While her music appeared in Słrier, the creator, “comfortable” and the route with Lucky Day, she draws her inspiration from Sha. “She always has the best hair, I have to know her technique in terms of volume,” says Shores, wearing her own fluffy curls.
Beauty before the show could seem to be an obligation, between the strict time frames, attempts to decorate and find the right look to set the mood. However, “My Glam room is strangely calming,” he says. “I really assume and it seems to me that before the concert before the concert seems to me a moment of peace.” Like her music, which incorporates psychedelia, neo-soul and hyper-present instruments, its beauty routine is a spot to embodiment this energy.
“The best part is that the reaction of the audience to the spectacle,” says Shores. “I put a lot of work, making sure that the series is good and I can share a piece of heart with them every night. I can’t wait for this feeling.”
Below, behind the scenes, they appear at the process of preparing shades before the program of her child All Right Show at the starting of this week in New York.
Makeup matters

The closer to catch the highlight

Her beautiful staples

Volume, volume and more volume

Hanging through the thread

Crystals growing from her shoes

To the red lip or to not the red lip?

After the last touch

Now drop the curtains

Celebrity Coverage
15 of our favorite photos of Ossa Davis and Ruby Dee

Do you recognize that we love the black love story and what is best than late actors and activists Ossa Davis and Ruby Dee? The couple met in 1946, when each of them were forged in the sport on Broadway. Initially, Dee was not impressed. “I really didn’t like him. I thought he was a very peculiar person,” said Angela Davis during a conversation during which the couple took part in PBS in 2002. “He was as great as beans and had an adam apple that got stuck. He was strictly from the country.”
Only when she saw him at work, she began to have a look at her star in a different way. “But one day I remember, he was on stage and played the role of a returning soldier … and at some point he slowly and intentionally tied a tie in his soldier’s uniform. And I remember how he was sitting in the audience and looked at him and looked at him and looked at him and something very special happened,” she said. “I didn’t think about him in a certain way and I didn’t have romantic ideas about him. But when I watched him, I felt a kind of lightning.” Two years later, the couple got married.
Over the years, they welcomed three children who were in 1948-2005, when Davis died. Fifty -six years. Asked by the nice Susan L. Taylor in regards to the release of Essence from October 2005, what it meant to her so deeply loved and for therefore long, Dee said: “I even have a tremendous feeling of thanksgiving. When I feel like complaining, I remember how blessed I’m married to Ossa. Love, I do it and that he was sleeping
Davis had similar gratitude, as a number of years before his death he shared this jewel about what he took them together.
“Fifty years of marriage and what did I learn from it? I tell my other husbands – whose eyeballs can be covered with lust – that the way to have all women is good love of one woman,” he said. “Marriage is a place that love calls home.”
Enjoy a number of photos of their love, over 56 years below. And learn more about their love history in our black love in two minutes of the movie above.
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