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Issa Rae

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Issa Rae
Rae in 2017
Born
Jo-Issa Rae Diop

(1985-01-12) January 12, 1985 (age 39)
Other namesJoissa Diop-Diame
EducationStanford University (BA)
Occupations
  • Actress
  • writer
  • producer
Years active2011–present
Notable workAwkward Black Girl, Insecure
Spouse
Louis Diame
(m. 2021)
Websiteissarae.com
Signature

Jo-Issa Rae Diop[1] (born January 12, 1985),[2] credited professionally as Issa Rae, is an American actress, writer, and producer.[3][4] Founder of Hoorae Media, she achieved wider recognition as the co-creator, co-writer, and star of the HBO television series Insecure (2016–2021), for which she was nominated for multiple Golden Globes Awards and Primetime Emmy Awards.[5][6]

Rae first garnered attention for her work on the YouTube web series Awkward Black Girl.[7] Since 2011, Rae has continued to develop her YouTube channel, which features various short films, web series, and other content created by black people.[8][9] Her 2015 memoir, titled The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl, became a New York Times bestseller.

Rae has also starred in feature films, with roles in the drama The Hate U Give (2018); the fantasy comedy Little (2019); the romance The Photograph (2020); the romantic comedy The Lovebirds (2020); the comedy thriller Vengeance (2022); and the comedies Barbie and American Fiction (both 2023), receiving nominations at the Screen Actors Guild Awards and Critics' Choice Movie Awards with the cast. She also voiced Jess Drew / Spider-Woman in Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse (2023) and Beyond the Spider-Verse (upcoming). Rae provided the voice work for the short film Hair Love, which won the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film in 2020.[10]

In 2018 and 2022, Rae was included in the annual Time 100 list of the most influential people in the world,[11][12] and in 2014 in the Forbes '30 Under 30' list in the entertainment section.[13] She was recognized with the Peabody Trailblazer Award and the Producers Guild of America Visionary Award.

Early life

[edit]

Jo-Issa Rae Diop was born in Los Angeles, California.[14] Her father, Abdoulaye Diop, is a pediatrician and neonatologist from Senegal, and her mother, Delyna Marie Diop (née Hayward), is a teacher from Louisiana.[3][15][16] Her parents met in France, when they were both in school.[17] She has four siblings. Her father has a medical practice in Inglewood, California.[18]: xiii 

The family lived in Dakar, Senegal,[1] during some of her childhood.[19] She was raised mostly in Potomac, Maryland, where she grew up with "things that aren't considered 'black,' like the swim team and street hockey and Passover dinners with Jewish best friends."[20] Rae was raised Catholic, her mother's faith.[21]

When Rae was in sixth grade, her family moved to the affluent View Park-Windsor Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles, where she attended a predominantly black middle school. Rae graduated from King Drew Magnet High School of Medicine and Science, where she started acting.[1] Her parents divorced when she was in high school.[18]: 100–102  Rae is fluent in French.[22]

In 2007, Rae graduated from Stanford University with a Bachelor of Arts in African and African-American Studies. As a college student, she made music videos, wrote and directed plays, and created a mock reality series called Dorm Diaries for fun. At Stanford, Rae met Tracy Oliver, who helped produce Awkward Black Girl and starred on the show as Nina.[20]

After college, Rae received a theater fellowship at The Public Theater in New York City.[1] Oliver and Rae started taking classes together at the New York Film Academy. Rae worked odd jobs and at one point was struggling to decide between business school and law school, but abandoned both prospects when Awkward Black Girl gained wider popularity in 2011.[15]

Career

[edit]

Awkward Black Girl

[edit]

Rae's web series Awkward Black Girl premiered on YouTube in 2011.[23] The show follows the life of J (played by Rae) as she interacts with co-workers and love interests who place her in uncomfortable situations. The story is told through a first-person narrative as J usually reveals how she feels about her circumstances through voice-over or dream sequence.

The series went viral through word of mouth, blog posts, and social media, resulting in mainstream media coverage and attention.[24][25][26] In an effort to fund the rest of the first season, Rae and producer Tracy Oliver decided to raise money for the series through Kickstarter. On August 11, 2011, they were awarded $56,269 from 1,960 donations and released the rest of season one on Rae's YouTube channel.[27]

Rae partnered with Pharrell and premiered season two of the series on his YouTube channel iamOTHER.[28] Rae began releasing other content on her original channel, predominantly created by and starring people of color.[29]

In 2013, Awkward Black Girl won a Shorty award for Best Web Show. Rae created Awkward Black Girl because she felt the Hollywood stereotypes of African-American women were limiting and she could not relate to them:

I've always had an issue with the [assumption] that people of color, and black people especially, aren't relatable. I know we are.[30]

By using YouTube as her forum, Rae was able to have autonomy of her work because she writes, films, produces, and edits most of her work. Rae's other shows—Ratchet Piece Theater, The "F" Word, Roomieloverfriends, and The Choir, among others—also focus on African-American experiences that are often not portrayed in the mainstream media.[31] Rae's YouTube series often imitate the production style of network television comedies, including "cut-away scenes" showing imagined behavior, similar to those seen in Scrubs and How I Met Your Mother.[32]

Insecure

[edit]

In 2013, Rae began working on a comedy series pilot with Larry Wilmore, in which she would star.[33] The series, about the awkward experiences of a contemporary African-American woman, was eventually titled Insecure. HBO picked up the pilot in early 2015 and it was subsequently greenlit.[34] Since its release in 2016, the series has received critical acclaim; Eric Deggans of NPR wrote that "Rae has produced a series that feels revolutionary just by poking fun at the life of an average, twenty-something black woman."[35]

In late 2016 Rae's mother, Delyna Diop, was featured in season 1, playing Rae's role model in her guest appearance.[36]

In 2017, the American Film Institute selected Insecure as one of the top 10 Television Programs of the Year.[37] For her acting work on the show, Rae has received two Golden Globe Award nominations for Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy in 2017 and 2018,[38] as well as three Primetime Emmy Award nominations for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series in 2018, 2020, and 2022.

In 2018, at the 77th annual Peabody Awards, Insecure was honored for "creating a series that authentically captures the lives of everyday young, black people in modern society."[39]

On November 14, 2016, HBO renewed the show for a second season.[40] The second season premiered on July 23, 2017.[41] On August 8, 2017, it was announced that the show was renewed for a third season,[42] which premiered on August 12, 2018. Season five premiered October 24, 2021. The final episode of Insecure aired December 26, 2021.

Film work

[edit]

Released in 2020, The Photograph follows the journey of Issa's character, Mae Morton, and LaKeith Stanfield's character Michael Block, as the two search for the backstory of Mae's mother. The New York Times said the film is "an unabashedly old-school love story".[43] Empire magazine said that "The Photograph is an African-American romance that, for the most part, feels relatable and true".[44]

Released in 2020, The Lovebirds directed by Michael Showalter, Rae played the role of Leilani. The film also starred Kumail Nanjiani, who played Jibran, Leilani's boyfriend. Throughout the film, the couple struggles to maintain their relationship and during this, they face an eventful murder.

Book

[edit]

Rae's first book, a memoir titled The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl, was released in 2015 and became a New York Times bestseller.[45] In the book, she chronicles her life through a series of humorous anecdotes and opens up about her personal struggle with not fitting in, and not being considered "black enough" at times.[16]

Other work

[edit]

In 2016, Rae created the podcast called Fruit.

On October 11, 2019, Google announced that Rae would be an additional voice to the Google Assistant. Users could make Google Assistant speak in Rae's voice by saying "Ok Google, talk like Issa."[46] Issa's voice was available until Friday, October 1, 2021.[47]

Also in 2019, Rae, through her newly launched record label Raedio, partnered with Atlantic Records to produce "Kinda Love" by singer-rapper TeaMarrr.[48]

In March 2021, Rae's production company, Hoorae, signed a five-year film and television deal with WarnerMedia.[49] In 2021, Sweet Life: Los Angeles, a reality television program created by Rae, was produced as part of this deal.[50]

Rae is a co-owner of Hilltop Coffee + Kitchen, a Los Angeles-based independent coffee chain.[51]

Personal life

[edit]

Rae's birth name, Jo-Issa, comes from a combination of the names of her grandmothers: Joyce and Isseu. Her middle name, Rae, is after an aunt, who was an artist.[20]

Rae married her longtime boyfriend, Louis Diame, a Senegalese businessman, in a private ceremony in France in July 2021.[52] Rae first wore her engagement ring publicly on the cover of Essence magazine's April 2019 issue.[52]

Public image and activism

[edit]

In 2012, Rae was included on the annual Forbes '30 Under 30' list in the entertainment section.[13] She was listed two times in the annual Time 100 list of the most influential people in the world.

In May 2015, Rae appeared on the cover of Essence magazine's Game Changers issue, alongside Shonda Rhimes, Ava DuVernay, Debbie Allen, and Mara Brock Akil. Rae expressed her desire for more people of color working in production behind the scenes to make a lasting impact in the television industry.[53] On the red carpet at the 2017 Emmy Awards, Rae told reporters, "I'm rooting for everybody Black." The quote went viral and appeared on T-shirts and in the song "Sue Me" by the rapper Wale.[54] Rae was also vocally supportive of the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike.[55]

Rae is an advocate for civil rights and women's rights movements. Her work includes themes of equality and social justice. She works closely with organizations like the ACLU, BLD PWR, and Black Lives Matter.[56] Rae has used her platform to bring attention to police violence and brutality against African-Americans. Following the police shooting of Alton Sterling in 2016, she raised $700,000 for the Sterling Family Trust to help pay for the Sterling children to attend college.[57]

Her show Insecure has changed the public perception of the South Los Angeles community by highlighting Black businesses.[58]

Filmography

[edit]

Film

[edit]
Rae (second from left) discusses Little with co-stars Regina Hall and Marsai Martin and director Tina Gordon
Year Title Role Notes
2014 Black Twitter Screening Short film; writer only
Protect and Serve Police Recruit Short film; also executive producer
A Bitter Lime Jane Johnson
2018 The Hate U Give April Ofrah
2019 Little April Williams
Hair Love Mother Short film; voice role
2020 The Photograph Mae Morton Also executive producer
The Lovebirds Leilani
Coastal Elites Callie Josephson
2022 Vengeance Eloise
2023 Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse Jess Drew / Spider-Woman Voice role
Barbie President Barbie
American Fiction Sintara Golden
TBA Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse Jess Drew / Spider-Woman Voice role; In production
Key
Denotes films that have not yet been released

Television

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2012–2013 The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl J Main cast; also creator; director and writer for episode: "The Sleepover"; producer for episode: "The Check"
2012 The Couple Lisa Episode: "Exes and Texts"
2012–2013 The Number Lisa 6 episodes
2013 True Friendship Society Mama Moth Episode: "Pilot Part Two"
My Roommate the J Episode: "Awkward Black Girl"
Instacurity Issa Episodes: "The Birthday Party" and "Instacurity PSA"
Little Horribles Best Friend Episode: "Sexual Activity"; also executive producer (3 episodes)
2014 Rubberhead Bride 2 Television film; segment: "Absorption"
2016–2021 Insecure Issa Dee Main cast; also creator & writer
2018 BoJack Horseman Dr. Indira (voice) 2 episodes
2019–2021 A Black Lady Sketch Show Various 6 episodes; also executive producer (16 episodes)
2020 Saturday Night Live Herself (host) Episode: "Issa Rae/Justin Bieber"
Sesame Street The Queen/The Princess Episode: "Cardboard Castle"
BlackAF Herself Episode: "yo, between you and me... this is because of slavery"
2022 Roar[59] Wanda Shepard Episode: "The Woman Who Disappeared"
The Hair Tales Herself

As producer only

[edit]
Year Title Credits Notes
2013 How Men Become Dogs Executive producer 9 episodes
Little Horribles 3 episodes
Inside Web Series Television documentary
Black Actress Producer
2013–2014 Roomieloverfriends Executive producer 4 episodes
2013–2015 The Choir Executive producer; director (2 episodes); writer (12 episodes)
2014 Hard Times Executive producer Short film
So Jaded Television film
Words with Girls
Bleach
2014–2015 First Co-executive producer (10 episodes); co-producer (1 episode)
2015 Get Your Life Executive producer
Killing Lazarus Producer
2022 Sweet Life: Los Angeles Creator and executive producer
Rap Sh!t[60] Creator, executive producer and writer
2025 One of Them Days Producer

Music videos

[edit]
Year Song Artist Role
2013 "Happy" Pharrell Williams Dancer
2017 "Moonlight" Jay-Z Rachel Green
"Spice Girl" Aminé Girlfriend
2018 "Nice for What" Drake Herself
2019 "Kinda Love" TeaMarrr Therapist
2020 "Lights On" D Smoke, SiR Stripper
"Entrepreneur" Pharrell Williams, Jay-Z Herself

Awards and nominations

[edit]
Award Year Work Category Result Ref.
Astra Film and Creative Awards 2024 Barbie Best Cast Ensemble Nominated [61]
Austin Film Critics Association 2023 Barbie Best Ensemble Nominated [62]
BET Awards 2017 Insecure Best Actress Nominated [63]
2018 Nominated [64]
2020 Won [65]
2021 Nominated [66]
2022 Nominated [67]
Black Film Critics Circle 2023 American Fiction Best Ensemble Won [68]
Black Reel Awards 2017 Insecure Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series Nominated
Outstanding Comedy Series Nominated
Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series Won
2018 Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series Won
Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series Nominated
Outstanding Comedy Series Nominated
2019 Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series Won
Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series Nominated
2020 Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series Won [69]
Outstanding Comedy Series Won
A Black Lady Sketch Show Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series Nominated
Columbus Film Critics Association 2024 Barbie Best Ensemble Nominated [70]
Critics' Choice Movie Awards 2024 Barbie Best Acting Ensemble Nominated [71]
Critics' Choice Television Awards 2019 Insecure Best Actress in a Comedy Series Nominated [72]
2021 Nominated [73]
2022 Nominated [74]
Florida Film Critics Circle 2023 Barbie Best Ensemble Nominated [75]
Georgia Film Critics Association Awards 2024 American Fiction Best Ensemble Nominated [76][77]
Barbie Nominated
Golden Globe Awards 2017 Insecure Best Actress in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy Nominated [78]
2018 Nominated [79]
2022 Nominated [80]
Gotham Awards 2020 Rap Sh!t Breakthrough Series - Shortform Nominated [81]
Gracie Awards 2018 Insecure Outstanding Female Actor in a Leading Role in a Comedy or Musical Won
Houston Film Critics Society 2023 Barbie Best Ensemble Cast Nominated [82][83]
MTV Movie & TV Awards 2017 Insecure Next Generation Nominated [84]
2018 Best Performance in a Show Nominated [85]
2021 Best Comedic Performance Nominated [86]
NAACP Image Awards 2017 Insecure Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series Nominated [87]
Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series Nominated
2018 Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series Nominated [88]
Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series Nominated
Herself Entertainer of the Year Nominated
2019 Insecure Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series Nominated [89]
BoJack Horseman Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance (Television or Film) Nominated
2021 The Photograph Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture Nominated [90]
Saturday Night Live Outstanding Guest Performance in a Comedy or Drama Series Nominated
Insecure Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series Won
Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series Nominated
2022 Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series Won [91]
Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series Won
2024 American Fiction Outstanding Ensemble Cast in a Motion Picture Nominated [92]
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse Outstanding Character Voice Performance – Motion Picture Won
Young Love Outstanding Character Voice-Over Performance (Television) Nominated
NAMIC Vision Awards 2017 Insecure Best Performance - Comedy Won
2021 Won
2022 Nominated
North Carolina Film Critics Association 2024 Barbie Best Acting Ensemble Nominated [93]
Peabody Award 2023 Herself Trailblazer Award Won [94]
People's Choice Awards 2020 The Lovebirds Female Movie Star of the Year Nominated [95]
Comedy Movie Star of the Year Nominated
The Photograph Drama Movie Star of the Year Nominated
Insecure Comedy TV Star of the Year Nominated
Portland Critics Association 2024 Barbie Best Ensemble Cast Nominated [96][97]
Primetime Emmy Awards 2018 Insecure Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Nominated [98]
2020 Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Nominated [99][100]
Outstanding Comedy Series Nominated
A Black Lady Sketch Show Outstanding Variety Sketch Series Nominated
2021 Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series Nominated [101]
2022 Outstanding Variety Sketch Series Nominated [102]
Insecure Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Nominated
Producers Guild of America Awards 2022 Herself Visionary Award Won [103]
San Diego Film Critics Society 2023 Barbie Best Ensemble Runner-up [104]
Satellite Awards 2018 Insecure Best Actress in a Television Series – Musical or Comedy Won [105]
2019 Nominated [106]
2021 Nominated [107]
Screen Actors Guild Awards 2024 Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture American Fiction Nominated [108]
Barbie Nominated
Seattle Film Critics Society Awards 2024 Barbie Best Ensemble Cast Nominated [109]
St. Louis Film Critics Association 2023 Barbie Best Ensemble Runner-up [110]
Streamy Awards 2018 Giants Best Drama Series Won [111]
TCA Awards 2017 Insecure Individual Achievement in Comedy Nominated [112]
2020 Nominated [113]
Utah Film Critics Association 2024 Barbie Best Ensemble Cast Nominated [114]
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards 2023 American Fiction Best Ensemble Nominated [115]
Barbie Nominated
Webby Awards 2019 Herself Video Person of the Year Won [116]

Works and publications

[edit]
  • Rae, Issa (2015). The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl. New York, NY: 37 Ink/Atria – Simon & Schuster. ISBN 9781476749051. OCLC 901338241.

References

[edit]
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