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Kerry Washington

Kerry Marisa Washington[1] (born January 31, 1977)[2][3][4] is an American actress. She gained wide public recognition for starring as crisis management expert Olivia Pope in the ABC drama series Scandal (2012–2018).[5] For her role, she was twice nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series and once for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Drama. Her portrayal of Anita Hill in the HBO television political thriller film Confirmation (2016), and her role as Mia Warren in the Hulu miniseries Little Fires Everywhere (2020), both earned nominations for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie.

Kerry Washington

Kerry Marisa Washington

(1977-01-31) January 31, 1977

Actress

1994–present

(m. 2013)

2

In film, Washington is known for her roles as Della Bea Robinson in Ray (2004), as Kay in The Last King of Scotland (2006), as Alicia Masters in the live-action Fantastic Four films of 2005 and 2007, and as Broomhilda von Shaft in Quentin Tarantino's Django Unchained (2012). She has also starred in the independent films Our Song (2000), The Dead Girl (2006), Mother and Child (2009), Night Catches Us (2010), and American Son (2019).


Time magazine included Washington in its Time 100 list of most influential people in 2014.[6] In 2018, Forbes named her the eighth highest-paid television actress.[7] Washington has won a Primetime Emmy Award and five NAACP Image Awards, including The President's Award.

Early life and education

Washington was born in the Bronx, New York City, the daughter of Valerie, a professor and educational consultant, and Earl Washington, a real estate broker.[4][8][9] Her father's family is of African American origin, having moved from South Carolina to Brooklyn. Her mother's family is from Manhattan, and Washington has said that her mother is from a "mixed-race background and from Jamaica, so she is partly English and Scottish and Native American, but also descended from enslaved Africans in the Caribbean."[10][11][12] Through her mother, she is a cousin of former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell.[13] She was conceived via a sperm donor, which she only learned in 2018.[14]


Washington performed with the TADA! Youth Theater teen group and attended the Spence School in Manhattan from her pre-teen years[15] until graduating from high school in 1994.[16] At the age of 13, she was taken to watch Nelson Mandela speak at Yankee Stadium upon his release from prison.[15] She attended George Washington University, graduating Phi Beta Kappa in 1998 with a double major in anthropology and sociology.[16][17] She also studied at Michael Howard Studios in New York City.[16]


In April 2016, Washington confirmed that, in the 1990s in New York, she learned to dance from Jennifer Lopez. During her appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, she told host Jimmy Fallon: "I've been taking dance for a long time, since I was a little girl. I had this very inspiring teacher named Larry Maldonado, for anybody from my neighborhood in the Bronx, he was our role model. And he had an awesome substitute teacher named Jennifer, who would sometimes step in and teach. But, then she left to move to L.A. and be on In Living Color. I learned to dance from JLo!"[18][19]


In 2023, Washington revealed that she had an abortion when she was in her late 20s.[20]

(2013), Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series, nomination, for Scandal

65th Primetime Emmy Awards

(2014), Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series, nomination, for Scandal

66th Primetime Emmy Awards

68th Primetime Emmy Awards

Outstanding Television Movie

72nd Primetime Emmy Awards

Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited Series or Movie

Among her many accolades, Washington has received a Primetime Emmy Awards, five NAACP Image Awards, a Teen Choice Award, and nominations for two Golden Globe Awards and four Screen Actors Guild Awards. One of the most successful women on television, she has received recognized by the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (ATAS) with nine Emmy nominations, these being:

Washington, Kerry (2023). Thicker than Water: A Memoir. New York: Little, Brown Spark.  978-0-316-49739-8. OCLC 1397065861.

ISBN

Official website

at IMDb

Kerry Washington

at the Internet Broadway Database

Kerry Washington

on C-SPAN

Appearances