Kerry Washington Biography - Biography

Early Life and Parents

The daughter of a real estate broker and an education professor, actress Kerry Washington was born in New York City on January 31, 1977, and grew up in the South Bronx. She started out with ballet lessons as a young child, but her first career ambition involved a certain large mammal. "I wanted to work with Shamu at Sea World," Washington told Giant. "I thought that was the best job in the world, to care for and feed dancing whales."

Washington attended the Spence School in Manhattan, a prestigious private school. In addition to appearing in school productions, she was a member of a theater group that tackled social issues. Washington soon won a theater scholarship to George Washington University, where she earned a degree in performance studies.

Movies and TV Shows

'Save the Last Dance' and 'Bad Company'

While she made her film debut in Our Song in 2000, Washington had one of her first career breakthroughs the following year. She won over audiences with her role in Save the Last Dance (2001), starring Julia Stiles. Soon after the release of this popular teen drama, Washington moved on to comedy. She appeared in the humorous action film Bad Company (2004), starring Chris Rock and Anthony Hopkins.

'Ray' and 'She Hate Me'

Washington's career really took flight in 2004; she had several major movie roles that year, including Della Bea Robinson, the wife of blind singer and musician Ray Charles, in the biopic Ray. Washington received strong reviews for her performance, and her co-star, Jamie Foxx, won an Academy Award for his portrayal of Charles. That same year, she starred opposite Anthony Mackie in Spike Lee's dramatic comedy She Hate Me.

'Fantastic Four' and 'King of Scotland' 

The versatile actress tried her hand at the comic book action genre with 2005's Fantastic Four, portraying sculptor Alicia Masters opposite Ioan Gruffudd, Jessica Alba, Chris Evans and Michael Chiklis. The following year, Washington once again showed off her skills as a dramatic actress in The Last King of Scotland. She won raves for her nuanced turn as the wife of Ugandan dictator Idi Amin, as played by Forest Whitaker. Around this time, Washington also had a recurring role on the hit television series Boston Legal.

'I Think I Love My Wife' and 'Lakeview Terrace'

In 2007, Washington re-teamed with Rock for I Think I Love My Wife, playing a vixen who gets involved with a married man. The part gave Washington the opportunity to branch out from the many devoted wife roles she had tackled in the past. She went on to explore interracial relationships with the thriller Lakeview Terrace (2008), in which she plays an African American woman married to a white man (Patrick Wilson). The couple is harassed by an African American cop (Samuel L. Jackson).

'For Colored Girls'

With For Colored Girls (2010), Washington worked with an impressive ensemble of actresses, including Whoopi Goldberg, Phylicia Rashad, Janet Jackson and Thandie Newton. The film, directed and written by Tyler Perry, was an adaptation of a play by Ntozake Shange. 

'Django Unchained'

In 2012, Washington reunited with Ray co-star Foxx for Quentin Tarantino's western Django Unchained. She played Broomhilda von Shaft, a slave married to Foxx's title character. In the film, the pair are separated, and Django teams up with a bounty hunter (Christoph Waltz) to find her. The following year, Washington was featured in the comedy/drama Peeples.

'Scandal' 

Also in 2012, Washington moved to the small screen to star on the political drama Scandal, created by ABC powerhouse Shonda Rhimes. In the series, Washington played Olivia Pope, a "fixer," or person who cleans up scandals and other messes for her clients. The actress went on to earn two Emmy nominations and won an NAACP Image Award for the role. Scandal's series finale aired in April 2018.

'Confirmation' 

Washington added another accomplishment to her roster of acting feats when she portrayed lawyer/academic Anita Hill in the 2016 HBO film Confirmation. The movie dramatized the 1991 Congressional hearings in which Hill asserted that Supreme Court justice nominee Clarence Thomas had sexually harassed her in the workplace. Washington received Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for her performance.

'Live in Front of a Studio Audience,' 'Little Fires Everywhere'

Washington joined the nostalgic proceedings when ABC launched its two-part Live in Front of a Studio Audience in 2019, playing Helen Willis in the one-off revival of The Jeffersons. The following March, she co-starred in the Hulu miniseries Little Fires Everywhere, as a nomadic artist who upends the idyllic life of Reese Witherspoon's character.

On Stage

Washington made her Broadway debut in 2009, as part of the ensemble for David Mamet's Race. In 2018, following the conclusion of Scandal, it was announced that she was returning to the Great White Way to co-star in a new play, American Son, alongside Steven Pasquale. The production was adapted for a feature film released by Netflix in November 2019. 

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