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Fun at Dragon Con 2023
Did I go drinking with hobbits this year? You bet I did. Hear all my stories escapades from Dragon Con 2023. Learn what new musical pin is in my store and how I’m keeping them organized through upcycling.
This is Pub Songs & Stories #274.
0:20 - Marc Gunn “Arthur McBride” from St Patrick’s Day
3:02 - WELCOME TO PUB SONGS & STORIES
I am Marc Gunn. I’m a rhythm and folk musician and podcaster. I perform at Ironshield Brewing in Lawrenceville, Georgia this Saturday.
If you’re new to the show, please follow us on your favorite podcatcher. You can do that PubSong.com or even better or you can subscribe and download all of my songs in this show and the last one. Just send me an email. pubsong@celtfather.
You will get an auto responder to download the month’s songs. You will also get that subscribe link. It’s quick and easy. While you’re emailing me to get your free EP, let me know what you’re doing while listening to this episode.
3:44 - WHAT’S NEW - UPCYCLING MUSICAL PIN CASES
8:48 - UPCOMING SHOWS
SEP 23: Ironshield Brewing, Lawrenceville, GA @ 5:30-8:30 PM
OCT 13: Ironshield Brewing, Lawrenceville, GA @ 6:00-9:00 PM
OCT 19: Bandcamp Internet Concert @ 7:30 PM
OCT 20-22: Multiverse Con, Atlanta, GA
DEC 3: Nerdy Wonderland & Holiday Market at The Lost Druid Brewery, Avondale Estates, GA
DEC 10: Nerdy Noel, Huntsville, AL
12:29 - Dan the Bard “Drink Drink Drink” from Unicorns & Dragons
14:44 - JOIN THE CLUB
The show is brought to you by my Gunn Runners on Patreon. If you enjoy this podcast or my music, please join the Club. Every week, you get bonus podcasts, downloadable songs, printed sheet music, blogs, or stories from the road. Plus, you get weekly access to my Coffee with The Celtfather video concerts. Sign up for as little as $5 per month and save 15% with an annual membership.
Thanks to my newest Gunn Runners on Patreon: DWS, Melissa Randall, A. Lynch, Traci Girard-Turner, Michelle Hahn, Lisa, David Willer, Jo Navarre, Tracy O'Shea, Antoinette Brenion, John Dowling, Kate Smith, Gina Colaianni, Ruth Acoya, Gordy Euler, Iain Benson, Kerry Komai, Dannan Tavona, Tom DiGenno, Mazer
If you can’t support us financially, you can leave a review for free.
15:49 - DRAGON CON THURSDAY - SATURDAY
24:56 - Marc Gunn “Those Characters Died” from Sci Fi Drinking Songs
29:56 - DRAGON CON 2023 - SATURDAY - MONDAY
37:09 - CLOSING
37:45 - OUTRO
Thanks for listening to Pub Songs & Stories. The show is brought to you by my Gunn Runners on Patreon. Sign up for new podcasts, videos, and songs every month. The show was edited by Mitchell Petersen with graphics by Miranda Nelson Designs.
You can follow and listen to the show wherever you find podcasts. Sign up to my mailing list to read the show notes for this episode and find out where I’m performing.
And of course, please tell one friend about this podcast. Word of mouth is the absolute best way to support any creative endeavor. Have fun and sing along at www.pubsong.com!
Remember. Reduce, reuse, recycle, and think about how you can make a positive impact on your environment.
#pubstories #danthebard
Check out this episode!
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Between Earth & Sky from Andrew Nadkarni on Vimeo.
Renowned ecologist Nalini Nadkarni studies "what grows back” after a disturbance in the rainforest canopy. After surviving a life-threatening fall from a tree, she must turn her research question onto herself to explore the effects of disturbance and recovery throughout her own life.
betweenearthandsky.com _____
a film by ANDREW NADKARNI featuring NALINI NADKARNI produced by SWETHA REGUNATHAN KATIE SCHILLER executive producers CAITLIN MAE BURKE SU KIM edited by PETER ZACHWIEJA directors of photography JOE VAN EECKHOUT DEREK KNOWLES original score SARI MELLAFE associate producers MEGAN MASSEY DEVIN TUSA PETER ZACHWIEJA _____
additional cinematography KATELYN REBELO ANDREW HINTON assistant editors JORDAN TULLIS REBECCA SCHWARTZ additional footage provided by MERETE MUELLER additionally featured KEYLOR MUÑOZ ELIZONDO INDIRA KULKARNI AMY McDERMOTT business affairs DEVIN TUSA clearance consultant ADAM LAWRENCE graphic design MEGAN ROJEK _____ produced in association with AMERICAN DOCUMENTARY | POV Shorts executive producers for American Documentary | POV Shorts OPAL H. BENNETT ERIKA DILDAY CHRIS WHITE produced in association with IF/THEN SHORTS | FIELD OF VISION consulting producer | IF/Then Shorts MERRILL STERRITT coordinator | IF/Then Shorts CHRISTINE CHUNG _____ post production services CUTTERS STUDIOS president & managing director | cutters studios CRAIG DUNCAN managing director & executive producer | cutters CAITLIN GRADY additional editing | cutters REBECCA SCHWARTZ senior producer | cutters JAYSON RAMOS executive producer | post-production ELIZABETH KRAJEWSKI _____ managing director | another country TIM KONN executive producer | another country LOUISE RIDER sound designer & mixer | another country JORDAN STALLING associate sound designer & mixer | another country LOGAN VINES
producer | another country JOSH HUNICUTT _____ managing director | flavor NEAL COHEN executive producer | flavor KATE SMITH flame artist | flavor MOISES TAVERA resource manager | flavor JULIE KLOS _____ color ASSEMBLY supervising colorist MARÍA CARRETERO colorist JOSÉ FONT producer | assembly VERONICA WEBB _____ co-produced by IT DOESN'T SUCK PRODUCTIONS impact support provided by THE REDFORD CENTER JILL TIDMAN HEATHER FIPPS ARATHI GOVIND CAIT FITZWATER NICO CADENA production support provided by BRIC TV KUYE H. YOUNGBLOOD CHARLIE HOXIE SRIYANKA RAY additional production funding provided by MOUNTAINFILM _____ special thanks to the family JACK LONGINO AUGUST LONGINO NATALIE VANDEVEN RIKKI NADKARNI LONGINO special thanks to the family BOB DEUTSCH ELLEN DEUTSCH PAULA DEUTSCH THELMA DEUTSCH AMAL FALLAH SUSHA FALLAH SAROJ GHOTING MOHAN NADKARNI VINAY NADKARNI special thanks EMILY BEST ELLA CHRISTIANSEN MARK DUPLASS DOUG FABRIZIO JESSICA FITZMORRIS DAISY FRIEDMAN PAUL GABRIELSEN JO GENNETT LORENA LOURENÇO RANDY MacLOWRY KHAULA MALIK CRISTY MEINERS KELSIE MOORE SKYLAR NIELSEN MALIKKAH ROLLINS ZEV ROSE BROOKE ROSS SUSAN SCHILLER KIRA SIMON-KENNEDY REENA SHAH KATRIN SPIRIDONOVA TRACY HEATHER STRAIN _____ location & access support MONTEVERDE CLOUD FOREST BIOLOGICAL PRESERVE MONTEVERDE INSTITUTE OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY - COLLEGE OF FORESTRY STARKER CAPSTONE WORKSHOP THE MOBILE MOON CO-OP UNIVERSITY OF UTAH _____ archival materials "Climbing a Tree" produced by Elaine Clark & Doug Fabrizio cinematography by Nathan C. Balli provided by RadioWest "Nalini Nadkarni | Tapestry Thinking: Weaving Together the Unexpected" provided by TEDxSaltLakeCity "Not My Job: We Quiz Tree Canopy Expert Nalini Nadkarni On Canapés" Wait Wait… Don’t Tell Me! provided by NPR "Fallen: A Transdisciplinary Tale of Disturbance and Recovery" provided by Society of Critical Care Medicine "Rain Forest: Heroes of the High Frontier" provided by National Geographic "The Second Voyage of the Mimi" provided by Bank Street College of Education "Between Earth and Sky: Our Intimate Connections to Trees" provided by University of California Press _____ The filmmaking team would like to acknowledge that this documentary was filmed on the unceded territory of the Quinault, Rama, Eastern Shoshone, Chepenefa Peoples, who have stewarded this land throughout the generations.
We thank them for their strength and resilience in protecting this land, and aspire to uphold our responsibilities according to their example. _____
If you were affected by sexual violence, you are not alone.
NATIONAL SEXUAL ASSAULT HOTLINE 800.656.HOPE online.rainn.org
The National Sexual Assault Hotline is operated by RAINN, the nation’s largest anti-sexual violence organization. _____ "Between Earth & Sky" won the 2021 IF/Then x The Redford Center Nature Access Pitch at DOC NYC 2021.
This film was produced by By the Creek Productions, which is solely responsible for its content. © 2023 By the Creek Productions LLC All Rights Reserved ___
betweenearthandsky.com/resources
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Back again with the costume designer talk -- Yes, I agree with the mischaracterization of all the characters in s6. It felt like last series' plots and endings had been thrown out the window. While watching s6, it felt like a different show all together. Everything that made every character unique was gone. Was there any reason as to why Edward was gone? Also, you stated that Matty likes Victorian and gothic culture. What are other characters' interests? I know Alo's are nature/punk; Rich: metal
Totally. I think series 5 got a lot of backlash from older fans who no longer felt like the characters were relatable and were very vocal about that fact on Twitter, and so they decided to go completely in the opposite direction because maybe people would like that instead. And I think that’s a real shame, because like I’ve said before, I think series 5 is some of the best, tightest writing that Skins ever did. As far as Edward goes, I think he left to work on Secret Diary of a Call Girl. My impression is that he was trying to balance both jobs in 2010 and then felt like it was too much. Katie Newham, who took over, was Edward’s assistant costumer, so I think he assumed that she would be able to just pick up where he left off, which ended up totally not being the case (and which is what makes me think she comes from a styling/costume construction background as opposed to a costume design one).
Canonically in terms of interests, here’s what the characters like:
Franky likes “making stuff,” The Catcher in the Rye, The Little Prince, Clockwork Orange, Graphic Novels – Dark Knight, Manga - The Rose of Versailles, Arcade Fire, Burial, Crystal Castles, Nirvana, Corpse Bride, Seven Samurai, Let Me In, Bad Santa, Spirited Away, Vertigo, Harold Lloyd!, Dexter, The Walking Dead, Battlestar Galactica, and taking photos.
Alo likes his weed, his van, his dog, Youth in Revolt, The Dharma Bums, The Velveteen Rabbit, Blitzen Trapper, Wolf Parade, Dog is Dead, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zero's, Fruit Bats AND Filthy filthy filthy filthy filth. Borgore, Excision, DatSikk, Funtcase, 16 Bit, Into the Wild, Grizzly Man, Where the Wild Things Are, East of Eden, The Jungle Book, Backdoor Sluts 9, The Hangover, Ninja Warrior, Party Down. Summer Heights High. Babestation. South Park. Family Guy, Lookwell, porn, and Victorian porn.
Rich is mostly defined by what he doesn’t like: he doesn’t like pop music, Simon Cowell, beautiful people, Radio 1, ITV, rapping, beatboxing, middle-class wankers, racism, sexism, Death Cab For Cutie, The Smiths, religion, Downton Abby, Tracy Chevalier, nu-metal, Empire magazine, Kerrang (wankers), drum machines (except when carefully used in Grindcore or Cybergrind – see Cutting Pink With Knives and Noism), synthesizers, Beth Ditto, public displays of affection, the city centre at the weekend, trance, techno, house, dubstep or any music made by skinny white people with computers, Kanye West, JLS, any show about fucking cooking or cooks, townies, chavs, narcissistic politicians, teachers, the song ‘Wait and Bleed’, the second solo on ‘Master Of Puppets’, artichokes, JK Rowling, any film or tv show with fucking vampires or zombies made after 1986, Glee, Glee, Glee, Glee, Glee, Glee, Glee. He does like metal (”ugly, angry music which you’d probably hate because you don’t understand it”), Atlas Shrugged, American Psycho, The Illuminatus Trilogy, Slayer, Napalm Death, Black Sabbath, Raging Speedhorn, Noism, Atari Teenage Riot, Venetian Snares, Behold The Arctopus, Godflesh, Cathedral, Sleep, Sepultura, Pantera, Soul Fly, Slipknot (2nd album only), PPK, Anal Cunt, Pig Destroyer, Jesu, Sunn 0))), James Plotkin, Earth, Brain Donor, Chrome Hoof, Hair Police, Mayhem, Wolves In The Throne Room, Burzum, Wolf Eyes, Ec8or, Dark City, Split Second, Blade Runner, Near Dark, Braindead, Halloween, The Thing, The Fly, and Alien.
Mini likes “Shopping. Shoes. Sushi. Sex. (”yes, always in that order.”) Sour apple martinis, putting effort into her appearance, Diana, Princess of Wales, Marilyn Monroe, Madonna, yoga, Pilates, fashion, fragrances, dubstep, Katy Perry, Harry Potter, Twilight, Dreamgirls, Grease, Dirty Dancing, Pretty Woman, The Hot Chick, Legally Blonde, Clueless, Mean Girls, Crossroads, Inbetweeners, Misfits, Come Dine With Me, Party Wars, True Blood, Gossip Girl, 90210, The Hills, and ANTM.
Liv likes dancing, HST, Philip K Dick, The Animals of Farthing Wood, Only Forward, Dubstep, Hard DnB, Die Antwoord, Kids, A Scanner Darkly, Dazed and Confused, Bright Young Things, Anchorman, Blades of Glory, The Other Guys, anything in which Mel Gibson dies, Banged Up Abroad, BSG, Firefly, South Park, Twin Peaks, Hollyoaks, The Gilmore Girls.
Nick likes Rugby, Sex, Winning, Drinking, being awesome, “all sorts” of music, R’n’B, Mumford and Sons, Rocky, Bourne, Borat, and anything with action or the funny, Sport and Friday Night Lights.
Matty likes absurdity, Friedrich Nietzsche, William S. Burroughs, Clive Barker, Hakim Bey, Splatterpunk, Maurice G. Dantec, Anton LaVey, Robert Walser, H.P. Lovecraft, Antonin Artaud, Raymond Abellio, The Art of War, everything Edgar Allen Poe would have listened to if the synthesizer was created before 1964, David Lynch, My Own Private Idaho, What's Eating Gilbert Grape, and Shortbus.
Grace likes so many things. Jane Austen, ballet, theater, lucid dreaming, not having to wear a school uniform, collecting pennies, making wishes on things, animals, vanilla ice cream, The Big Book of Fairytales, Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Wuthering Heights, Northanger Abby, Mansfield Park, Persuasion, Emma, Lolita, Jane Eyre, Little Women, Ballet Shoes, Alice Through the Looking Glass, Great Expectations, Tess of The D’Urbervilles, A Little Princess, The Secret Garden, Tom’s Midnight Garden. The Lion The Witch and The Wardrobe, The Wizard of Oz, Tales From The Brothers Grimm, Matilda, Alice's Adventures In Wonderland, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Romeo and Juliet, Much Ado About Nothing, Death of a Salesman, Cyrano de Bergerac, Macbeth, Cat On A Hot Tin Roof, A Streetcar Named Desire, Cymbeline, Twelfth Night, The Tempest, The Winter's Tale, music that moves her, Casablanca. Sabrina. 42nd Street. Meet Me In St. Louis. A Star Is Born. The Wizard of Oz. An American In Paris. Mary Poppins. The Sound of Music. Annie. Singing In The Rain. Top Hat. The Gay Divorce. My Fair Lady. West Side Story. The Red Shoes. Grease. Fame. Dirty Dancing. Moulin Rouge. Chicago. Cleopatra. The Philadelphia Story. The Shop Around The Corner. An Affair To Remember. Some Like It Hot. Roman Holiday. Meet John Doe. La Belle Et La Bete. Breakfast At Tiffany’s. Romeo and Juliet. Disney films, Jeeves and Wooster. The One Show. Strictly Come Dancing. Anything on the Disney Channel. So You Think You Can Dance. Downton Abbey. Agatha Christie’s Poirot. The Forsythe Saga. Any Human Heart. Upstairs, Downstairs.
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[TASK 151: JAMAICA]
In celebration of Caribbean American Heritage Month, here’s a masterlist below compiled of over 1,170+ Jamaican faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever faceclaim or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK - examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F:
Cleo Laine (1927) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress and singer.
Mona Hammond (1934) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Possibly Other / Chinese] - actress.
Joan Hooley (1936) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Leonie Forbes (1937) Afro-Jamaican - actress, broadcaster, and producer.
Martine Beswick (1941) Jamaican [Portuguese / British] - actress and model.
Carole Crawford (1943) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Cynthia Richards (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rita Marley (1946) Cuban [Afro-Jamaican] - singer.
Millie Small (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Beryl Cunningham (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Esther Anderson (1946) Jamaican - actress, filmmaker, and photographer.
Marcia Barrett (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Beverley Kelso (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Audrey Hall (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Grace Jones (1948) Afro-Jamaican, as well as 1/16th Scottish - model, singer and actress.
Marcia Griffiths (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eleanor Alberga (1949) Afro-Jamaican - composer.
Fae Ellington (1950) Afro-Jamaican - media personality and lecturer.
Susan Cadogan (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lillian Allen (1991) Afro-Jamaican - musician and writer.
Liz Mitchell (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dawn Penn (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Judy Mowatt (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Patsy Yuen (1952) Jamaican [Hakka Chinese] - model, fashion designer, and Miss Jamaica World 1973.
Claudja Barry (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actress.
Lorna Bennett (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Marcia Hines (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer, and tv personality.
Adrienne Banfield-Jones (1953) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - tv personality.
Doña Croll (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Carlene Davis (1953) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Samantha Rose (1954) Jamaican - singer.
Rosanne Katon (1954) Jamaican / Unknown - model, actress, and comedian.
Shari Belafonte (1954) Afro-Jamaican, Dutch Jewish, Irish, Scottish / African-American - actress, model, writer and singer.
Sandy Daley (1954) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Cindy Breakspeare (1954) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Irish, English] / British - singer and model.
Sandi Bogle / Sandy Channer (1954) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Chinese, Possibly Other] - tv personality.
Jacqui Gordon-Lawrence (1956) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Sheila Hylton (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sheryl Lee Ralph (1956) African-American, Afro-Jamaican [including Cameroonian] - actress and singer.
Jaki Graham / Jacqueline Graham (1956) Jamaican [including Nigerian] - singer-songwriter and producer.
Marcia Aitken (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sharon Forrester (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Precious Wilson (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ruby Turner (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer-songwriter.
Suzanne Packer (1958) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino] - actress.
Janet Kay (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer-songwriter.
Tonya Williams (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
J.C. Lodge / June Carol Lodge, (1958) Jamaican - singer, actress and artist.
Barbara Eve Harris (1959) Trinidadian [Afro-Jamaican] - actress.
Sister Carol / Carol Theresa East (1959) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer.
Gail Vaz-Oxlade (1959) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Spanish, Possibly Other] - tv personality and writer.
Carroll Thompson (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer, bassist, and pianist.
Camille Turner (1960)Afro-Jamaican = performance artist, curator, and educator.
Lonny Chin (1960) Jamaican, Chinese, Welsh, Swedish - actress and model.
Marla Glen (1960) Afro-Jamaican / Mexican - singer.
Buntricia Bastian (1960) Afro-Jamaican - makeup artist.
Diane Louise Jordan / Diane Johnson (1960) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter and radio presenter.
Gina Belafonte (1961) 1/4 Afro-Jamaican, 5/8 Jewish [Dutch Jewish, Russian Jewish, Sephardi Jewish], 1/16 Irish, 1/16 Scottish- actress and producer.
Venice Kong (1991) Jamaican [Chinese] - model and actress.
Pauline Henry (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Kim Appleby (1961) Afro-Jamaican / British - actress and singer-songwriter.
Tracy Spencer (1962) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer.
Sister Nancy / Ophlin Russell (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Downtown Julie Brown / Julie Brown (1963) Afro-Jamaican / British - actress, tv personality, DJ, and VJ.
Caron Wheeler (1963) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, pianist, and producer.
Sharon Marley (1964) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - singer-songwriter, percussionist, dancer, and curator.
Gloria Reuben (1964) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican (including Cameroonian, Ghanaian, Ivorian, Malian, Nigerian), Ashkenazi Jewish, Sephardi Jewish, likely some English] - actress, singer, and producer.
Sophia George (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Angie Le Mar (1965) Afro-Jamaican - actress, tv presenter, comedian, producer, director, and writer.
Gigi Hamilton (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Kate Langbroek (1965) Jamaican, Jewish / Dutch - tv presenter, comedian, and radio presenter.
Doris Pearson (1966) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer, dancer, and choreographer.
Michelle Hurd (1966) Afro-Jamaican / English, Scottish, German - actress.
Pepa / Sandra Denton (1966) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actress.
Lorraine Pearson (1967) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer.
Tania Evans (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Jeanette von der Burg / Jeanette Söderholm (1967) Afro-Jamaican / Swedish - singer.
Skin / Deborah Ann Dyer (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer, DJ, and model.
Cedella Marley (1967) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - actress, singer-songwriter, dancer, fashion designer, and author.
Kay Purcell (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Lady G / Janice Fyffe (1968) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Karyn Bryant (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actress, writer, and television personality.
Nadine Sutherland (1968) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lisa Shaw (1968) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Karen Robinson (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Denise Pearson (1968) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Alexia Gardner (1968 or 1969) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, and producer.
Sardia Robinson (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actress, comedian, writer, and producer.
Saskia Garel (1969) Jamaican [Chinese / Spanish] - actress and singer-songwriter.
Roxanne Beckford / Roxanne Beckford-Hoge (1969) Afri-Jamaican - actress.
Michaela Pereira (1970) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Nigerian, Taino, Irish, Unspecified Other] / European - television personality.
Michie Mee / Michelle McCullock Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actress.
Yanna McIntosh (1970) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Audrey Reid (1970) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Deni Hines / Dohnyale Hines (1970) Afro-Jamaican / Ethiopian, Somali - singer.
Jaya / María Kagahastian-Gotidoc (1970) Afro-Jamaican, Visayan Filipina, Spanish / Filipina - actress, singer, rapper, tv host, dancer, and producer.
Diana King (1970) Afro-Jamaican / Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Monie Love / Simone Johnson (1970) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and radio personality.
Naomi Campbell (1970) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Chinese, Possibly Other] - actress, model, and businesswoman.
Kathryne Dora Brown (1971) Afro-Jamaican / Irish, English, Scottish, German - actress.
Jada Pinkett Smith (1971) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian / African-American - actress, singer-songwriter, comedian, and businesswoman.
Karin Taylor (1971) Jamaican, Brazilian, Chinese - model and blogger.
Charmaine Sinclair (1971) Indo-Jamaican - porn actress and model.
Billie Myers (1971) Afro-Jamaican / British - singer-songwriter.
Vernie Bennett / Vernett Bennett (1971) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Natasha Williams (1971) Jamaican - actress.
Patra / Dorothy Smith (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Salena Godden (1972) Afro-Jamaican / Irish, Scottish, English - musician, performer, poet, and author.
Selena Griffin (1972) Unspecified Native American, Jamaican, Cuban, African-American - actress.
Lady Saw / Marion Hall (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lorraine Pascale (1972) Afro-Jamaican - model, tv personality, and celebrity chef.
Georgianna Robertson (1972) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Indian, Scottish] - model and actress.
Easther Bennett (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rachel Stuart (1972) Afro-Jamaican - model, actress and television personality.
Lisa Moorish (1972) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Irish, Scottish, Unspecified Asian] / English - singer-songwriter.
Staceyann Chin (1972) Afro-Jamaican. Chinese-Jamaican - spoken-word poet and performing artist.
Misa Hylton-Brim (1973) Afro-Jamaican, Japanese / African-American - fashion designer and stylist.
Beenie Man / Anthony Moses Davis (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Macka Diamond (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Nadia Brown (1973) Afro-Jamaican - poet, writer, and author.
Beverley Knight (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, tv presenter, and producer.
Tanya Stephens (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Stacey McKenzie (1973) Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Scottish - model and television personality.
Elizabeth Llewellyn (1973 or 1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Carlene Smith (1973) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Elle Downs (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Amber Katori Wilson (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Chevelle Franklyn (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Karen Chin (1974) Jamaican - DJ.
Christine Adams (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actress and model.
Brenda Edwards (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actress and tv personality.
Robinne Lee (1974) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino, Chinese, British] - actress and author.
Divine Brown (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Skye Edwards (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Zadie Smith (1975) Afro-Jamaican / English - novelist.
Queen Ifrica / Ventrice Morgan (1975) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Shaznay Lewis (1975) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - actress and singer-songwriter.
Lisa Hanna (1975) Afro-Jamaican - Miss World 1993.
Ce'cile / Cecile Claudine Charlton (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sharon Duncan-Brewster (1976) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Naomie Harris (1976) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Trinidadian - actress.
Denise Nurse (1976) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter.
Marsha Thomason (1976) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress.
Charlotte / Charlotte Kelly (1976 or 1977) Jamaican - singer-songwriter, pianist, keyboardist, guitarist, and producer.
d'bi Young (1977) Afro-Jamaican - dub poet and activist.
Oluniké Adeliyi (1977) Afro-Jamaican, Yoruba Nigerian - actress.
Kerry Washington (1977) African-American, Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, as well as some English, Scottish, Unspecified Native American] - actress.
Camille McDonald (1977) Afro-Jamaican - model and television personality.
Michelle Buteau (1977) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, French] / Haitian [Afro-Haitian, Lebanese] - actress, comedian, and podcast host.
Jully Black / Jullyann Gordon (1977) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Possibly Other] - actress, singer-songwriter, and producer.
Nyanda / Nyanda Thorbourne (1978) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, English] / African-American - singer-songwriter.
Foxy Brown / Jennifer Esmerelda Hylton (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Alesha Dixon (1978) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer.
Gwendolyn Osborne (1978) Afro-Jamaican / British - actress and model.
Alaine Laughton (1978) Jamaican [Taino, Afro-Jamaican] - singer-songwriter.
Nicole Lyn (1978) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican / Chinese, English] - actress.
Mamadee / Mamadie Wappler (1979) Sierra Leonean, Jamaican / German - singer-songwriter.
YayaBeatsFace (1979) Afro-Jamaican - makeup artist.
Terri Walker / Chanelle Gstettenbauer (1979) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Lisa Maffia (1979) Afro-Jamaican / Italian, English - singer-songwriter, rapper, model, tv presenter, and fashion designer.
Judi Love (1980) Afro-Jamaican - comedian and radio presenter.
Sabrina Colie (1980) Jamaican [Indo-Jamaican / Afro-Jamaican, Scottish] - actress and director.
Nahtasha Budhi (1980) Afro-Jamaican - actress and model.
Daisi Pollard (1980) Afro-Jamaican - model, beauty queen, businesswoman, author, and actress.
Daenya McDonald (1980) Afro-Jamaican - actress and model.
Melina Matsoukas (1981) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Cuban / Greek Jewish, Polish Jewish - director.
Jamelia / Jamelia Niela Davis (1981) Jamaican / Zimbabwean - singer, tv presenter and actress.
Susan Kelechi Watson (1981) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Nadirah X / Nadirah Sabreen Seid (1977) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Carla Campbell (1980) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Nordia Coco Witter (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kimberly Megan (1981) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Shanna Malcolm (1981) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Olivia / Olivia Theresa Longott (1981) Jamaican, Indian, Cuban, Unspecified Native American - singer.
Ms. Dynamite / Niomi McLean-Daley (1981) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian, Afro-Grenadian / Irish, Scottish, English, German - singer-songwriter, rapper, and producer.
YolanDa Brown (1982) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter, saxophonist, and composer.
Kristin Kreuk (1982) Jamaican [Chinese, Afro-Jamaican, Scottish], Chinese, Indonesian / Dutch - actress and producer.
Chrisette Michele (1982) Afro-Jamaican, Unknown - singer.
Spice / Grace Latoya Hamilton (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jaye Jacobs / Emma Jaye Jacobs (1982) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Ebony Bones (1982) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, model, and producer.
Kerron Ennis (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Irie Love (1982) Hawaiian, Jamaican, Dutch, English, Unspecified Native American - singer.
Selita Ebanks (1983) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Caymanian - model and actress.
Trey Anthony (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actress, comedian, producer, and playwright.
Layla Flaherty (1983) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actress, model, and tv personality.
Vinessa Antoine (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Nyla Thorbourne (1983) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Nyla / Nailah Thorbourne (1983) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, English] / African-American - singer-songwriter.
VV Brown / Vanessa Brown (1983) Afro-Jamaican / Puerto Rican - singer-songwriter, model, pianist, guitarist, percussionist, and producer.
Speech Debelle / Corynne Elliot (1983) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Kendra Westwood (1984) Jamaican / Grenadian - actress.
Donisha Rita Claire Prendergast (1984) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] / Unspecified - actress, model, dancer, filmmaker, and poet.
Cherine Anderson (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actress.
Keisha Buchanan (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Vanessa Veasley (1984) Afro-Jamaican / Louisiana Creole, Irish, Spanish - model.
Keisha Buchanan (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Etana / Shauna McKenzie (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Camille Davis (1984) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Ika Wong (1984) Jamaican [Chinese, Unspecified White, Unspecified Black / Unknown] - reality star.
Sakina Deer (1984) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Tami Chynn / Tammar Chin (1984) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, Possibly Other] / Jamaican [Chinese], Cherokee - singer-songwriter and dancer.
Jamie Gunns (1985) Indo-Jamaican / English - model.
Kreesha Turner (1985) Afro-Jamaican, Chinese-Jamaican / Scottish, German-Canadian - singer.
Fefe Dobson (1985) Jamaican / Unspecified Indigenous Canadian, Irish, English, Dutch - singer.
Charlene-Vanessa Draytón (1985) Jamaican / Puerto Rican - actress.
Amanda Brown (1985) Afro-Jamaican / Puerto Rican - singer.
Keyshia Ka'oir (1985) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Mia Isabella (1985) Jamaican, Puerto Rican, French - porn actress - Trans!
Tessanne Chin (1985) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, Possibly Other] / Jamaican [Chinese], Cherokee - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
Lyric Rochester (1985) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Nicole Beharie (1985) Afro-Jamaican / Nigerian - actress and singer.
Yendi Phillips (1985) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - model, tv host, Miss Jamaica Universe 2010, and Miss Jamaica World 2007.
Zahra Redwood (1985) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Jamaica Universe 2007.
Andrea Lewis (1985) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer.
Chantal Raymond (1985) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Jamaica World 2010.
Antonia Thomas (1986) Afro-Jamaican / English, possibly Welsh - actress.
Laura Mvula (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Kittian - singer.
Adi Alfa (1986) Nigerian / Jamaican, Chinese, British - actress.
Rebecca Ferguson (1986) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer.
Rebecca Silvera (1986) Afro-Jamaican - reality star.
Annaliese Dayes (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Saint Lucian, Afro-Barbadian, Afro-Grenadian, Afro-Vincentian - model, television personality, and presenter.
Dominique Moore (1986) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Raine Seville (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Nerissa Irving (1986) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Chrystina Sayers (1986) Afo-Jamaican, Unspecified Native American, African-American, Irish - musician.
Ishawna (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Tracy Z. Francis (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Mexican - actress.
Arabella Ruby (1987) Afro-Jamaican, British / White American - actress.
Lashana Lynch (1987) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Sharmila Makeda (1987) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Guyanese - actress.
Zaraah Abrahams (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian, Iraqi - actress.
Cleopatra Coleman (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish, possibly other - actress.
Sandy Green (1987) Jamaican - singer-songwriter and keyboardist.
Rox / Roxanne Tataei (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Iranian - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and keyboardist.
Angel Nelly (1988) Jamaican - dancer.
Margot Bingham (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Russian Jewish, German Jewish - actress.
Jade Ewen (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish, Italian [including Sicilian] - actress and singer.
Gillain Berry (1988) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Aruban - model and Miss Aruba 2010.
Leonie Elliott (1988) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Elease Donovan (1988) Afro-Jamaican - reality star.
Ashleigh Francis (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish - model and Miss World Australia 2010.
Karla Crome (1988) Afro-Jamaican, Irish - actress.
Alexandra Burke (1988) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican, Irish - singer.
Natalie Duncan (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Greek, English - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Annastasia Baker (1988) Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Danielle Rickards (1988) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Chantal Zaky (1988) Jamaican [British, Canadian, Portuguese] / Egyptian - model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2012.
FKA Twigs / Tahliah Debrett Barnett-Smith (1988) Afro-Jamaican / English, Spanish - singer and dancer.
Alisha Wainwright (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Haitian - actress.
Anita Antoinette (1989) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Rochelle Humes (1989) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer and television presenter.
Yrsa Daley-Ward (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Nigerian - actress, model, and writer.
Lianne La Havas (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Greek - singer.
Lesa-Gayle Wee Tom (1989) Afro-Jamaican - beauty queen and reality star.
Aluna Francis (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Tanzanian, Indian - singer.
Barbee / Faith J Eselebor (1989) Nigerian / Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Steph Fearon / Stephanie Fearon (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Maltese - actress.
Ayesha Curry (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] / African-American, Polish - actress, tv personality, celebrity cook, and author.
Kamille / Camille Purcell (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Cuban - singer-songwriter and producer.
Brittany Lyons (1989) Jamaican [Unspecified White, Possibly Other] - model and Miss Jamaica World 2008.
Gaye McDonald (1989) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Dhq Sher (1990) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Alyssa Veniece (1990) Jamaican [Chinese, German, Portugese, Indian, French] - actress.
Jourdan Dunn (1990) 7/8 Afro-Grenadian, 1/16 Afro-Jamaican, 1/16 Syrian - model.
April Jackson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - model, reality tv star, and Miss Jamaica Universe 2008.
Delilah / Paloma Ayana Stoecker (1990) Nigerian, Jamaican, Cuban, English / Spanish, French - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Jade Anouka (1990) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Trinidadian - actress and poet.
Elle Royal / Danielle Prendergast (1990) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Jenaae Jackson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Earth Jamaica 2009.
Ciarra Nevitt (1990) English, Jamaican, St. Lucian - actress.
Sharlene Rädlein (1990) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Scottish, German, Possibly Other] - model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2015.
Zita Hanrot (1990) Afro-Jamaican / French - actress.
Danielle Nicole (1990) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
HoodCelebrityy / Tina Pinnock (1991) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jade Thompson (1991) Afro-Jamaican / English - model.
Jessie Morrison (1991) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Bella Blair (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Kaci Fennell (1992) Afro-Jamaican - host, model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2014.
Junglepussy / Shayna McHayle (1991) Jamaican / Trinidadian - rapper and actress.
Stefflon Don / Stephanie Allen (1991) Afro-Jamaican - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Tori Kelly (1992) Afro-Jamaican, Puerto Rican / Irish, German - singer and actress.
Latty / slickchic_latty (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Young M.A / Katorah Marrero (1992) Afro-Jamaican / Puerto Rican - rapper.
Olivia Olson (1992) Afro-Jamaican / Swedish - actress and singer.
Shannon Hamilton (1992) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Camille Kostek (1992) Polish, Irish, Jamaican - model and reporter.
Zaddy / Just On My Chill (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Misha B / Misha Bryan (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and rapper.
Georgina Campbell (1992) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress.
Kamie Crawford (1992) Jamaican, German, Irish, Cuban, Indian, African-American - actress, TV host, model and Miss Teen USA 2010.
Petite-Sue Divinitii (1992) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Vivianna Grant (1992) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Jessica Plummer (1992) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer and actress.
Leomie Anderson (1993) Afro-Jamaican - model and designer.
Antoinette Robertson (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Daneille Mattis (1993) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Alicia Burke (1993) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Renae McLean (1993) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Simona Brown (1993 or 1994) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Ella Mai (1994) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - singer.
Kadesha Porter (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Christina Nelson (1994) Jamaican - dancer.
Winnie Harlow (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Shay Cherise (1994) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Tamara Lawrance (1994) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress.
Ella Eyre (1994) Afro-Jamaican / Maltese - singer.
Adrienne Show (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Zuri Tibby (1995) Afro-Jamaican, Dominican, Indian, Irish - model.
Nay / Nay and Meech (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Tsheca White (1995) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Miss RFabulous (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Zuri Marley (1995) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter.
Ella Balinska (1996) Afro-Jamaican / Polish - actress.
Isabel Dalley (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model and Miss Universe Jamaica 2016.
Samantha J / Samantha Gonsalves (1996) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Portuguese, Sephardi Jewish] - singer-songwriter and model.
Shanice Allen (1996) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Davina Bennett (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2017.
Amira McCarthy (1996) Afro-Jamaican, Irish / Gambian - singer.
Cheyenne Maya Carty (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Dionne Bromfield (1996) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer-songwriter and tv personality.
Hannah Shakespeare (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Shenseea / Chinsea Lee (1996) Afro-Jamaican, Korean - singer.
Jorja Smith (1997) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer.
Barbra Lee-Grant (1997) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Jada Kingdom (1998) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Shanice Archer (1998) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress.
Tami Williams (1998) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Gabz / Gabrielle Gardiner (1998) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Selah Marley (1998) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - model.
Emily Maddison (1999) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Jamaica Universe 2018.
Tia Rolph (1999) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Willow Smith (2000) 3/4 African-American, 1/8 Afro-Barbadian, 1/8 Afro-Jamaican - singer, actress and dancer.
Koffee / Mikayla Simpson (2000) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, DJ, and guitarist.
Haile Thomas (2000) Afro-Jamaican - international speaker, youth health activist, vegan food & lifestyle influencer.
Shameika Gordon (2000) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Sydney Aitcheson (2000) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Gabriella Laws (2001) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Alyssia Tsang (2001) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Iris Dubois (2001) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Alaina Tsang (2001) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Ciara Johnson (2001) Afro-Jamaican - model and blogger.
Zipporah Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer.
Linlyn Lue (?) Jamaican [Chinese] - actress.
Michele Austin (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Jo Hamilton (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Scottish, Possibly Other] / Kenyan, Scottish - singer, multi-instrumentalist, and composer.
Zahra Newman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Maureen Okpoko (?) Tuareg Nigerian / Jamaican - actress.
Tanya Muneera Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Natalia Castellanos (?) Jamaican, Surinamese, Venezuelan, Colombian - actress.
Sukina Abdul Noor (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Wilma Reading (?) Afro-Jamaican, Afghan, Torres Strait Islander, Unspecified Aboriginal Australian, Irish, Scottish, English - singer.
Ayanna Witter-Johnson (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, cellist, and composer.
Nadine Benjamin (?) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer.
Eden Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - instagrammer (edenmarley).
Doreen Shaffer / Monica Johnson (?) Jamaican [Afro Costa Rican / German] - singer.
Sarafine Andres (?) Jamaican, Bahamian, Indian - instagrammer (sarafine_andres).
Pamputtae / Eveanna Henry (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Diane Söderholm (?) Afro-Jamaican / Swedish - singer.
TAP (?) Jamaican, Bahamian - youtuber (instagram: theycallmetap).
Chyna Layne (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipina - actress.
Sheyla Bonnick (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Iman McDonnaugh (?) Jamaican, Trinidadian, Italian, Irish - model.
Michael Hyatt (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Samantha Cole (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Andrea-Rachel Parker (?) Afro-Jamaican, Spanish, Unspecified Native American - actress.
Tia Hendricks (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Gabrielle Graham (?) Jamaican, Montserratian - actress.
Philicia Saunders (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Kerri McLean (?) Afro-Jamaican / Flemish, Welsh - actress.
Johanna Thea (?) Afro-Jamaican, Indian, Swiss, English - actress and writer.
Ranking Miss P / Margaret Anderson (?) Afro-Jamaican - radio presenter.
Janeshia Adams-Ginyard (?) Afro-Jamaican - stunt actress.
Jacinth Headlam (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Tai Brown (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Andrea Laing (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Whitney White (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actress.
Danielle Pinnock (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Jo Martin (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actress.
Sharon Ferguson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Tahirah Sharif (?) Afro-Jamaican / Pakistani - actress.
Suzie McGrath (?) Afro-Jamaican, English - actress.
Rachael Grace (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Lisa Marie Summerscales (?) Jamaican / English - actress.
Lisagaye Tomlinson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Genevieve Capovilla (?) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actress.
Josanne Hutchinson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress, playwright and poet.
Shaniqua Okwok (?) Jamaican / Ugandan - actress.
Lisa Mercedez (?) Jamaican - rapper.
Nathalie Merchant (?) Jamaican, Panamanian / Romanian - actress.
Simone Moore (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Maya Nadine (?) Jamaican [Chinese], German - actress.
Alana Henry (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Toyah Frantzen (?) Cuban, Afro-Jamaican, Dutch - actress, director and writer.
Arianna D'Amato (?) Afro-Jamaican, Italian - actress.
Devynity / Devyn Wray (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, MC, spoken word artist, and poet.
Porsche Thomas (?) Jamaican, Trinidadian - actress.
Catherine Burrell (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Debra Ann Townes (?) Jamaican, Panamanian, African-American, Unspecified Native American - actress.
Brittoni Sinclair (?) Jamaican / African-American - actress.
Yvonne Curtis / Yvonne McIntosh (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Aleisha Barnett (?) Jamaican [Guyanese, Unknown] - actress.
Gail Hamilton (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Kristen Graham (?) Jamaican, Chinese - actress and model.
Maia Watkins (?) Afro-Jamaican / Guyanese, Ukrainian - actress.
Queen Paula (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Renee Mittelstaedt (?) Afro-Jamaican, German - actress and model.
Tymika Tafari (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Nicolette Lynch (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Melissa Suppiah (?) Jamaican, Sri Lankan, Portuguese - actress.
Nahtoreya Coleman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Shirley Thompson (?) Afro-Jamaican - violinist and composer.
Noelle Kerr (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Naomi Dela Cruz (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipina - actress.
Kadian Thomas (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Leonie Haynes-Moses (?) Grenadian / Barbadian, Jamaican - actress.
Simone Michaud (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress, model coach, singer-songwriter, lyricist, musician, and producer.
Iza Scott (?) Jamaican, Unspecified Native American, Irish, Polish, French - actress.
Myra McKenzie Merriweather (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Naomi Grossett (?) Afro-Jamaican, Irish - actress.
Miqueal-Symone Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Rosemary Mathurin (?) Jamaican / Saint Lucian - actress.
Annette Brissett (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
The Ra11n / Metis Monroe / Kara Jade (?) Afro-Jamaican / Metis [Plains Cree, Unspecified] - rapper, model, and MC.
Myrna Hague (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Denai Moore (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Christina Knight (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Natalie Storm (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Quanteisha / Quanteisha Benjamin (?) Afro-Jamaican, Indian - singer-songwriter and rapper.
Akira Reid (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Doreen Shaffer / Monica Johnson (?) Jamaican [German / Costa Rican] - musician.
Llanakila / Victoria Brown (?) Afro-Jamaican - artist, painter, digital illustrator, and digital artist.
Polly A. / Meleni Smith (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - singer.
Tenza (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Vashti Clarke (?) Afro-Jamaican - model, actress, and entrepreneur.
Dahlia Harris (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Chantelle Ernandez (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kimberly Huie (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
D'Angel / Michelle Downer (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer, actress, model, and brand ambassador.
Naki Depass (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Stacy-Ann Gooden (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Beverley Heath Hoyland (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Nicketa Steer (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Natalya Spencer (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Trillary Banks (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - rapper.
Khalia (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Lovena Fox (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kim Roberts (?) Jamaican / Dominican - actress.
Djanet Sears (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress and director.
Tasha the Amazon / Tasha Schuman (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ordena Stephens-Thompson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Dancehall Queen Stacey (?) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Mad Michelle (?) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Janica Coralee (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (janica_coralee).
Jessica Wong (?) Chinese, Jamaican - Instagrammer (jessleewong).
Joelette (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (estrella.marie).
Amanda (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (mandaaub).
Jeneil Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Dom Collins (?) Afro-Jamaican - model and Instagrammer (domalexi).
Shawna-Kay (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: kay_shawnakay)
Racquel Mckenzie (?) Afro-Jamaican - model, actor and dancer (Instagram: kellzbroadway)
Keliah Singh (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: _iamkeliahsingh_)
Shenelle Katina (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (shenellekatina).
Yanique Barrett (?) Afro-Jamaican - tv host, singer and Instagrammer (yaniquecurvydiva).
Melenigma (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (melenigma).
Natosh Renee (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (natoshrenee).
Aiyana A. Lewis (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (aiyanaalewis).
Shevon K. Nieto (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer, athlete and Instagrammer (shevonstoddart).
Monica Claire Loshusan (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (monicaclaire876).
Meshane Kelly (?) Afro-Jamaican - model and Instagrammer (kellymeshane).
Chantaé (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer, model and Instagrammer (tina.channiel).
M:
Harry Belafonte (1927) Afro-Jamaican, Sephardi Jewish / Afro-Jamaican, Irish, Scottish - singer and actor.
Seaman Dan / Henry Gibson Dan (1929) 3/4 Torres Strait Islander, 1/8 Jamaican, 1/16 Niuean, 1/16 New Caledonian - singer-songwriter.
Alvin "Seeco" Patterson / Francisco Willie (1930) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Dizzy Reece / Alphonso Son Reece (1931) Afro-Jamaican - trumpeter.
Ernest Ranglin (1932) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and composer.
Carlos Malcolm (1934) Afro-Jamaican - trombonist, percussionist and bandleader.
Baba Brooks (1935) Afro-Jamaican - trumpet player.
Scratch / Lee Perry / Rainford Perry (1936) Afro-Jamaican [including Yoruba Nigerian] - singer-songwriter, producer, and inventor.
Scratch / Lee Perry / Rainford Hugh Perry (1936) Afro-Jamaican [Yoruba] - singer and music producer.
Clifton Jones (1937) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Lester Sterling / Mr. Versatile (1936) Afro-Jamaican - trumpet and saxophone player.
Kenny Lynch (1938) Afro-Jamaican, British / Barbadian - actor, singer-songwriter, and entertainer.
Derrick Harriott (1939) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jimmy James (1940) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Winston Jarrett (1940) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garth Fagan (1940) Afro-Jamaican - choreographer.
Tito Simon / Keith Foster (1940) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Bunny Lee / Edward O'Sullivan Lee (1941) Afro-Jamaican - record producer.
Bongo Herman / Herman Davis (1941) AfroJamaican - hand-drummer, percussionist and singer.
Stranger Cole / StrangeJah Cole / Wilburn Theodore Cole (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Carl Douglas (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Phil Pratt (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
U-Roy / Ewart Beckford (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Toots Hibbert / Frederick Nathaniel Hibbert (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dobby Dobson (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer and record producer.
Eric "Monty" Morris (1942) Jamaican - musician.
Alvin Ranglin (1942) Jamaican - singer.
Thom Bell (1942) Jamaican - songwriter, arranger, and record producer.
David Madden (1943) Jamaican - musician.
Dandy Livingstone / Robert Livingstone Thompson (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Boris Gardiner (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Ras Michael / Michael George Henry (1943) Jamaican - singer.
Willie Francis (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Roydel Johnson / Congo Ashanti Roy (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Peter Straker (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actor.
Anton Phillips (1943) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Bob Andy / Keith Anderson (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Max Romeo (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kiddus I / Frank Dowding Jr (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
B.B. Seaton / Bibby / Harris Lloyd Seaton (1944) singer and record producer.
Sydney Crooks / Luddy Pioneer / Norris Cole / Luddy Crooks / Frankie Diamond /
Brother Cole (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dwight Pinkney (1945) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Cornell Campbell (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ernie Smith (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Denzil Dennis (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
The Mighty Pope / Earle Heedram (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rupie Edwards (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Burning Spear / Winston Rodney (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Aston Barrett (1946) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Tommy Cowan (1946) Afro-Jamaican - producer and singer.
Winston Groovy Winston Tucker (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ijahman Levi / Trevor Sutherland (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer and guitarist.
Willard White (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Enos McLeod (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Douglas Ewart (1946) Afro-Jamaican - multi-instrumentalist and instrument builder.
Bunny Wailer / Neville O'Riley Livingston (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Conroy Gedeon (1947) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Barry Biggs (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
King Jammy / Lloyd James (1947) Afro-Jamaican - dub mixer and record producer.
Dave Barker (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eric Donaldson (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Cedric Myton (1947) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Jesse Green (1948) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Johnny Osbourne (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Winston Francis (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
King Sounds / Roy Livingstone Plummer (1948) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Oliver Samuels (1948) Afro-Jamaican - comedian and actor.
Lloyd Parks (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Lloyd Lovindeer (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Pablo Moses / Pablo Henry (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ken Boothe (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Herman Chin Loy (1948) Jamaican [Chinese] - musician and producer.
Jimmy Cliff (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer, musician, and actor.
Junior Byles / Kerrie Byles (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garth Dennis (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Roy Cousins (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer, producer and record label owner.
Big Youth / Manley Augustus Buchanan (1949) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Anthony Sherwood (1949) Afro-Jamaican - actor, producer, director and writer.
Gil Scott-Heron (1949) Afro-Jamaican, African-American - poet and musician.
Tony Ray (1949) Jamaican [Jewish] - singer, bassist, and drummer.
Jimmy London (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Leroy Sibbles (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Pat Kelly (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Junior Marvin / Donald Hanson Marvin Kerr Richards Jr (1949) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and singer.
Philip Akin (1950) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Pablove Black (1950) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Watty Burnett (1950) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Flabba / Errol Holt (1950) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Paul Douglas (1950) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Leroy Wallace (1950) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Peter Ashbourne (1950) Afro-Jamaican - musician and composer.
Pluto Shervington (1950) Afro-Jamaican - musician, singer, engineer and producer.
Carl Lumbly (1951) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Robbie Lyn (1951) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Junior English (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Horace Andy (1951) Afro-Jamaican - songwriter and singer.
Constantine "Vision" Walker (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lynval Golding (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer and guitarist.
Errol Dunkley (1951) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Basil Wallace (1951) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Clinton Fearon (1951) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer.
Niney the Observer / George Boswell (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Bruce Ruffin (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Clive Hunt (1952) Afro-Jamaican - musician, arranger, composer and producer.
Don Carlos (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Admiral Bailey (1952) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Dr Alimantado / Winston James Thompson (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer, DJ, and producer.
Keith Sterling (1952) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Mutabaruka / Allan Hope (1952) Afro-Jamaican - poet, musician, actor, educator, and talk-show host.
Leroy Smart (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Sly Dunbar (1952) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Delroy Lindo (1952) Afro-Jamaican - actor and director.
Carl Malcolm (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Ronny Cush (1952) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Dillinger / Lester Bullock (1953) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Robert Wisdom (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Santa Davis / Carlton "Santa" Davis (1953) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Al Campbell (1954) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
David Jahson (1954) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Everton Blender (1954) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Robbie Shakespeare (1953) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and record producer.
Clive Chin (1954) Jamaican [Hakka Chinese] - musician and producer.
Trinity / Junior Brammer (1954) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and producer.
Linval Thompson (1954) Afro-Jamaican - musician and producer.
Mikey Chung (1954) Jamaican [Chinese] - keyboard, guitar and percussion player, arranger and record producer.
Gussie Clarke (1954) Afro-Jamaican - producer.
Gary Wilmot (1954) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor, singer, and comedian.
Natty Wailer / Nathaniel Ian Wynter (1954) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Gary Crosby (1955) Afro-Jamaican - bassist and composer.
Fred Locks / Stafford Elliot (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Johnny Clarke (1955) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Tapper Zukie / David Sinclair (1955) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and producer.
Beres Hammond (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
DJ Kool Herc / Clive Campbell (1955) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Tony Tuff / Winston Anthony Morris (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Honey Boy / Keith Williams (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Neville Staple (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sylford Walker (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jah Screw / Paul Love (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Jah Thomas / Nkrumah Thomas (1955) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and record producer.
Earl "Chinna" Smith (1955) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Ojiji / Rupert Harvey (1955) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Glen Washington (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Tinga Stewart / Neville Stewart (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dread Hinds / David Hinds (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer and guitarist.
Don Letts (1956) Afro-Jamaican - musician, DJ, and director.
Ambelique / Owen George Anthony Silvera (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Freddie McGregor (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Tyrone Downie (1956) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Burro Banton (1956) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Wayne Jarrett (1956) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
U Brown / Huford Brown (1956) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Electric Dread / Winston McAnuff (1957) Jamaican [7/8 Afro-Jamaican, 1/8 Scottish] - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and percussionist.
Dean Fraser (1957) Afro-Jamaican - saxophonist.
Joseph Cotton (1957) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Peter Williams (1957) Jamaican - actor.
Vivian Jones (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eek-A-Mouse / Ripton Joseph Hylton (1957) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Brigadier Jerry (1957) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Ini Kamoze / Cecil Campbell (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Junior Giscombe / Norman Giscombe (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Anthony Johnson (1957) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - singer.
Michael Rose (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Afrika Bambaataa (1957) Afro-Jamaican - disc jockey, rapper, songwriter and producer.
Maxi Jazz / Maxwell Fraser (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, rapper, and DJ.
Ainsley Harriott (1957) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter, entertainer, and celebrity chef.
Lenny Henry / Lensworth Henry (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, tv presenter, comedian, and writer.
Levi Roots / Keith Graham (1958) Afro-Jamaican - musician, tv personality, and celebrity chef.
Ras Midas (1958) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
David Reivers (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Earl Sixteen / Earl John Daley (1958) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
George Nooks / Prince Mohammed (1958) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lone Ranger / Anthony Alphanso Waldron (1958) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Brian Bovell (1959) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Papa Kojak / Floyd Anthony Perch (1959) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and singer.
Mel Gaynor (1959) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Brazilian - singer, drummer, and percussionist.
Sidney Mills (1959) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Ranking Joe / Joseph Jackson (1959) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Roy Rayon (1959) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Spanner Banner / Joseph Bonner (1959) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Cleveland Watkiss (1959) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, guitarist, and pianist.
Leo Williams (1959) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Cocoa Tea / Calvin George Scott (1959) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Luke / Uncle Luke / Luke Skyywalker / Luther Campbell (1960) Afro-Bahamian / Afro-Jamaican - actor, rapper, record executive, and promoter.
Linford Christie (1960) Afro-Jamaican - actor and former sprinter.
Peter Metro (1960) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Tiger / Norman Washington Jackson (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eric "Fish" Clarke (1960) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Mikey Craig / Michael Craig (1960) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and guitarist.
Levi Tafari (1960) Afro-Jamaican - actor and poet.
Patrick Andy (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Peter Thomas (1960) Afro-Jamaican - reality star.
Admiral Tibet / Kenneth Allen (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Shaun Wallace (1960) Afro-Jamaican - tv personality.
General Trees / Amos Edwards (1960) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Pato Banton / Patrick Murray (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Rikki Beadle-Blair (1961) Afro-Jamaican / Unspecified - actor, singer-songwriter, dancer, director, choreographer, screenwriter, and designer.
Professor Nuts / Carl Wellington (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Colin McFarlane (1961) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Master T / Tony Young (1961) Afro-Jamaican - television personality.
Half Pint / Lindon Andrew Roberts (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Paul Innocent (1961) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Maxi Priest / Max Elliott (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Emanuel Walsh (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Shinehead / Edmund Carl Aiken (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and rapper.
Colin Salmon (1962) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Robert Ffrench (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Danny Red / Danny Dread / Daniel Clarke (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Triston Palma (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
King Kong / Dennis Anthony Thomas (1962) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and singer.
Anthony Red Rose (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eddie Bo Smith Jr. (1962) Afro-Jamaican - actor and musician.
Tony Rebel / Patrick George Anthony Barrett (1962) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Super Cat / William Maragh (1963) Afro-Jamaican / Indo-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Patrick Robinson (1963) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor.
Chaka Demus / John Taylor (1963) Afro-Jamaican - musician and DJ.
Junior Reid / Delroy Reid (1963) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Courtney Pine (1964) Afro-Jamaican - keyboardist, saxophonist, flutist, clarinetist, and bassist.
Romero Jennings (1964) Jamaican - makeup artist.
Gully Bop / Robert Lee Malcolm (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Icho Candy / Winston Evans (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Maurice Dean Wint (1964) Jamaican - actor.
Luciano (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sanchez / Kevin Anthony Jackson (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Barrington Levy (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Stedman Pearson (1964) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and dancer.
Alrick Riley (1964) Afro-Jamaican - actor, director, and writer.
Kevin Michael Richardson (1964) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Steve Williamson (1964) Afro-Jamaican - keyboardist, saxophonist, and composer.
Kurtis Mantronik / Kurtis el Khaleel / Graham Curtis el Khaleel (1965) Jamaican / Syrian - DJ, drummer, keyboardist, and producer.
Gary Beadle (1965) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Lieutenant Stitchie / Cleveland Laing (1965) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Anthony McKay (1965) Afro-Jamaican, Unspecified Hispanic - actor, producer and writer.
Prezident Brown / Fitz Albert Cotterell (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Cutty Ranks / Philip Thomas (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Mikey Spice / Michael Theophilus Johnson (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Slick Rick / Richard Walters (1965) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and producer.
Ice MC / Ian Campbell (1965) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Roderick Williams (1965) Afro-Jamaican / Welsh - singer and composer.
Michael Bentt (1965) Afro-Jamaican - actor and former boxer.
Goldie / Clifford Price (1965) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish - actor, DJ, and visual artist.
Tippa Irie / Anthony Henry (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Coolie Ranx / Obiajula Ugbomah (1965) Yoruba Nigerian / Jamaican - actor and singer.
Junior Williams (1965) Afro-Jamaican / Dominican, Italian - actor.
Daddy Freddy / S. Frederick Small (1965) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Pinchers / Delroy Thompson (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Macka B / Christopher MacFarlane (1966) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Normski / Norman Anderson (1966) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and DJ.
Mark Van Hoen (1966) Jamaican, Punjabi Indian, Dutch, English - musician.
Bushwick Bill (1966) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Richard Chevolleau (1966) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Junior Tucker / Leslie Tucker (1966) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Richie Stephens (1966) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Shabba Ranks / Rexton Rawlston Fernando Gordon (1966) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
A Guy Called Gerald / Gerald Simpson (1967) Afro-Jamaican - DJ, keyboardist, drummer, and producer.
Arnold Pinnock (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Papa San / Tyrone Thompson (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jerome Sydenham (1967) Nigerian, Jamaican, British - DJ, musician, producer, and label owner.
Singing Melody / Everton Hardweare (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Andrew Tosh (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sidney Sloane (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actor, tv presenter, and radio presenter.
Phillip Leo / Phillip Pottinger (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, guitarist, keyboardist, and producer.
Darren Barrett (1967) Afro-Jamaican - trumpeter-songwriter, flugelhorn player, bandleader, producer, photographer, and videographer.
Young MC / Marvin Young (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer-songwriter, rapper, and producer.
Dennis Seaton (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Capleton / Clifton George Bailey III (1967) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Howard McNair (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Daddy Screw / Michael Alexander Johnson (1968) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Chubb Rock / Richard Simpson (1968) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Errol Lee (1968) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Evan Parke (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Tricky / Adrian Thaws (1968) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Guyanese, English - actor, singer, keyboardist, harmonicist, and producer.
Mad Cobra / Cobra / Ewart Everton Brow (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Shaggy / Orville Burrell (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, DJ, and producer.
Ziggy Marley (1968) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - actor, singer-songwriter, guitarist, pianist, percussionist, and producer.
Adrian Lester (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor, director, and writer.
Omar / Omar Lye-Fook (1968) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese / Indo-Jamaican] - singer-songwriter, keyboardist, bassist, guitarist, and drummer.
Leeroy Thornhill (1968) Afro-Jamaican, Mauritian - DJ, keyboardist, and dancer.
Kid / Christopher Reid (1968) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor, comedian and rapper.
Roni Size / Ryan Williams (1969) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and producer.
Mark Rhino Smith (1969) Jamaican, Cherokee, Ghanaian, Chinese, Unspecified White - actor.
Junior Kelly / Keith Morgan (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garfield Wilson (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Roger Cross (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Spragga Benz / Carlton Errington Grant (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Mark Smith (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actor and body builder.
Thriller U / Eustace Hamilton (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
B.O. Dubb / Raymond Ebanks (1970) Afro-Jamaican, English / Finnish - rapper.
Conrad Coates (1970) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Jah Mason / Andre Johnson (1970) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Pete Rock (1970) Afro-Jamaican - producer, DJ and rapper.
Derrick Morgan (1970) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Tyson Beckford (1970) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese], Afro-Panamanian - actor and model.
Delroy Pearson (1970) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Flourgon / Michael May (1970) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Me One / Eric Martin (1970) Jamaican - singer-songwriter, rapper, multi-instrumentalist, and producer.
Yami Bolo / Rolando Ephraim McLean (1970) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Tony T. / Neal Antone Dyer (1971) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, and DJ.
General Levy / Paul Scott Levy (1971) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
D-Flame / Daniel Kretschmer (1971) Jamaican / German - rapper.
Anthony Hoyes (1971) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Richie Spice / Richell Bonner (1971) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Merciless / Leonard Bartley (1971) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Sadiki / Henry Buckley Jr. (1971) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bounty Killer / Rodney Basil Price (1972) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Ian Edwards (1972) Afro-Jamaican - actor, comedian, producer, and writer.
Chuck Fenda / Leshorn Whitehead (1972) Afro-Jamaican - musician and DJ.
Roots Manuva / Rodney Smith (1972) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, producer, and remixer.
Stephen Marley (1972) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - singer and producer.
Tony Matterhorn (1972) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Raymond T. Williams (1972) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Erik Griffin (1972) Jamaican, Belizean, Honduran [African, Indian, Spanish, Possibly Other] / Irish, Possibly Other - comedian, writer and actor.
Wayne Wonder / Von Wayne Charles (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rikrok / Ricardo Ducent (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Little Hero / Paul Gayle (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Busta Rhymes / Trevor George Smith, Jr. (1972) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actor.
Wentworth Miller (1972) 1/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 African-American, 1/4 Rusyn, 1/8 Curaçaoan [Dutch, French, Swedish, Hispanic, Polish], 1/16 Lebanese, 1/16 Syrian - actor and model.
Doron Bell (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Mark Shim (1973) Afro-Jamaican - saxophonist.
Antonio / Maurice Silvera (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Chezidek / Desbert Johnson (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Stephen Graham (1973) 1/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Swedish, 1/4 Irish, 1/4 English - actor.
Buju Banton / Mark Anthony Myrie (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bushman / Dwight Duncan (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ismael Lea South (1973) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Glen Scott (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, producer, and arranger.
Sean Paul / Sean Paul Francis Henriques (1973) Jamaican [Chinese, English, German / Afro-Jamaican, Portuguese Jewish, French Jewish, Serbian Jewish, Dutch Jewish, German Jewish] - rapper, singer, and producer.
Nicholas Pinnock (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Ghost / Carlton Hylton (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Don Yute (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Adrian Holmes (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Canibus / Germaine Williams (1974) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actor.
Mr. Vegas / Clifford Smith (1974) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Terror Fabulous / Cecil Campbell (1974) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Mega Banton / Garth Williams (1974) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Andru Donalds (1974) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer.
Rampage / Roger McNair (1974) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Kevin Hanchard (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Mr. Lexx / Lexxus / Christopher George Palmer (1974) Afro-Jamaican - performer.
Huey Dunbar / Eustace Dunbar IV (1974) Jamaican / Puerto Rican - singer.
Laurence Westgaph (1975) Nigerian / Jamaican, Barbadian - model and tv presenter.
Des Coleman / Desune Coleman (1975) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, and weather presenter.
Choclair / Kareem Blake (1975) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Glenn Lewis (1975) Jamaican / Trinidadian - singer.
Klashnekoff / Ricochet Klashnekoff / Darren Kandler (1975) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Julian Marley (1975) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer.
Dulé Hill (1975) Afro-Jamaican - actor and dancer.
Elephant Man / Oneal Bryan (1975) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer.
Lutan Fyah / Anthony Martin (1975) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer.
Keron Grant (1976) Afro-Jamaican - comic artist.
Kardinal Offishall / Jason D. Harrow (1976) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Laza Morgan (1976) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Ky-Mani Marley (1976) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - actor, singer-songwriter, guitarist, trumpetist, pianist, and bongo player.
Gramps Morgan Roy Morgan (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Anthony B / Keith Blair (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eddy Wata (1976) Nigerian / Jamaican - singer.
Duane Stephenson (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Fantan Mojah (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sizzla / Miguel Orlando Collins (1976) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Vybz Kartel (1976) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Pierre Gage (1977) Jamaican, Haitian - singer.
Garfield Taylor (1977) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Natty King / Kevin Christopher Roberts (1977) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bryan Art (1977) Afro-Jamaican - singer, songwriter, musician, producer, and guitarist.
Wally Rudolph (1977) Afro-Jamaican - actor and writer.
Dan-e-o / Daniel Faraldo (1977) Afro-Jamaican, Spanish - actor and singer.
Doc Brown / Ben Bailey Smith (1977) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor.
Soweto Kinch (1978) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - saxophonist.
Hector Lincoln (1978) Jamaican, Cuban - actor.
Jermaine Fagan (1978) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Swizz Beatz / Kasseem Dean (1978) Afro-Jamaican, Puerto Rican - producer, rapper, DJ, and entrepreneur.
Da'Ville / Orville Thomas (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garrison Hawk (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Walker T / Marvin Christopher Walker (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Glamma Kid / Iyael Lyases Tafari Constable (1978) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer.
Shane West (1978) Jamaican [English, Sephardi Jewish, distant Scottish] / Cajun [French], distant Spanish, English, Irish - actor and musician.
Glamma Kid / Iyael Lyases Tafari Constable (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Damian Marley (1978) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English] - singer-songwriter, rapper, DJ, and producer.
Jah Cure / Siccature Alcock (1978) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Shemron O. Cowan (1978) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Lyriq Bent (1979) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Gunplay / Richard Morales Jr. (1979) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Busy Signal / Reanno Devon Gordon (1979) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kamau Preston (1979) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Shiah Coore (1979) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Warrior King (1979) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Vacca / Alessandro Vacca (1979) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Jade Jones (1979) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer-songwriter, tv personality, and celebrity chef.
Paul Campbell (1979) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Leon Lopez (1979) Afro-Jamaican / Spanish - actor, singer-songwriter, model, tv presenter, and director.
Rory Reid (1979) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter.
Shequida / Shequida Hall / Gary Hall (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, drag queen, and playwright.
Mighty Mystic / Kevin Mark Holness (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Karamo Brown (1980) Afro-Jamaican - tv host and television personality.
Alano Miller (1980) Jamaican, Bahamian, Cuban - actor.
Jaja Soze / Elijah Kerr (1980) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
DJ Flava / Kemar McGregor (1980) Afro-Jamaican - producer.
Kevin Mark Trail (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Floyd West / Pied Piper (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Wayne Marshall (1988) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Claude Kelly (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Perfect / Greg Rose (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
I Wayne / Cliffroy Taylor (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ding Dong Ravers / Kemar Christopher "Ding Dong" Dwaine Ottey (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer and dancer.
Teacha Dee / Damion Darrel Warren (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Protoje / Oje Ben Ollivierre (1981) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Vincentian - singer.
Marvin Priest / Marvin Cornell Elliott (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Ricky Whittle (1981) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor and model.
E-Dee / Everton Charles Dennis (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Desus Nice / Daniel Baker (1981) Afro-Jamaican - comedian and social media personality.
Kalil Wilson (1981) Nigerian, Kalinago, Jamaican, French, English - singer, pianist, percussionist, composer, and arranger.
Omar Turner (1981) Afro-Jamaican - writer.
DeeWunn / Damone Walker (1981) Afro-Jamaican - MC, songwriter and performer.
Safaree Samuels (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer, rapper and tv personality.
Mavado / David Constantine Brooks (1981) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and singer.
Aidonia / Sheldon Lawrence (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Tarrus Riley (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Merchant / Ricardo Renford Nicholson (1981) Afro-Jamaican - DJ, writer and producer.
Exco Levi / Wayne Ford Levy (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Willy William (1981) Afro-Jamaican - DJ, record producer, and singer.
City Boy / Bradley McIntosh (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer, rapper, record producer and former actor.
Danny Lee Wynter / Danny Wynter (1982) Afro-Jamaican / Romani, Italian - actor and writer.
Muslim Belal / Ashley Chin (1982) Jamaican [3/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Chinese] - actor, rapper, spoken word artist, screenwriter, and poet.
Samuel Anderson (1982) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor.
DJ Nicco (1982) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Serani / Craig Serani Marsh (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Demarco / Collin Demar Edwards (1982) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Blakkman / Oral White (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Gak Jonze / Micah Lei (1982) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Assassin / Jeffrey Campbell (1982) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Jammer / Jahmek Power (1982) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, MC, and producer.
Mo George / Mohammed George (1982) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Antiguan - actor.
Asher D (1982) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Walshy Fire / Leighton Walsh (1982) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - DJ, MC, and producer.
Giggs / Nathaniel Thompson (1983) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Akala / Kingslee McLean Daley (1983) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian, Afro-Grenadian / Irish, Scottish, English, German - rapper-songwriter, poet, journalist, and activist.
Rolan Bell (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
D.J. Taylor (1983) Afro-Jamaican / English, Irish - actor.
Howard Charles (1983) Afro-Jamaican, English - actor.
Shebada / Keith Ramsay (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actor and comedian.
Eldie Anthony (1984) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Ghetts / Justin Clarke (1984) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Grenadian - rapper.
Blak Ryno / Ryno Di Stinger (1984) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman (1984) Afro-Jamaican / likely English - actor and model.
Shawn Emanuel (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, pianist, and producer.
I-Octane / Byiome Muir (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dev / Devin Joseph Griffin (1984) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor, DJ, and radio presenter.
Kalado / Eton Gordon (1984) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Booba Starr / Dane Salmon (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Big Narstie / Tyrone Lindo (1985) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, and MC.
Sinqua Walls (1985) Afro-Jamaican, French, Unspecified Native American, possibly other - actor.
Bashy / Ashley Thomas (1985) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Dominiquais - actor and rapper-songwriter.
Stylo G / Jason McDermott (1985) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and rapper.
Taxstone / Daryl Campbell (1985) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and social media personality.
Konshens / Garfield Spence (1985) Afro-Jamaican - singer, DJ, and producer.
Wretch 32 / Jermaine Sinclair (1985) Afro-Jamaican, Guyanese, Zambian - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Kano / Kane Robinson (1985) Afro-Jamaican - actor and rapper.
Nineteen85 / Anthony Paul Jefferies (1985) Afro-Jamaican - producer and songwriter.
Smiler / Joseph Bartlett-Vanderpuye (1985) Jamaican, Guyanese, Zambian - rapper and MC.
Marvin Humes (1985) Afro-Jamaican / English, Scottish - singer, disc jockey, television presenter, and radio host.
Dexta Daps / Louis Grandison (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jonathan Emile (1986) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and singer.
OMI / Omar Samuel Pasley (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Starboy Nathan / Nathan / Nathan Fagan-Gayle (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Rusty Beaman (1986) Jamaican - actor.
Penn Badgley (1986) English, Irish, likely around 1/16th or 1/32 Afro-Jamaican, as well as German and Scottish, Dutch, Welsh, French Huguenot - actor and musician.
Rocky B / Plat’num B / Bezzle / Marcel Somerville (1986) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, DJ, and producer.
Scorcher / Tayo Jarrett (1986) Nigerian, Jamaican, Vincentian - rapper.
iSH / Ishan Morris (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor and singer.
Boi-1da / Matthew Samuels (1986) Afro-Jamaican - keyboardist-songwriter, drummer, and producer.
Tyler Lepley (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actor.
Fazer / Richard Rawson (1987) Afro-Jamaican - actor, rapper-songwriter, singer, DJ, and producer.
Christopher Martin (1987) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kid Fury / Gregory A. Smith (1987) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber, comedian, and writer.
Tommy Lee Sparta / Leroy "Junior" Russell (1987) Afro-Jamaican - singer
SPOT (1987) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Irish] / Afro-Guyanese - rapper and pianist.
Mike Beatz / Michael Anthony Barnett (1988) Afro-Jamaican - hip-hop recording artist and producer.
King Bach / Andrew B. Bachelor (1988) Afro-Jamaican - actor, comedian, and Internet personality.
Third World Don (1988) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and music producer.
Kemuel Crossty (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actress.
LunchMoney Lewis / Gamal Lewis (1988) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer.
T-Minus / Tyler Mathew Carl Williams (1988) Afro-Jamaican - record producer.
Nick Sagar (1988) Jamaican / Guyanese - actor.
Popcaan / Andrae Hugh Sutherland (1988) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Mo Gilligan / Mosiah Gilligan (1988) Afro-Jamaican - comedian.
Aston Merrygold (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Irish, English - actor, singer-songwriter, tv personality, and dancer.
Charly Black (1989) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Meechy Darko / Dimitri Simms (1989) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Malachi Kirby (1989) Jamaican [3/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Unspecified South Asian] - actor.
Eka Darville (1989) Afro-Jamaican, some Unspecified White - actor.
Labrinth / Timothy Lee Mckenzie (1989) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Kittian, Afro-Nevisian - singer, rapper, multi-instrumentalist, and record producer.
Bambaata Marley (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter, guitarist, pianist, drummer, and percussionist.
Ricardo Hewitt (1989) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Leroy Kenton (1989) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Andrew Trabass (1989) Afro-Jamaican - comedian, actor, musician and YouTuber.
Corbin Bleu (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actor, dancer and singer.
Jesse Royal (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino] - singer-song
Daniel Marley (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] / Iranian Jewish - rapper.
Geaux Yella (1989) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Sean Kingston (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer and rapper.
Chip / Chipmunk / Jahmaal Fyffe (1990) Afro-Jamaican - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Byron Carvil Cecil Napier (1990) Afro-Jamaican - actor..
Govana / Romeo Nelson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jason Forbes (1990) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Dominiquais - actor, comedian, and writer.
Leeroy Reed (1990) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and tv personality.
Romain Virgo (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Russhaine Berry (1990) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Kranium / Kemar Donaldson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bena Di Senior / Radeem Haslam (1991) Afro-Jamaican - musician, producer and entrepreneur
Chad Subratie (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Jo Mersa Marley (1991) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer.
DJ Akademiks (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Shamier Anderson (1991) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Blaize Andres (1991) Afro-Jamaican, Mexican - actor.
Quite Perry / Rohan Perry (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Sevn Thomas (1991) Afro-Jamaican - producer and singer.
Zuse (1991) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Jah Lando (1991) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and rapper.
Jamali Maddix (1991) Afro-Jamaican / Italian, British - comedian.
Tre C. Roberts (1992) Jamaican / Trinidadian - actor.
Jahmiel (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Chronixx / Jamar McNaughton (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jason Facey (1992) Afro-Jamaica - dancer, choreographer, producer, actor, photographer, and clothing designer.
Drew Ray Tanner (1992) Chinese, Afro-Jamaican, French-Canadian, possibly other - actor.
Prince Marni (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Vincent Ross (1992) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Lloyd Barker (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Indie Allen / Michael Allen (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Stephan James (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Krishane / St Aubyn Antonio Levy (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kortnee Simmons (1993) African, Dominican, Brazilian, Jamaican, Unspecified Native American - actor.
Jhaedee Richards (1993) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Alkaline / Earlan Bartley (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Demetrius Joyette (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Masego / Micah Davis (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer and saxophonist.
Shane Paul McGhie (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Masicka / Javaun Fearon (1993) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Jourdan Copeland (1993) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Rejjie Snow / Alex Anyaebunam (1993) Igbo Nigerian / Jamaican, Irish - rapper-songwriter and producer.
The Chicken Connoisseur / Elijah Quashie (1993) Afro-Jamaican - youtuber and restaurant critic.
Cashief Nichols (1993) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
PartyNextDoor / Jahron Anthony Brathwaite (1993) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Trinidadian - rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer.
Dalton Harris (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jaboukie Young-White (1994) Afro-Jamaican, Cuban, Chinese, Irish - comedian and writer.
Kedar Williams-Stirling (1994) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
JavierNathaniel (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Aaron Miller (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Jnel / Jnel Comedy (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Don Hinds (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Romone Robinson (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
RiskyKidd / Shane Schuller (1994) Afro-Jamaican / German - rapper, guitarist, and pianist.
QQ / Kareem Dawkins (1994) Afro-Jamaican - singer..
Layton Williams (1994) Afro-Jamaican, Montserratian - actor, singer, and dancer.
Jonny Brown (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Robb Banks / Richard O'Neil Burrell (1994) Afro-Barbadian / Unknown - rapper.
Daniel Caesar (1995) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - singer.
Joey Badass / Jo-Vaughn Virginie Scott (1995) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, songwriter, record producer and actor.
Shameik Moore (1995) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, dancer, and rapper.
Derrick Monasterio (1995) Jamaican [Lebanese, East Indian, Sephardi Jewish, Scottish], Italian / Filipino [Tagalog, Waray], Spanish [Castilian, Valencian], English - actor, dancer, and singer.
Yaadman Etan (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Raz Fresco (1995) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
KyngTavii / Tovaughn Hamilton (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
K'Vonne Legore (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Skip Marley (1996) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter.
Astro / Brian Vaughn Bradley, Jr. (1996) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, producer, and actor.
C.J. Wallace (1996) Afro-Jamaican / African-American, European - entrepreneur, actor, and musician.
Tevin Steele (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Fry Irish (1996) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Montell Martin (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Twani Price (1996) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Montel Douglas (1996) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Kyle Bent (1997) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Zion David Marley (1997) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - rapper.
Khalil Madovi (1997) Jamaican, Zimbabwean - actor, rapper, singer, tv presenter, producer, and artist.
Alton Mason (1997) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Harris J / Harris Jung (1997) Jamaican, English / Indian, Irish - singer, guitarist, and pianist.
Deron Campbell (1998) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Yanrique Wright (1998) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Joseph Griffin (1998) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Shevon Salmon (1998) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Jaden Smith (1998) 3/4 African-American, 1/8 Afro-Barbadian, 1/8 Afro-Jamaican - actor, rapper, singer and model.
Malique Thompson-Dwyer (1998) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Romaine Dixon (1999) Afro-Jamaican - model.
ItzMarico (2000) Afro-Jamaican - Tik Tok star.
Joshua Omaru Marley (2002) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - singer and model.
Phil Chen (?) Jamaican [Hakka Chinese] - bassist.
Yohan Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer.
Shaun Escoffery (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and singer.
Gerald Eaton (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter and producer.
Juice Aleem (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Supa Dups / Dwayne Chin-Quee (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Hakka Chinese, Possibly Other Chinese, German] - DJ, drummer, and producer.
KJ Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - rapper.
Arrow Benjamin / Dean McIntosh (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Willy Chin / Warren Hoo (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - DJ and producer.
Carl Henry (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
The Kemist (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, English] - DJ, songwriter, and producer.
Jah Vinci / Kirk Rhoden (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bobby Chin (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - DJ.
Eddy François (?) Jamaican, Haitian - singer.
Sid O'Connell (?) Afro-Jamaican, Irish - actor and producer.
Nathan Mitchell (?) Jamaican, Trinidadian - actor.
Junior Simpson (?) Afro-Jamaican - comedian.
Neil Reidman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Toby Sandeman (?) Afro-Jamaican, French, English - actor and athlete.
Sanjay Orlando (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
GAIKA (?) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Grenadian - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Jordane Christie (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Adam Gifford (?) Jamaican, Costa Rican, Cherokee, Italian - actor.
Jurell Carter (?) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor.
Dexter Bell (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Lloyd Everitt (?) Afro-Jamaican / Welsh - actor.
Martin Huss (?) Afro-Jamaican - model and rapper.
Shawn Turner (?) Afro-Jamaican, Unspecified - actor.
Allius Barnes (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Roe Dunkley (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Justin Harris (?) Afro-Jamaican, German - actor.
Wayne Booth (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Fletcher Harrington (?) Afro-Jamaican, Scottish, Russian, English - actor.
Scott Xylo / Shaquille Thompson (?) Afro-Jamaican - bassist-songwriter, drummer, and producer.
Jah Turban (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Alexander Nunez (?) Afro-Jamaican / Chilean - actor.
Jimel Atkins (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Nari Blair-Mangat (?) Afro-Jamaican / Indian - actor.
Dimitri Abold (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Shomari (?) Jamaican, Sierra Leonean - actor.
Di Vinci SanTana (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actor.
Jackie Guy (?) Jamaican - dancer and choreographer.
Danilo Reyes (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipino - actor and musician.
Andrew Adams (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Stephen Barrington (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Darien LaBeach (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
G.K. Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, West Indian, Italian, Scottish. - actor.
Trinity Brooks (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Shomari Downer (?) Afro-Jamaican, possibly British - actor.
Trevor Thomas (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Colton Royce (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipino - actor.
Mark Green (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Damiãn Garth Brown (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Sure Shot / Mark Duffus (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, drummer, and producer.
Dudney Joseph Jr. (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Odell Davis Jr. (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer-songwriter, and producer.
Christian Wong (?) Jamaican [Chinese] - actor.
Sebastien Heins (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
DJ Excalibah / Matthew Xia (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Possibly Other] / Scottish, English - DJ, radio presenter, and director.
Jason Robinson (?) Jamaican - actor.
Durant Mcleod (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino, Chinese, Jewish, Scottish] - actor.
Joshua Nathan Guardabascio (?) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actor.
DJ Ace Koromantyn (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, DJ, producer, and blogger.
Endless / Allan Tennent (?) Jamaican - actor.
Marc Anthony Lowe (?) Indo-Jamaican / South Indian, Taino, Chinese - actor.
Matt U Johnson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Dennis Leonard Johnson (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actor.
Kenya Wint (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Brushy One String / Andrew Chin (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Di Genius / Stephen McGregor (?) Afro-Jamaican - producer and singer.
General Degree / Cardiff Butt / Snapple Dapple (?) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Indecka / Chevol Grant (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kashief Lindo (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Five Steez (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Gary Pine (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Delly Ranx (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rvssian / Tarik Johnston (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eklypse Sicka / Keniel Flowers (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Herman Marquis (?) Afro-Jamaican - saxophonist.
Harold Butler (?) Afro-Jamaican - pianist and songwriter.
Ron Butler (?) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Phil Chen (?) Jamaican [Chinese] - guitarist.
Nelson Miller (?) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Mad Lion / Oswald Priest (?) fro-Jamaican - rapper and musician.
Arif Cooper (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician, music producer, event promoter and a radio broadcaster.
Steven "Lenky" Marsden (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Alozade / Michael Sterling (?) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Calton Coffie (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Mikey Dangerous (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Conrad Bromfield (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Ras Criss (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Kirk Diamond (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Ras Droppa / Samuel Richards (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Prince Hammer / Beris Simpson (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Kiprich / Marlon Jaro Plunkett (?) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Denroy Morgan (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Louie Rankin (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actor.
Addis Pablo (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Willi Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician and producer.
Michael Cory Davis (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and filmmaker.
Pablo Gad (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ernest Cupidon (?) Afro-Jamaican - comedian and actor.
Alicai Harley (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Charles Officer (?) Afro-Jamaican - writer, actor and director.
Dean Redman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Orisha Shakpana (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Tre Mission (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Walter Chin (?) Afro-Jamaican - celebrity photographer.
Jay Douglas (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Carl Harvey (?) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and producer.
Nigel Shawn Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and director.
Lemur Shifaka (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Dana Carrabon (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and model (Instagram: kidcarra)
Rh’mone Foster (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and model (Instagram: bookfrostyee)
T.J. Moore (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: inspiremoore)
Dlorenzo (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: dlorenzo_official)
NB:
Parisa Fitz-Henley (1977) Afro-Jamaican - Non-Binary (She/Her and They/Them Pronouns) - actor.
Ellyn Jade / Jade Willoughby (1990) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino, British] / Ojibwe - Two-Spirit (Unspecified Pronouns) - model and actor.
Not problematic but has expressed being uncomfortable being used so don’t use!:
Justine Skye / Justine Skyers (1995) Afro-Jamaican / Indo-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, and model. - Source.
Problematic:
Lady C / Lady Colin Campbell (1949) Jamaican [Lebanese / Sephardic Jewish, Spanish, Portuguese, Irish, English] - tv host, radio host, socialite, and author. - Intersex! - Anti-black racist comments about Meghan Markle and Meghan and Harry’s baby and whorephobic comments.
Rustie Lee (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer, tv personality, and celebrity chef. - UKIP supporter.
Wayne Jobson (1954) Jamaican [Unspecified White] - musician and producer. - Appropriation of dreadlocks.
Al Roker (1954) Afro-Jamaican, African-American / Afro-Bahamian - actor, tv personality, weather forecaster, journalist, and author. - Comments that are racist to Japanese people and defended a white weatherman over his racist remarks referring to Martin Luther King Jr.
Yehoshua Sofer (1958) Jamaican [Ukrainian Jewish] - rapper - Appropriation of dreadlocks and anti-black comments, including referring to Rastafarians as a “cult”.
Mike Tyson (1966) African-American, likely Afro-Jamaican - boxer and actor. - Convicted of rape and is a Tier II sex offender.
Jeremy Renner (1971) Panamanian / Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican], German, English, Scottish, Swedish, Irish - actor, singer, producer - N-word, g-slur, t-word, w-word to refer to Black Widow, played a Nazi character and described him as a “poor twisted soul”, saying a movie about a Nazi falling in love with a black woman “isn’t about racism” to him it’s “people with problems and how they choose to deal with them” and calls it “sweet and endearing”, and compared trans women to crossdressers.
Jason Barrett (1976) Afro-Jamaican - actor, screenwriter, and mixed martial artist. - Arrested for illegally selling guns.
Pete Wentz (1979) Afro-Jamaican / German, English - musician. - Dated a 15 year old when he was 23 who he later posted revenge porn of and threatened.
Kaya Jones / Chrystal Neria (1984) German, Irish, Scottish, Spanish, Unconfirmed Costa Rican, Unconfirmed Nicaraguan, Unconfirmed Panamanian, Unconfirmed Jamaican, Unconfirmed Chinese, Unconfirmed Colombian, Unconfirmed Unspecified Black, Unconfirmed Jewish / Italian [including Sicilian], Unconfirmed Mexican, Unconfirmed Apache - singer, violinist, DJ, model, actress, and dancer - Trump supporter who even has said she would like to put down the first brick in the wall on the Mexican border, has used multiple racial slurs, has compared the residential school system of Native Americans to white people willingly sending their kids to boarding schools, Islamophobic comments, anti-black comments, and honestly so much more.
Aml Ameen (1985) Afro-Jamaican - actor - Transphobia.
Teddy Sinclair / Natalia Kills / Natalia Cappucini / Verbalicious / Natalia Keery-Fisher (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Uruguayan [Italian, Irish, Possibly Other] - singer, guitarist, drummer, and actress. - Bullied an X-Factor contestant.
Madeleine Mantock (1990) Jamaican, Unspecified White - actress. - Plays a Latine character on Charmed when she is not Latine.
Frank Dillane (1991) Afro-Jamaican / English, Irish, Scottish, remote Manx - actor - Arrested for battery.
Leigh-Anne Pinnock (1991) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian, possibly other - singer. - Defended her boyfriend after he made homophobic remarks.
Herizen Guardiola (1996) Afro-Jamaican / Cuban - actress and singer-songwriter. - Dated a 16-year-old when she was 20.
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Why Is Daniel Smith Paint Considered Underrated? | daniel smith paint
From Abode Beautiful
If you’ve watched Outer Banks, one of Netflix’s latest and actual talked about shows, you ability acerb analyze as a Pogue or a Kook, but behindhand of your choice, I anticipate we can all accede that Sarah Cameron’s ancestors home is one we would like to alive in. Lowndes Grove, a celebrated abode amid in Charleston, South Carolina, was congenital in 1786. Abode Admirable batten to assembly artist Daniel Novotny, set decorator Missy Ricker, set artist D. Tracy Smith, area advance Linda Lee, and the controlling administrator of Patrick Properties Hospitality Group (Lowndes Grove is one of PPHG’s venues), Amber Coté, who told us aggregate that went into the architecture of the fabulous Tanneyhill Acreage to actualize the absolute set while still attention the history of Lowndes Grove. Although the absolute activity home may not appear with a map that leads to gold mysteriously angry to an celebrated shipwreck, it is still an absorbing assignment of design.
Located on a 14 acre acreage complete with a beach view, Lowndes Grove is listed on the National Register of Celebrated Places and is currently acclimated for weddings, meetings, receptions, and celebrations. Because of the home’s use as an accident space, set decorator Missy Ricker says, “we were consistently bound with the bulk of time we had to ‘dress’ the sets and in what we could do to adapt the space.”
The beauteous Georgian-style home is amidst by oak copse and overlooks the serene Ashley River. In the appearance Outer Banks, the home was already the abode of the fabulous Denmark Tanney (possibly aggressive by Denmark Vesey), a bondservant who apparent gold afterwards a boating on the (also fictional) Royal Merchant address (likely afflicted by the actual absolute Merchant Royal ship), afresh acclimated that gold to chargeless himself and added apprenticed people.
The alternative of Lowndes Grove as the Cameron ancestors home has been in the works back aboriginal aftermost year, says assembly artist Dan Novotny. “In January 2019, Netflix arrive me to an aboriginal advance of Charleston to see options for our key locations, including the Cameron ancestors home, in a apocryphal adjacency alleged Tanneyhill,” he says. “We bare the home to feel historically significant. We chose Lowndes Grove because it embodied that affluent celebrated vibe. The complete amphibian oak copse accept that characteristic Southern charm.”
Story continues
Lowndes Grove has been a admired of Lee’s for abounding years. “The director, Jonas Pate, said he capital Tanneyhill ‘to be an earlier big acreage appearance abode on the water, with at atomic two or three acreage of land,'” she recalls. “In our story, it’s been congenital in the 1700s, so it’s like an old Charleston house, but it’s
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‘Saga,’ Sonny Liew, Jill Thompson take home 2017 Eisner Awards
Sonny Liew, Jill Thompson and the team behind Saga all took home multiple awards last night at the 28th annual Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards at Comic-Con International in San Diego.
Saga took home four awards, including Best Continuing Series and Best Writer for Brian K. Vaughan, while artist Fiona Staples won Best Cover Artist and Best Penciller/Inker. Liew ‘s awards for his graphic novel, The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye, included Best Writer/Artist, Best U.S. Edition of International Material—Asia, and Best Publication Design. And Jill Thompson was recognized three times: for Best Single Issue/One-Shot for her work on Beast of Burden: What the Cat Dragged In, Best Graphic Album—New for Wonder Woman: The True Amazon and Best Painter/Multimedia Artist.
Several comics legends were also honored at the ceremony. Jack Kirby and William Messner-Loebs both received the Bill Finger Excellence in Comics Writing Award, while Walt Simonson, Jim Starlin, Gilbert and Jaime Hernandez, George Perez, Milt Gross, H.G. Peter, Antonio Prohias and Dori Seda were all inducted into the Hall of Fame.
The Bob Clampett Humanitarian Award, created to honor those people in comics and the popular arts who have worked to help others, went to Joe Ferrara, for his work in prostate cancer awareness, and Mark Andreyko for curating the Love Is Love anthology after the Pulse nightclub shooting. Love is Love also won for best anthology.
Other awards presented at the ceremony include the Will Eisner Spirit of Retailer Award, which went to Comicazi in Somerville, Massachusetts, and the Russ Manning Promising Newcomer Award, which wnet to Anne Szabla, writer/artist of Bird-Boy.
Here’s the complete list of all nominees, with the winners bolded:
Best Short Story “The Comics Wedding of the Century,” by Simon Hanselmann, in We Told You So: Comics as Art (Fantagraphics) “The Dark Nothing,” by Jordan Crane, in Uptight #5 (Fantagraphics) “Good Boy,” by Tom King and David Finch, in Batman Annual #1 (DC) “Monday,” by W. Maxwell Prince and John Amor, in One Week in the Library (Image) “Mostly Saturn,” by Michael DeForge, in Island Magazine #8 (Image) “Shrine of the Monkey God!” by Kim Deitch, in Kramers Ergot 9 (Fantagraphics)
Best Single Issue/One-Shot Babybel Wax Bodysuit, by Eric Kostiuk Williams (Retrofit/Big Planet) Beasts of Burden: What the Cat Dragged In, by Evan Dorkin, Sarah Dyer, and Jill Thompson (Dark Horse) Blammo #9, by Noah Van Sciver (Kilgore Books) Criminal 10th Anniversary Special, by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips (Image) Sir Alfred #3, by Tim Hensley (Pigeon Press) Your Black Friend, by Ben Passmore (Silver Sprocket)
Best Continuing Series Astro City, by Kurt Busiek and Brent Anderson (Vertigo/DC) Kill or Be Killed, by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips (Image) The Mighty Thor, by Jason Aaron and Russell Dauterman (Marvel) Paper Girls, by Brian K. Vaughan and Cliff Chiang (Image) Saga, by Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples (Image)
Best Limited Series Archangel, by William Gibson, Michael St. John Smith, Butch Guice, and Tom Palmer (IDW) Briggs Land, by Brian Wood and Mack Chater (Dark Horse) Han Solo, by Marjorie Liu and Mark Brooks (Marvel) Kim and Kim, by Magdalene Visaggio and Eva Cabrera (Black Mask) The Vision, by Tom King and Gabriel Walta (Marvel) We Stand on Guard, by Brian K. Vaughan and Steve Skroce (Image)
Best New Series Black Hammer, by Jeff Lemire and Dean Ormston (Dark Horse) Clean Room, by Gail Simone and Jon Davis-Hunt (Vertigo/DC) Deathstroke: Rebirth, by Christopher Priest, Carlo Pagulayan, et al. (DC) Faith, by Jody Houser, Pere Pérez, and Marguerite Sauvage (Valiant) Mockingbird, by Chelsea Cain and Kate Niemczyk (Marvel)
Best Publication for Early Readers (up to age 8) Ape and Armadillo Take Over the World, by James Sturm (Toon) Burt’s Way Home, by John Martz (Koyama) The Creeps, Book 2: The Trolls Will Feast! by Chris Schweizer (Abrams) I’m Grumpy (My First Comics), by Jennifer L. Holm and Matthew Holm (Random House Books for Young Readers) Narwhal: Unicorn of the Sea, by Ben Clanton (Tundra)
Best Publication for Kids (ages 9-12) The Drawing Lesson, by Mark Crilley (Ten Speed Press) Ghosts, by Raina Telgemeier (Scholastic) Hilda and the Stone Forest, by Luke Pearson (Flying Eye Books) Rikki, adapted by Norm Harper and Matthew Foltz-Gray (Karate Petshop) Science Comics: Dinosaurs, by MK Reed and Joe Flood (First Second)
Best Publication for Teens (ages 13-17) Bad Machinery, vol. 5: The Case of the Fire Inside, by John Allison (Oni) Batgirl, by Hope Larson and Rafael Albuquerque (DC) Jughead, by Chip Zdarsky, Ryan North, Erica Henderson, and Derek Charm (Archie) Monstress, by Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda (Image) Trish Trash: Roller Girl of Mars, by Jessica Abel (Papercutz/Super Genius) The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl, by Ryan North and Erica Henderson (Marvel)
Best Humor Publication The Further Fattening Adventures of Pudge, Girl Blimp, by Lee Marrs (Marrs Books) Hot Dog Taste Test, by Lisa Hanawalt (Drawn & Quarterly) Jughead, by Chip Zdarsky, Ryan North, Erica Henderson, and Derek Charm (Archie) Man, I Hate Cursive, by Jim Benton (Andrews McMeel) Yuge! 30 Years of Doonesbury on Trump, by G. B. Trudeau (Andrews McMeel)
Best Anthology Baltic Comics Anthology š! #26: dADa, edited by David Schilter and Sanita Muizniece (kuš!) Island Magazine, edited by Brandon Graham and Emma Rios (Image) Kramers Ergot 9, edited by Sammy Harkham (Fantagraphics) Love Is Love, edited by Marc Andreyko (IDW/DC) Spanish Fever: Stories by the New Spanish Cartoonists, edited by Santiago Garcia (Fantagraphics)
Best Reality-Based Work Dark Night: A True Batman Story, by Paul Dini and Eduardo Risso (Vertigo/DC) Glenn Gould: A Life Off Tempo, by Sandrine Revel (NBM) March (Book Three), by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin, and Nate Powell (Top Shelf) Rosalie Lightning: A Graphic Memoir, by Tom Hart (St. Martin’s) Tetris: The Games People Play, by Box Brown (First Second)
Best Graphic Album—New The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye, by Sonny Liew (Pantheon) Black Dog: The Dreams of Paul Nash, by Dave McKean (Dark Horse) Exits, by Daryl Seitchik (Koyama) Mooncop, by Tom Gauld (Drawn & Quarterly) Patience, by Daniel Clowes (Fantagraphics) Wonder Woman: The True Amazon by Jill Thompson (DC Comics)
Best Graphic Album—Reprint Demon, by Jason Shiga (First Second) Incomplete Works, by Dylan Horrocks (Alternative) Last Look, by Charles Burns (Pantheon) Meat Cake Bible, by Dame Darcy (Fantagraphics) Megg and Mogg in Amsterdam and Other Stories, by Simon Hanselmann (Fantagraphics) She’s Not into Poetry, by Tom Hart (Alternative)
Best U.S. Edition of International Material Equinoxes, by Cyril Pedrosa, translated by Joe Johnson (NBM) Irmina, by Barbara Yelin, translated by Michael Waaler (SelfMadeHero) Love: The Lion, by Frédéric Brémaud and Federico Bertolucci (Magnetic) Moebius Library: The World of Edena, by Jean “Moebius” Giraud et al. (Dark Horse) Wrinkles, by Paco Roca, translated by Erica Mena (Fantagraphics)
Best U.S. Edition of International Material—Asia The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye, by Sonny Liew (Pantheon) Goodnight Punpun, vols. 1–4, by Inio Asano, translated by JN PRoductions (VIZ Media) orange: The Complete Collection, vols. 1–2, by Ichigo Takano, translated by Amber Tamosaitis, adaptation by Shannon Fay (Seven Seas) The Osamu Tezuka Story: A Life in Manga and Anime, by Toshio Ban and Tezuka Productions, translated by Frederik L. Schodt (Stone Bridge Press) Princess Jellyfish, vols. 1–3 by Akiko Higashimura, translated by Sarah Alys Lindholm (Kodansha) Wandering Island, vol. 1, by Kenji Tsuruta, translated by Dana Lewis (Dark Horse)
Best Archival Collection/Project—Strips (at least 20 years old) Almost Completely Baxter: New and Selected Blurtings, by Glen Baxter (NYR Comics) Barnaby, vol. 3, by Crockett Johnson, edited by Philip Nel and Eric Reynolds (Fantagraphics) Chester Gould’s Dick Tracy, Colorful Cases of the 1930s, edited by Peter Maresca (Sunday Press) The Realist Cartoons, edited by Paul Krassner and Ethan Persoff (Fantagraphics) Walt & Skeezix 1931–1932, by Frank King, edited by Jeet Heer and Chris Ware (Drawn & Quarterly)
Best Archival Collection/Project—Comic Books (at least 20 Years Old) The Complete Neat Stuff, by Peter Bagge, edited by Eric Reynolds (Fantagraphics) The Complete Wimmen’s Comix, edited by Trina Robbins (Fantagraphics) Fables and Funnies, by Walt Kelly, compiled by David W. Tosh (Dark Horse) Trump: The Complete Collection, by Harvey Kurtzman et al., edited by Denis Kitchen and John Lind (Dark Horse) U.S.S. Stevens: The Collected Stories, by Sam Glanzman, edited by Drew Ford (Dover)
Best Writer Ed Brubaker, Criminal 10th Anniversary Special, Kill or Be Killed, Velvet (Image) Kurt Busiek, Astro City (Vertigo/DC) Chelsea Cain, Mockingbird (Marvel) Max Landis, Green Valley (Image/Skybound), Superman: American Alien (DC) Jeff Lemire, Black Hammer (Dark Horse); Descender, Plutona (Image); Bloodshot Reborn (Valiant) Brian K. Vaughan, Paper Girls, Saga, We Stand On Guard (Image)
Best Writer/Artist Jessica Abel, Trish Trash: Roller Girl of Mars (Papercutz/Super Genius) Box Brown, Tetris: The Games People Play (First Second) Tom Gauld, Mooncop (Drawn & Quarterly) Tom Hart, Rosalie Lightning: A Graphic Memoir (St. Martin’s) Sonny Liew, The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye (Pantheon)
Best Penciller/Inker or Penciller/Inker Team Mark Brooks, Han Solo (Marvel) Dan Mora, Klaus (BOOM!) Greg Ruth, Indeh (Grand Central Publishing) Francois Schuiten, The Theory of the Grain of Sand (IDW) Fiona Staples, Saga (Image) Brian Stelfreeze, Black Panther (Marvel)
Best Painter/Multimedia Artist (interior art) Federico Bertolucci, Love: The Lion (Magnetic) Brecht Evens, Panther (Drawn & Quarterly) Manuele Fior, 5,000 km per Second (Fantagraphics) Dave McKean, Black Dog (Dark Horse) Sana Takeda, Monstress (Image) Jill Thompson, Wonder Woman: The True Amazon (DC); Beasts of Burden: What the Cat Dragged In (Dark Horse)
Best Cover Artist (for multiple covers) Mike Del Mundo, Avengers, Carnage, Mosaic, The Vision (Marvel) David Mack, Abe Sapien, BPRD Hell on Earth, Fight Club 2, Hellboy and the BPRD 1953 (Dark Horse) Sean Phillips, Criminal 10th Anniversary Special, Kill or Be Killed (Image) Fiona Staples, Saga (Image) Sana Takeda, Monstress (Image)
Best Coloring Jean-Francois Beaulieu, Green Valley (Image/Skybound) Elizabeth Breitweiser, Criminal 10th Anniversary Special, Kill or Be Killed, Velvet (Image); Outcast by Kirkman & Azaceta (Image/Skybound) Sonny Liew, The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye (Pantheon) Laura Martin, Wonder Woman (DC); Ragnorak (IDW); Black Panther (Marvel) Matt Wilson, Cry Havoc, Paper Girls, The Wicked + The Divine (Image); Black Widow, The Mighty Thor, Star-Lord (Marvel)
Best Lettering Dan Clowes, Patience (Fantagraphics) Brecht Evens, Panther (Drawn & Quarterly) Tom Gauld, Mooncop (Drawn & Quarterly) Nick Hayes, Woody Guthrie (Abrams) Todd Klein, Clean Room, Dark Night, Lucifer (Vertigo/DC); Black Hammer (Dark Horse) Sonny Liew, The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye (Pantheon)
Best Comics-Related Periodical/Journalism The A.V. Club comics coverage, including Comics Panel, Back Issues, and Big Issues, by Oliver Sava et al. Comic Riffs blog, by Michael Cavna Critical Chips, edited by Zainab Akhtar (Comics & Cola) PanelPatter.com, edited by Rob McMonigal WomenWriteAboutComics.com, edited by Megan Purdy and Claire Napier
Best Comics-Related Book blanc et noir: takeshi obata illustrations, by Takeshi Obata (VIZ Media) Ditko Unleashed: An American Hero, by Florentino Flórez and Frédéric Manzano (IDW/Editions Déese) Krazy: George Herriman, A Life in Black and White, by Michael Tisserand (Harper) The Life and Legend of Wallace Wood, vol. 1, edited by Bhob Stewart and J. Michael Catron (Fantagraphics) More Heroes of the Comics, by Drew Friedman (Fantagraphics)
Best Academic/Scholarly Work Brighter Than You Think: Ten Short Works by Alan Moore, with essays by Marc Sobel (Uncivilized) Forging the Past: Set and the Art of Memory, by Daniel Marrone (University Press of Mississippi) Frank Miller’s Daredevil and the Ends of Heroism, by Paul Young (Rutgers University Press) Pioneering Cartoonists of Color, by Tim Jackson (University Press of Mississippi) Superwomen: Gender, Power, and Representation, by Carolyn Cocca (Bloomsbury)
Best Publication Design The Art of Charlie Chan Hock Chye, designed by Sonny Liew (Pantheon) The Complete Wimmin’s Comix, designed by Keeli McCarthy (Fantagraphics) Frank in the Third Dimension, designed by Jacob Covey, 3D conversions by Charles Barnard (Fantagraphics) The Realist Cartoons, designed by Jacob Covey (Fantagraphics) Si Lewen’s Parade: An Artist’s Odyssey, designed by Art Spiegelman (Abrams)
Best Webcomic Bird Boy, by Anne Szabla Deja Brew, by Teneka Stotts and Sarah DuVall (Stela.com) Jaeger, by Ibrahim Moustafa (Stela.com) The Middle Age, by Steve Conley On Beauty, by Christina Tran
Best Digital Comic Bandette, by Paul Tobin and Colleen Coover (Monkeybrain/comiXology) Edison Rex, by Chris Roberson and Dennis Culver (Monkeybrain/comiXology) Helm, by Jehanzeb Hasan and Mauricio Caballero On a Sunbeam, by Tillie Walden Universe!, by Albert Monteys (Panel Syndicate)
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JAY AND SILENT BOB STRIKE BACK (2001) “Seeing a bit of this movie after 16 years gives me the same feeling I felt seeing that photo of Donald Rumsfeld shaking hands with Saddam Hussein in the 1980′s. Or that footage where Al Gore was celebrating his 2000 election win before they recalled the vote. Basically, it reminds you that history is not how you remember it. Like, moments in history are so opposite and forgotten they seem like alternate timelines . I’m talking about the fact that Hollywood’s joke Kevin Smith was once able to get Ben Affleck, Chris Rock, Will Ferrell, George Carlin, Carrie Fisher, Jon Stewart, Tracy Morgan, Gus Van Sant, and Wes Craven to all appear in a movie together. WHY? HOW? WHAT WAS HAPPENING? Was Kevin Smith consider Stanley Kubrick? Or how about the fact that the Gazelles went to see the late showing of this spontaneously on a Friday night, and went home not hating ourselves. Cuz’s’shit” -Donnie Gazelle
“Honestly maybe my least favorite filmmaker in history. I used to work at a graphic design studio with Cookie Gazelle and we had this one coworker who had patterned himself entirely after Silent Bob. Like he wore the long coat and had the goatee and talked about Kevin Smith movies all the time and I really started to take a hard look at my life at that time. I’m realizing that like a bad quarterback whose stats are inflated by having a transcendent receiver to throw to, almost EVERY moment of KS’s filmography I’ve enjoyed are the result of Jason Lee having megawatt charisma (because of SciTi, duh). The universe corrects its errors - KS is now in the place he’s meant to be. Directing episodes of THE FLASH on tv. Affleck’s not returning his calls.” -Tommy Gazelle
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Adidas - “One in a Billion”
Client: Adidas VP, Global Brand Communications: Ryan Morlan Senior Director, Global Brand Communications and Media: Lia Stierwalt Director, Global Brand Communications: Jenny Chen Senior Manager, Creative Production & Shoot: Eleanor Fitzgerald VP, Brand Director Sports Performance - adidas China: Marc Leroux VP, Brand Activation - adidas China: Philip Ho Senior Director, Brand Communications - adidas China: Josephine Tsai Director Brand Communications - adidas China: Lorna Luo Manager Brand Communication Training - adidas China: Amy Fan
Featured in the Campaign China National Volleyball Team Player: Hui Ruo Qui China Olympic Swimmer: Ning Ze Tao Former European Football Player: David Beckham
Agency: 72andSunny Los Angeles and 72andSunny New York Chief Creative Officer, Co-Founder: Glenn Cole Group Creative Director: Frank Hahn Creative Director: Wei Wei Dong Creative Director: Matthew Carey Creative Technologist: Tim Grover Writer: Ben Wiley Designer: Brandon Mai Chief Production Officer: Tom Dunlap Executive Producer: Kerli Teo Producer: Jenny Jones Group Brand Director: James Stephens Brand Director: Ryan Warner Brand Manager: Brian Kim Brand Coordinator: Brittany Allen Group Strategy Director: Sudeep Gohil Strategy Director: Ginger Xiang Senior Strategist: Marc Pardy Partnerships & Legal Director: Christina Rust Partnerships & Legal Manager: Kelly Ventrelli Junior Partnerships & Legal Manager: Noah Winter
Production: Prettybird Director: Max Malkin Co-Founder / Executive Producer: Kerstin Emhoff Vice President / Executive Producer: Ali Brown Director of Production: Tracy Hauser Producer: Matt Wersinger
Editorial: Lost Planet NY Editor: Bruce Herrman Executive Producer: Krystn Wagenberg Producer: Paolo Solarte
Sound Design: Barking Owl Sound Designer: Michael Anastasi Executive Producer/ CD: Kelly Bayett Producer: Ashley Benton
Finishing/VFX: The Mill NY Executive Producer: Melanie Wickham Senior Producer: Eliana Carranza-Pitcher Production Coordinator: Ashley Goodwin Shoot Supervisor: Eliza Randall 2D Lead Artist: Ilia Mokhtareizadeh 2D Artists: Vi Nguyen, Andre Vidal, Mikey Smith, Kyle Zemborain Motion Graphics: Laura Nash, Chris Mennuto
Color: The Mill NY Colorist: Mikey Rossiter Color Assist: Nate Seymour and Elias Nousiopoulos Executive Producer: Dee Allen Color Producer: Natalie Westerfield Color Coordinator: Evan Bauer
Mix Heard City Audio Mixer - Eric Warzecha Audio Producer - Andi Lewis Audio EP - Sasha Awn
Music Apparat "Ash/Black Veil" Music Supervision: Daniel Cross
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Jewelry Quotes
Official Website: Jewelry Quotes
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• A girl could never have too much jewelry or too much weaponry. – Laurell K. Hamilton • A little man is running a jewelry store. A man runs in saying, Okay, take my watch, put on a new band, install a new battery, clean the case, install a new crystal, and tune it up. I will be back in a half hour for it. Thanks! and runs out the door. The little jeweler says, C-C-C-Come in? – Henny Youngman • A lot of the jewelry that I wear are fan gifts because they’re so awesome and they give me great presents. – Taylor Swift • A man can do a television interview and roll out of bed 15 minutes before; it’s just not the same for a woman. A woman has to pay attention to her hair, makeup, clothing, and jewelry choices. – Michele Bachmann • A man’s got two shots for jewelry: a wedding ring and a watch. The watch is a lot easier to get on and off than a wedding ring. – John Mayer • A piece of jewelry is in a sense an object that is not complete in itself. Jewelry is a ‘what is it?’ until you relate it to the body. The body is a component in design just as air and space are. Like line, form, and color, the body is a material to work with. It is one of the basic inspirations in creating form. – Art Smith • A woman needs ropes and ropes of pearls. – Grace Kelly • Accessories are crucial. A great bag and a piece of statement jewelry are the fastest way to elevate an otherwise understated look. – Ivanka Trump • Accessories are important and becoming more and more important every day. They can completely change the look of an outfit, and women like the idea of having a wardrobe that’s versatile. For instance, a strong piece of jewelry can make a simple outfit look elegant. – Giorgio Armani • Adversity is the diamond dust Heaven polishes its jewels with. – Thomas Carlyle • All my jewelry has stories. – Eva Green • Always make sure your jewelry isn’t taking over you or your ensemble and keep everything in proportion to your frame – Nina Garcia • Another thing rappers, I admire your rebellious spirit, but materialism is a form of mental slavery. Slow down on the jewelry, pick up a book. – Dov Davidoff • Any girl who was a lady would not even think of having such a good time that she did not remember to hang on to her jewelry. – Anita Loos • As I get older, I use less jewelry – necklace or earrings each morning, not both; my clothes are getting more basic – fewer colours and simpler cuts; and my make-up is stripped back to basics. – Tracy Chevalier • At a flea market I always head for the junk jewelry table first. – Ethel Merman
jQuery(document).ready(function($) var data = action: 'polyxgo_products_search', type: 'product', keywords: 'Jewelry', orderby: 'rand', order: 'DESC', template: '1', limit: '68', columns: '4', viewall:'Shop All', ; jQuery.post(spyr_params.ajaxurl,data, function(response) var obj = jQuery.parseJSON(response); jQuery('#thelovesof_jewelry').html(obj); jQuery('#thelovesof_jewelry img.swiper-lazy:not(.swiper-lazy-loaded)' ).each(function () var img = jQuery(this); img.attr("src",img.data('src')); img.addClass( 'swiper-lazy-loaded' ); img.removeAttr('data-src'); ); ); ); • Be careful with the man jewelry. A little goes a long way. – Ashton Kutcher • Biography is the medium through which the remaining secrets of the famous dead are taken from them and dumped out in full view of the world. The biographer at work, indeed, is like the professional burglar, breaking into a house, rifling through certain drawers that he has good reason to think contain the jewelry and money, and triumphantly bearing his loot away. – Janet Malcolm • But I do mean to say, I have heard her declare, When at the same moment she had on a dress Which cost five hundred dollars, and not a cent less, And jewelry worth tem times more, I should guess, That he had not a thing in the wide world to wear! – William Allen Butler • But the Milanese have made bad choices, bad fashion, and bad jewelry. – Christian Lacroix
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• Cool! Now I can steal some rich old coot’s Ferrari and go fishing for marlin with the same piece of jewelry. – Jennifer Rardin • Costume jewelry is not made to give women an aura of wealth, but to make them beautifu – Coco Chanel • Customized jewelry is one of my targets with Bold Machines. – Bre Pettis • Death, jewelry, or magic; it sounded like Valentine’s Day. – Laurell K. Hamilton • Decide which you want to play up: your clothing or your jewelry, but not both. Let one be the star and one the supporting player. – Padma Lakshmi • Do not judge from mere appearances. – Edwin Hubbel Chapin • Do not judge men by mere appearances; for the light laughter that bubbles on the lip often mantles over the depths of sadness, and the serious look may be the sober veil that covers a divine peace and joy. – Edwin Hubbel Chapin • Donald Trump participated in something known as the empty box scam. He bought $65,000 worth of jewelry from Bulgari across the street from Trump Tower, and had the record show that it was mailed to him in an out-of-state address. Now, if you’re not a New York resident, you may not have to pay sales tax if the jewelry is mailed to you in another state. The problem is, they were empty boxes. It was proven. – Hillary Clinton • Even if heaven were real, and measured as Revelation says, so many cubits this wayand that, how gimcrack a place it would be, crammed with its pavements of gold, its gates of pearl and topaz, like a gigantic chunkof costume jewelry. – Margaret Laurence • Every day of my adult life, I have worn at least one piece of jewelry from my maternal grandmother’s collection, all of which were manufactured by famed Danish silversmith Georg Jensen. To the naked eye, I am either a Jensen loyalist or a grandmother loyalist. Really I am just a Pretty Things loyalist.- Sloane Crosley • Flowers that are so pathetic in their beauty, frail as the clouds, and in their coloring as gorgeous as the heavens, had through thousands of years been the heritage of children – honored as the jewelry of God. – Thomas de Quincey • For me accessories create and define a woman’s personal style. The bag she carries, the watch on her wrist, her jewelry, her sunglasses, her shoes all define a look that is her signature. For Spring 2014, my accessory collections are about a clean, graphic boldness creating a new dimension redefining modern classics. – Ralph Lauren • For me the diamond dawns are set In rings of beauty. – John Townsend Trowbridge • For me, hair is an accoutrement. Hair is jewelry. It’s an accessory. – Jill Scott • Funny, I never shopped. Even my jewelry – not a piece of my jewelry I bought for me. – Imelda Marcos • Give crowns and pounds and guineas But not your heart away; Give pearls away and rubies, But keep your fancy free. – A. E. Housman • Gold, unlike all other commodities, is a currency…and the major thrust in the demand for gold is not for jewelry. It’s not for anything other than an escape from what is perceived to be a fiat money system, paper money, that seems to be deteriorating. – Alan Greenspan • Guard well your spare moments. They are like uncut diamonds. Discard them and their value will never be known. Improve them and they will become the brightest gems in a useful life. – Ralph Waldo Emerson
• He hits the ball 130 yards and his jewelry goes 150. – Bob Hope • Hollywood liberals could not be reached for comment on the cost of the inauguration because they were being fitted for gowns and jewelry worth millions of dollars in anticipation of Oscar night. – Ann Coulter • I am happy to receive any items of jewelry. – Katie Price • I am not big on jewelry, but I do love hats as an accessory, specifically snap backs and beanies. – Jourdan Dunn • I believe in trying foods from all over the world, going to markets and finding jewelry and furniture and just treating myself well. It’s important for me creatively to travel. – Crystal Renn • I collect jewelry for a story – so something I got on a trip or something I got from my family. You know it always needs to have a meaning for me. – Julia Restoin Roitfeld • I didn’t mind giving up carnality, jewelry and red meat in return for comradeship and an afterlife. – Margaret Millar • I don’t buy jewelry just for the aesthetic side. – Julia Restoin Roitfeld • I feel naked without jewelry. – Olivia Thirlby • I had a strong identity in mind but then of course I had to trust Didier Dubot’s expertise. They’ve been doing jewelry for so many years. – Julia Restoin Roitfeld • I had much rather be adorned by beauty of character than by jewels. Jewels are the gift of fortune, character comes from within. – Plautus • I had very good dentures once. Some magnificent gold work. It’s the only form of jewelry a man can wear that women fully appreciate. – Graham Greene • I hate imitation jewelry, dark lipstick and most of all a shrill voice. This has spoiled many a picture of feminine loveliness. – Ray Milland • I have been making wire jewelry – and think I’ll really do something with it, eventually. – Alexander Calder • I have seen women looking at jewelry ads with a misty eye and one hand resting on the heart, and I only know what they’re feeling because that’s how I read the seed catalogs in January. – Barbara Kingsolver • I have tons of jewelry. I like to wear a lot of it – Amber Tamblyn • I hope that when girls see my clothes, my shoes, or my outrageous jewelry collection, they feel the thrill of wanting more for themselves too. I love what my friend Andre Leon Talley said: “If you are successful, people want to see it. They want to share in your dream”. – Kimora Lee Simmons • I hope that women everywhere will wear this jewelry and feel the passion and love that is, to me, the real spirit of True Harmony. – Carol Alt • I just love clothes! I’m a girl who loves clothes, accessories, shoes, bags and jewelry. – Kelly Rowland • I like black for clothes, small items, and jewelry. It’s a color that can’t be violated by any other colors. A color that simply keeps being itself. A color that sinks more somberly than any other color, yet asserts itself more than all other colors. It’s a passionate gallant color. Anything is wonderful if it transcends things rather than being halfway. – Yana Toboso • I like colonic irrigation because sometimes you find old jewelry.- Joan Rivers • I like jewelry. Big rings, big necklaces. Shoes, belts, luggage. – Janel Parrish • I like to be dressy casual. I wear jeans and nice sneakers. I wear nice clothes, but not super dressed up. I don’t wear too much jewelry. I keep it simple and maybe wear just a little chain. – Vinny Guadagnino • I love how significant jewelry is throughout the world and throughout time. People have been adorning themselves with jewelry for years and its one of the oldest forms of art and design. This is something that has and will always inspire me. – Pamela Love • I love jewelry – rings, earrings, bracelets, necklaces, you name it. – Sofia Vergara • I love photography. I like to write. I like coaching. I’ve made jewelry. I’m very creative. – Diandra Asbaty • I love rewriting because that is where and how you discover the story. Its like you have this skeleton, and you get to put flesh on it and hair and clothes and really wonderful jewelry. – Caroline Leavitt • I love rhinestones, faux jewelry. – Adriana Trigiani • I love to be casual and comfortable, but I also love the easy glamour of wearing jewelry all the time. – Elizabeth Taylor • I love to shop. Clothes, electronics, and I love jewelry, especially yellow gold. – Apolo Ohno • I make jewelry occasionally. I’m not a hobbyist. I’m a reader, I’m a lover of books, I like to watch movies, but mostly a lot of nothing. I’m quite content doing very little. – Janeane Garofalo • I might not wear chains or I may just wear a watch or I may not wear any jewelry at all or I may just go all out on an outfit or just rock some basic s*** just a pair of jeans, a t-shirt and ones. But, I still standout more than a lot of people in the room so I can’t really describe it but I know from the outside looking in people can explain better than I can. – Lil Herb • I never had a fondness for gems or the extravagance of Harry Winston or Van Cleef & Arpels. I’ve always liked the more flamboyant, imaginative things. I lusted after costume jewelry. My husband was a very lucky man. – Iris Apfel • I obviously have a great love and appreciation of jewelry, thanks to my mother, much to the dismay of both my father and my boyfriends. – Ivanka Trump • I really just appreciate good jewelry, clarity, gold. I think gold is made for kings and pharaohs – that’s what I am. That’s why I rock gold and, you know, stuff like that. – Big Sean • I really learned a lot from collecting clothes because I got to go back into the history of fashion and fashion photography and jewelry. It changed how I felt about fashion and about what I did forever because I used to look a little bit down on myself for it. – Stephanie Seymour • I really love Paul Smith. And Chrome Hearts. They make the most beautiful, high-end leather and outerwear and jewelry you’ve ever seen. But I’m not a big fan of shopping. I certainly am a fan of clothes and especially people that put time into the construction of them. – Dean Winters • I remember opening my dad’s closet and there were, like, 40 suits, every color of the rainbow, plaid and winter and summer. He had two jewelry boxes full of watches and lighters and cuff links. And just… he was that guy. He was probably unfulfilled in his life in many ways. – Jon Hamm • I remove my wedding rings and put them in the jewelry box. So many others have done this. I am not the only one. I am not the only one. But here, I am the only one. – Elizabeth Berg • I think it’s a tribute to the artistic importance of hip-hop culture and what hip-hop has brought into music and fashion and jewelry that it is being adapted or imitated or is inspiring variations or new types of art or new types of music. – Simon de Pury • I think I’ve revived the costume-jewelry industry. – Madeleine Albright • I think jewelry can change an outfit more than anything else. Transformation, punch, individuality: One or all of the above are why you should wear jewelry. – Iris Apfel • I think swag is very important to rappers. It’s the overall appearance and style of an artist – these blue shorts and this blue hat and this $80,000 chain, this jewelry and all these tattoos, that’s swag. – Soulja Boy • I think that the lack of intuition in fashion today is one of the most dangerous things. My fear is that our business is turning into a bag business, and it’s all about the bag. But it’s not only about the bag. It’s about the women. And it’s not about a bag or a shoe or the jewelry. It’s only about women. . . . Being almost politically correct and doing only what you expect without the ability to make mistakes is very dangerous to fashion. We have to go with our heart. We have to go with our intuition. – Alber Elbaz • I think there is going to be a whole market and we’ll start to see hip-hop jewelry regularly in jewelry auctions around the world. Therefore, anybody who gets on the train early can only do well financially in the long run. – Simon de Pury • I treat clothing or a piece of jewelry like it was a piece of art. �� Daphne Guinness • I used to collect vintage clothing – exquisite lace dresses, embroidered shawls and ornate jewelry – but that’s just not me any more. – Britt Ekland • I used to think that if I had success I would have freedom. But I have less freedom now than I’ve ever had. And what gives me satisfaction is not the jewelry and not the cars. What gives me satisfaction is doing things for others, like children. – Criss Angel • I want a chainsaw very badly, because I think cutting down a tree would be unbelievably satisfying. I have asked for a chainsaw for my birthday, but I think I’ll probably be given jewelry instead. – Susan Orlean • I will not go out with a man who wears more jewelry than me, and I’ll never, ever go to bed with a guy who calls me Babe. Other than that, however, I’m real flexible. – Linda Sunshine • I won’t wear rings and jewelry on the stage because I don’t want you looking at my hands. I want you hearing what I’m saying. – Mavis Staples • I’m busy sorting through our new collection of rhinestone jewelry. Should anyone be in the market for sparkly accessories the size of a hubcap, this is the place to get them. Earlier today, a customer picked up one of the enormous chandelier-style offerings and asked, ‘Do those be genuine rhimestones?’ I couldn’t even begin to explain everything that was wrong with her sentence, so I simply replied, ‘Yes. They do be genuine. – Jen Lancaster • I’m reminded of a book my father used to read me,” she said. “A bunch of elves and things get into a huge war over a piece of jewelry that everybody wants but nobody can wear. – Daniel Handler • If a girl says not to get her a birthday present that means get me a birthday present and make sure it’s jewelry. – Kami Garcia • If I go up to Harlem or down to Sixth Street, and I’m not dressed up or I’m not wearing my jewelry, then the people feel I’m talking down to them. People expect to see Mrs. Astor, not some dowdy old lady, and I don’t intend to disappoint. – Brooke Astor • If I’m not feeling good, I load on jewelry. It gives me energy and makes me feel happy. – Kate Hudson • If there was a choice on spending a lot of money on accessories or dress, I always chose accessories. I think jewelry can change an outfit more than anything else. – Iris Apfel • If you don’t know jewelry, know the jeweler. – Warren Buffett • If you don’t know the Jewelry, know the Jeweller – Warren Buffett • If you don’t want people to look at you, Park had thought at the time, don’t wear fishing lures in your hair. Her jewelry box must look like a junk drawer. – Rainbow Rowell • If your dad is anything like mine, then you have no clue what to buy him for Father’s Day. The only Father’s Day tradition in my family is the annual conversation he and I have where I say, ‘Hey, Dad, what do you want for Father’s Day this year?’ and he says, ‘Nothing.’ Then I ask my mom what I should get him and she says, ‘He likes sandalwood soap, dangly jewelry and Chanel No. 5 perfume.’ – Michael Showalter • I’ll work for whoever wants to hire me. Even the jewelry channel. – Dylan Moran • I’m a big rings person…and bracelets…and earrings. I love all of it [Laughs]. One time, I was getting off an airplane and I had been traveling for like a month in Europe, and I came from the airplane right to my mom’s house who I hadn’t seen in awhile, and she looked at me and she goes, “Is it possible to fit any more jewelry on you? Is that actually possible?” And I looked down and, because when I travel I don’t like to pack my jewelry so I end up wearing a ton of it, and I had just had everything on me. And I love buying jewelry when I travel – so there was a lot. – Kate Hudson • Im a hard worker, and everything with me is, if I work hard, I should get paid for it. Everything with me, I try to symbolize something flashy like jewelry or a car. The rubbing hands is a symbol of hustling, so it goes back to the money. – Birdman • I’m crazy about jewelry; swimwear and jewelry. – Candice Swanepoel • I’m going to get up every morning at 6:30 to work out. Then, when I’ve kept with it all week, I give myself something I really want, like a new handbag or a piece of jewelry I’m coveting. – Molly Sims • I’m just disillusioned with the hip-hop sound right now. It’s too materialistic. You know, I’m the kind of guy … I can’t do that. If you track my movement, you’ll never see a picture of me with any girl that wasn’t mine, or my own car. My jewelry, my clothes. What kind of gangsta rapper has a stylist? A stylist?! – Ice T • I’m listening to Gogol Bordello, which is totally random, but I love him. Just finished the new Joan Didion book, Blue Nights, which I loved. I haven’t been to the movies in God knows how long. I haven’t been doing anything but living in a bubble, making jewelry! – Pamela Love • I’m not a huge jewelry fan. – Felicity Jones • I’m not into jewelry. I’ve got some earrings but they’re not too expensive. There are guys who drop a hundred grand for a chain. The public’s got it right – a lot of NBA stars are arrogant and like to spend lots of money and have lots of girlfriends and all that. – Andrew Bogut • I’m not normally a jewelry person. I’m supposed to be a working class champion and all, and I don’t like to rub my success in people’s faces. – Bubba Sparxxx • Imagine wasting all that perfectly good anger on paranoid fantasies. Not since Emily Litella got upset about “Soviet jewelry” has there been such a waste of anger. You will notice a certain theme to these Emily Litella Moments. Behind them all is a touching faith that someone, somewhere is actually in charge of what’s happening – a proposition I beg leave to doubt. – Molly Ivins • In a way, there’s nothing more intimate than a piece of jewelry. A painting is hung on somebody’s wall. You put a piece of furniture in your home. But jewelry is worn by a person, so there is a fascination with the history of a piece. – Simon de Pury • In both business and personal life, I’ve always found that travel inspires me more than anything else I do. Evidence of the languages, cultures, scenery, food, and design sensibilities that I discover all over the world can be found in every piece of my jewelry. – Ivanka Trump • I’ve always loved the fashion of the ’30s and everything that came with the Art Deco era – the jewelry and the glamour. – Emmy Rossum • I’ve been designing my own pieces for a long time. My mother’s a jewelry designer, so we knew at some point we were going to do a line and dive into the fashion world. – Christian Serratos • I’ve been on a plane before with more money in jewelry than my life insurance policy, and it’s one of the scariest feelings in the world… if you lose it, you have to pay for it yourself, and you don’t even get to keep it! – Rumer Willis • I’ve borrowed tons of jewelry. Most people [in Hollywood] do. But it’s your responsibility to keep track of it. – Rumer Willis • I’ve never in my life bought a big piece of jewelry – like, ‘I’m gonna get myself a big piece of jewelry!’ Songwriters’ lives are unstable and up and down. Even though mine has sort of has followed more of a going toward the sky trajectory. – Kara DioGuardi • I’ve read about all the sales today. If you’re an auto dealer, you’re feeling it. If you’re a furniture retailer like we are, you’re feeling it. If you’re a jewelry retailer, you’re feeling it. I know some of these businesses because we’re in them. Yeah, it’s being felt, but it will be felt big time more if we don’t do something about it, what’s going on. – Warren Buffett • I’ve teamed up with BaubleBar to curate a collection of gorgeous jewelry pieces. I worked closely with the BaubleBar team to design a collection that encompasses my style and all of my go to pieces. – Ashley Madekwe • Jewellery takes people’s minds off your wrinkles. – Sarah Phillips • Jewelry and pins have been worn throughout history as symbols of power, sending messages. Interestingly enough, it was mostly men who wore the jewelry in various times, and obviously crowns were part of signals that were being sent throughout history by people of rank. – Madeleine Albright • Jewelry is fine on some guys, but it’s not for me. – Ross Kemp • Jewelry is incredibly feminine, and reflects the grace and beauty of a women’s style like nothing else. – Ivanka Trump • Jewelry is something that has to do with emotion. That aspect of jewelry really interests me. – Ann Demeulemeester • Jewelry is the most transformative thing you can wear. – Iris Apfel • Jewelry should not upstage you. I pick one hot point on my body that I’m going to highlight. Let one area do the singing – you don’t want to hear three songs at once. – Padma Lakshmi • Jewelry takes people’s minds off your wrinkles. – Sonja Henie • Jewelry, to me, is a pain in the derriere, because you have to be watching it all the time. – Eartha Kitt • Kindness is not something that we put on for certain occasions, like a piece of jewelry; rather, it is an attribute of God’s that He desires to reproduce in us. – Charles Stanley • Knowledge cannot be stolen from us. It cannot be bought or sold. We may be poor, and the sheriff may come and sell our furniture, or drive away our cow, or take our pet lamb, and leave us homeless and penniless; but he cannot lay the law’s hand upon the jewelry of our minds. – Elihu Burritt • Lust is the sin that gets me excited. Luckily, because I’m married, I also get really good jewelry out of it. – Heather Locklear • Marco Polo had seen the inhabitants of Zipangu place rose-colored pearls in the mouths of the dead. A sea-monster had been enamoured of the pearl that the diver brought to King Perozes, and had slain the thief, and mourned for seven moons over its loss. – Oscar Wilde • McCain was introduced at the convention last night by his wife — I won’t say ‘trophy wife’ — but she did $300,000 worth of clothes and jewelry on, no matter to the party of the little guy. But Cindy McCain talked about how his character, honor and integrity made him the exact kind of married man she was looking to pick up at a bar. – Bill Maher • Men who have a pierced ear are better prepared for marriage – they’ve experienced pain and bought jewelry. – Rita Rudner • Mock jewelry on a woman is tangible vulgarity. – Bayard Taylor • My approach to jewelry has always been to keep it very simple, but if you want to wear something, make sure it is exquisite and lovely and will stand out. – Sophie Cookson • My dad was a jingle writer, and my mom was a jewelry designer and musician. – Reeve Carney • My everyday look has definitely become more low maintenance, but accessories are everything. A structured bag, statement jewelry or a cute scarf can add polish to any outfit! – Adriana Lima • My favorite jewelry, it’s just what I’m feeling at the time. – Erykah Badu • My favourite thing in my wardrobe is my jewelry. – Kate Reardon • My grill is intended to be discreet. It’s there because I enjoy jewelry. – Jill Scott • My husband gave me a necklace. It’s fake. I requested fake. Maybe I’m paranoid, but in this day and age, I don’t want something around my neck that’s worth more than my head. – Rita Rudner • My inspiration is always love and history, and my passion to a fault is craftsmanship and responsibility. Those are the simplest things. It goes beyond jewelry. It’s every part of my life. – Waris Ahluwalia • My parents were glad to see that my new husband looks like a ‘regular guy’-no earring or anything. But really I think a man with an earring is better prepared for marriage. I mean, he’s already experienced pain and bought jewelry. – Rita Rudner • My style is ghetto chic. I love tacky jewelry, mega heels, high-waisted shorts, catsuits. – Jessie J • My years of living the jet-set life were fun, but they weren’t fulfilling. The perks and benefits were lovely, but all of the fabulous furs, fancy jewelry and fun fetes simply weren’t enough to fill my soul. – Sandra Lee • Next to gold and jewelry, health is the most important thing you can have. – Phyllis Diller • Nice jewelry and a boys corpse. Oh you’re so pretty. – Koushun Takami • Not on one strand are all life’s jewels strung. – William Morris • Not the brightest gem in the jewelry shop, but you’ve got to admire his single-minded dedication to drug abuse. – John Green • Nothing in life is fun for the whole family. There are no massage parlors with ice cream and free jewelry. – Jerry Seinfeld • Seriously. Who needed a real lover when you had a handsome, affectionate man who adored you, put a beautiful house over your head, gave you a great job, lavished you with fabulous clothes, shoes, purses and jewelry and would never break your heart? – Kristen Ashley • She is mine own, And I as rich in having such a jewel As twenty seas, if all their sand were pearl, The water nectar, and the rocks pure gold. – William Shakespeare • Some say the economy means that you have to persuade people to invest in clothes – to buy less things but more expensive things. I disagree – invest in jewelry, or a house, maybe, but not in fashion. – Donatella Versace • Studing jewelry gives you an incredible technical background. If you can work on very, very small things, then, I think, typically you find it easier to go bigger rather than the other way around. I think a lot of architects have struggled with small things. Whereas if you start small, it’s easier to get bigger. – Marc Newson • Sun and moon have no light left, earth is dark; Our women’s world is sunk so deep, who can help us? Jewelry sold to pay this trip across the seas, Cut off from my family I leave my native land. Unbinding my feet I clean out a thousand years of poison, With heated heart arouse all women’s spirits. Alas, this delicate kerchief here Is half stained with blood, and half with tears. – Qiu Jin • Sweet are the uses of adversity which, like the toad, ugly and venomous, wears yet a precious jewel in his head. – William Shakespeare • That whole week, we started to divide things into those two categories: anything or something. A piece of jewelry bougth at a department store: anything. A piece of jewelry made by hand: something. A dollar: anything. A sand dollar: something. A gift certificate: anything. An IOU for two hours of starwatching: something. A drunk kiss at a party: anything. A sober kiss alone in a park: something. – David Levithan • The best legacy you could leave is not some building that is names after you or a piece of jewelry but rather a world that has been impacted and touched by your presence, your joy, and your positive actions. – Jon Gordon • The children break all my jewelry, so everything I wear is cheap – from Topshop or Dorothy Perkins. – Sally Phillips • The countless gold of a merry heart, The rubies and pearls of a loving eye, The indolent never can bring to the mart, Nor the secret hoard up in his treasury. – William Blake • The difference between false memories and true ones is the same as for jewels: it is always the false ones that look the most real, the most brilliant. – Salvador Dali • The earth is like a beautiful bride who needs no manmade jewels to heighten her loveliness. – Khalil Gibran • The Female Once-Over – a process by which one woman creates a detailed profile of another woman based upon about a million subtle details of clothing, jewelry, makeup, and body type, and then decides how much of a social threat she might be. Men have a parallel process, but it’s binary: Does he have beer? If yes, will he share with me? – Jim Butcher • The grossest form of this injury of the body to ornament it, is in tattooing. Next, the piercing the ear all around its rim, piercing the nose and the lips to introduce rings or bars of jewelry. – Julia McNair Wright • The jewelry business is a very, very tough business – tougher than the computer business. You truly have to understand how to take care of your customers. • The jewelry stores say, ‘Tell your wife you love her with a diamond,’ while wives tell you they love you with, ‘Ok, but just because it’s Valentine’s Day.’ – George Lopez • The kinds of things I like with crystals are the really beautiful costume jewelry, vintage pieces, and they usually have that diamond shape. – Zoe Kravitz • The leather vests are work vests, supposed to look like factory workers. They’re actually the vests we use in the studio when we make jewelry. – Pamela Love • The most precious jewels are not made of stone, but of flesh. – Robert Ludlum • The only gift my dad ever bought me is still in my jewelry box. It died at 10 minutes to 11 decades ago, but the gold Caravelle watch keeps my dad alive. A watch isn’t about keeping time. It’s about stopping it. – Regina Brett • The ultimate in futility is owning important jewelry. Insurers often insist on the wearing of paste replicas because necks with real rocks around ’em risk wringing. – Malcolm Forbes • The writing process for a short story feels more like field geology, where you keep turning the thing over and over, noting its qualities in detail, hammering at it, putting it near flame, pouring different acids on it, and then finally you figure out what it is, or you just give up and mount it on a ring and have an awkward chunky piece of jewelry that seems weirdly dominating but that you for some reason like. I could be wrong about field geology here. – Rivka Galchen • There were no jewelry hidden. Walt wanted this atmosphere: They were supposed to live here, they’ve been outside somewhere, but they could come back at any minute and catch us. – John Hench • There’s nothing essentially romantic about things like roses or jewelry. Romance starts as some blank concept, and then you just fill it in with objects so you have something to point to when you want to make it real. – Andrea Seigel • To me, jewelry is a natural progression and there is something so meaningful and magical about creating that one of a kind, special piece. – Pamela Love • We must buy jewelry; it identifies us with our tribe, just as body piercing identifies those of a different tribe. – Paulo Coelho • We passed hieroglyphic scrolls, gold jewelry, sarcophagi, statues of pharaohs, and huge chunks of limestone. Why would someone display a rock? Aren’t there enough of those in the world? – Rick Riordan • We used to have MTV and all these ways we can show our videos, and it was these rap shows, and it was everything. And then it became not cool to be conscious; it became cool to just hang out. Escapism rap became the norm. And, when I say “escapism rap”, I mean getting high, get your cars, get your money, get your jewelry, go to the club, have your women, and it just became all about escaping your reality and not making your reality better on a real tip; not just on the have fun tip. – Ice Cube • We were broke in a way that only kids can be broke. Our toes were black with dye from wearing boots that weren’t waterproof. We had infected ear lobes and green rings around our fingers from cheap jewelry. No one ever even had a chocolate bar. – Heather O’Neill • Wear a fabulous smile, great jewelry and know that you are totally and utterly in control. – Donatella Versace • Wearing a breathable fabric is the most important thing for me. I also love to keep it simple and keep the number of garments Im wearing ideally at one (a sundress for example), and then add some great jewelry. – Hilary Rhoda • Well, I always tried to look nice and be feminine even in the worst tragedies and crisis, there’s no reason to add to everyone’s misery by looking miserable yourself. That’s my philosophy. This is why I always wore makeup and jewelry into the jungle-nothing too extravagant, but maybe just a nice gold bracelet and some earrings, a little lipstick, good perfume. Just enough to show that I still had my self-respect. – Elizabeth Gilbert • Well, I never studied design and I went to art school to study art, you know, sculpture and things like that, and ended up making things like sculpture and started making chairs and jewelry together and that’s how I started. – Marc Newson • Well… I had braces and I had to wear headgear! I loved my braces, actually. For me, they were like a piece of jewelry! Instead of the silver or pewter I had gold braces. It was so much fun, I loved them. I got to change the colors and stuff and I had the rubber bands. – Jordin Sparks • What can I say about my jewelry? It speaks for itself. To me, style is to be simple. – Elsa Peretti • What I love about jewelry is you can change it for something else without surgery. – Joan Rivers • When I wear jewelry it needs to really mean something. – Julia Restoin Roitfeld • When I went to stay with I’m, he asked me for something of my fathers to make the tracking easier. I gave him the Morgenstern ring. He said he‘d let me know if he senses Valentine anywhere in the city, but so far he hasn’t.” “Maybe he just wanted your ring,” Clary said. “He sure wears lot of jewelry. – Cassandra Clare • When I’m in the house of God, I don’t wear my jewelry, if you’re looking for my jewelry. All you see is my heart of gold. – Mr. T • Whether I’m making a recipe or a piece of jewelry or a white-rose-and-jasmine tea or the perfume, I like to think of myself as a happy little sorceress, and if I could just have a little general store with all that stuff and give people a sense of my taste, that would be lovely. – Padma Lakshmi • Will the people in the cheaper seats clap your hands? And the rest of you, if you’ll just rattle your jewelry. – John Lennon • With melted opals for my milk, Pearl-leaf for my cracker. – Gwendolyn Brooks • Within each piece, I create an intriguing balance between jewelry and the body, and an intensity which draws others to it. – Sarah Richardson • Wives are good on paper, at least. until they turn into harpies with sharp claws and open check books. Then they’re kind of frightening. And they put on all kinds of makeup and parade around the street with their shopping cart yelling “Sale on aisle seven!” at anyone who will listen. Their wooden clog sandals make a helluva racket on linoleum tile. Their plastic jewelry clatters like the bones of little children. – Rob Campbell • Women like jewelry. They’re like racoons: show them some shiny stuff and they’ll follow you home. – Alonzo Bodden • Working-girls, in pairs and groups and swarms, loitered by these windows, choosing their future boudoirs from some resplendent display which included even a man’s silk pajamas laid domestically across the bed. They stood in front of the jewelry stores and picked out their engagement rings, and their wedding rings and their platinum wrist watches, and then drifted on to inspect the feather fans and opera cloaks; meanwhile digesting the sandwiches and Sundaes they had eaten for lunch. – F. Scott Fitzgerald • Yeah, my role is gonna be a character by the name of Yondu. And there’s gonna be more of Yondu. Yondu is gonna be even more handsome. Perhaps maybe Yondu will add some more bling to his teeth and wear some more jewelry. I don’t know. It’s gonna be a lot of fun. I’ve got my fingers crossed that we’ll flush out the character even more. – Michael Rooker • Yes, your jewelry choices make a difference. When you invest in ethical, heirloom-quality jewelry, you’re also investing in the future. Your purchase supports a creative community of like-minded humanitarians, out there doing important work. – Zoe Helene • You don’t want your jewelry to make you look fat. A lot of what’s out there now does – you just wind up looking like a Christmas tree. – Padma Lakshmi • You just don’t notice the time of your own metamorphosis. Until you do. Every once in a while time dissolves and you remember what you liked as a kid. You jump on your hotel bed, order dessert first, decide to put every piece of jewelry you own on your body and leave the house. Why? Because you can. Because you’re the boss. Because… Ooooh. Shiny. – Sloane Crosley • You know, my uncle wore a lot of jewelry, a lot of gold chains. – 2 Chainz • You know,” I said, holding my ground. “I gotta tell you. The goatee thing? Yeah, way over. And you know a little jewelry really does go a long way. Just something you might want to consider. I’m actually glad you stopped by, because I have a couple things I’ve been meaning to say to you. Number one, about your wife? Yeah, she’s a skank. And number two, you know that whole thing where you killed Jesse and then buried his remains out back there? Yeah, way un-cool. – Meg Cabot • You never have to buy an issue of Cosmo again to be the ‘Best Lover He’s Ever Had.’ Just remember this phrase: ‘Oh my goodness, I don’t know if that will fit.’ Then start mentally picking out jewelry.- Lisa Ann Walter • You should not say anything that you cannot put your totality behind. The total value of you is that whatever you say, you stick with it. When you don’t stick with what you say, you have no value, and your decoration and your jewelry and your sex and your person have no value. Real communication is the faculty of a human that whatever you say, you stick with it. – Harbhajan Singh Yogi
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Jewelry Quotes
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• A girl could never have too much jewelry or too much weaponry. – Laurell K. Hamilton • A little man is running a jewelry store. A man runs in saying, Okay, take my watch, put on a new band, install a new battery, clean the case, install a new crystal, and tune it up. I will be back in a half hour for it. Thanks! and runs out the door. The little jeweler says, C-C-C-Come in? – Henny Youngman • A lot of the jewelry that I wear are fan gifts because they’re so awesome and they give me great presents. – Taylor Swift • A man can do a television interview and roll out of bed 15 minutes before; it’s just not the same for a woman. A woman has to pay attention to her hair, makeup, clothing, and jewelry choices. – Michele Bachmann • A man’s got two shots for jewelry: a wedding ring and a watch. The watch is a lot easier to get on and off than a wedding ring. – John Mayer • A piece of jewelry is in a sense an object that is not complete in itself. Jewelry is a ‘what is it?’ until you relate it to the body. The body is a component in design just as air and space are. Like line, form, and color, the body is a material to work with. It is one of the basic inspirations in creating form. – Art Smith • A woman needs ropes and ropes of pearls. – Grace Kelly • Accessories are crucial. A great bag and a piece of statement jewelry are the fastest way to elevate an otherwise understated look. – Ivanka Trump • Accessories are important and becoming more and more important every day. They can completely change the look of an outfit, and women like the idea of having a wardrobe that’s versatile. For instance, a strong piece of jewelry can make a simple outfit look elegant. – Giorgio Armani • Adversity is the diamond dust Heaven polishes its jewels with. – Thomas Carlyle • All my jewelry has stories. – Eva Green • Always make sure your jewelry isn’t taking over you or your ensemble and keep everything in proportion to your frame – Nina Garcia • Another thing rappers, I admire your rebellious spirit, but materialism is a form of mental slavery. Slow down on the jewelry, pick up a book. – Dov Davidoff • Any girl who was a lady would not even think of having such a good time that she did not remember to hang on to her jewelry. – Anita Loos • As I get older, I use less jewelry – necklace or earrings each morning, not both; my clothes are getting more basic – fewer colours and simpler cuts; and my make-up is stripped back to basics. – Tracy Chevalier • At a flea market I always head for the junk jewelry table first. – Ethel Merman
jQuery(document).ready(function($) var data = action: 'polyxgo_products_search', type: 'product', keywords: 'Jewelry', orderby: 'rand', order: 'DESC', template: '1', limit: '68', columns: '4', viewall:'Shop All', ; jQuery.post(spyr_params.ajaxurl,data, function(response) var obj = jQuery.parseJSON(response); jQuery('#thelovesof_jewelry').html(obj); jQuery('#thelovesof_jewelry img.swiper-lazy:not(.swiper-lazy-loaded)' ).each(function () var img = jQuery(this); img.attr("src",img.data('src')); img.addClass( 'swiper-lazy-loaded' ); img.removeAttr('data-src'); ); ); ); • Be careful with the man jewelry. A little goes a long way. – Ashton Kutcher • Biography is the medium through which the remaining secrets of the famous dead are taken from them and dumped out in full view of the world. The biographer at work, indeed, is like the professional burglar, breaking into a house, rifling through certain drawers that he has good reason to think contain the jewelry and money, and triumphantly bearing his loot away. – Janet Malcolm • But I do mean to say, I have heard her declare, When at the same moment she had on a dress Which cost five hundred dollars, and not a cent less, And jewelry worth tem times more, I should guess, That he had not a thing in the wide world to wear! – William Allen Butler • But the Milanese have made bad choices, bad fashion, and bad jewelry. – Christian Lacroix
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• Cool! Now I can steal some rich old coot’s Ferrari and go fishing for marlin with the same piece of jewelry. – Jennifer Rardin • Costume jewelry is not made to give women an aura of wealth, but to make them beautifu – Coco Chanel • Customized jewelry is one of my targets with Bold Machines. – Bre Pettis • Death, jewelry, or magic; it sounded like Valentine’s Day. – Laurell K. Hamilton • Decide which you want to play up: your clothing or your jewelry, but not both. Let one be the star and one the supporting player. – Padma Lakshmi • Do not judge from mere appearances. – Edwin Hubbel Chapin • Do not judge men by mere appearances; for the light laughter that bubbles on the lip often mantles over the depths of sadness, and the serious look may be the sober veil that covers a divine peace and joy. – Edwin Hubbel Chapin • Donald Trump participated in something known as the empty box scam. He bought $65,000 worth of jewelry from Bulgari across the street from Trump Tower, and had the record show that it was mailed to him in an out-of-state address. Now, if you’re not a New York resident, you may not have to pay sales tax if the jewelry is mailed to you in another state. The problem is, they were empty boxes. It was proven. – Hillary Clinton • Even if heaven were real, and measured as Revelation says, so many cubits this wayand that, how gimcrack a place it would be, crammed with its pavements of gold, its gates of pearl and topaz, like a gigantic chunkof costume jewelry. – Margaret Laurence • Every day of my adult life, I have worn at least one piece of jewelry from my maternal grandmother’s collection, all of which were manufactured by famed Danish silversmith Georg Jensen. To the naked eye, I am either a Jensen loyalist or a grandmother loyalist. Really I am just a Pretty Things loyalist.- Sloane Crosley • Flowers that are so pathetic in their beauty, frail as the clouds, and in their coloring as gorgeous as the heavens, had through thousands of years been the heritage of children – honored as the jewelry of God. – Thomas de Quincey • For me accessories create and define a woman’s personal style. The bag she carries, the watch on her wrist, her jewelry, her sunglasses, her shoes all define a look that is her signature. For Spring 2014, my accessory collections are about a clean, graphic boldness creating a new dimension redefining modern classics. – Ralph Lauren • For me the diamond dawns are set In rings of beauty. – John Townsend Trowbridge • For me, hair is an accoutrement. Hair is jewelry. It’s an accessory. – Jill Scott • Funny, I never shopped. Even my jewelry – not a piece of my jewelry I bought for me. – Imelda Marcos • Give crowns and pounds and guineas But not your heart away; Give pearls away and rubies, But keep your fancy free. – A. E. Housman • Gold, unlike all other commodities, is a currency…and the major thrust in the demand for gold is not for jewelry. It’s not for anything other than an escape from what is perceived to be a fiat money system, paper money, that seems to be deteriorating. – Alan Greenspan • Guard well your spare moments. They are like uncut diamonds. Discard them and their value will never be known. Improve them and they will become the brightest gems in a useful life. – Ralph Waldo Emerson
• He hits the ball 130 yards and his jewelry goes 150. – Bob Hope • Hollywood liberals could not be reached for comment on the cost of the inauguration because they were being fitted for gowns and jewelry worth millions of dollars in anticipation of Oscar night. – Ann Coulter • I am happy to receive any items of jewelry. – Katie Price • I am not big on jewelry, but I do love hats as an accessory, specifically snap backs and beanies. – Jourdan Dunn • I believe in trying foods from all over the world, going to markets and finding jewelry and furniture and just treating myself well. It’s important for me creatively to travel. – Crystal Renn • I collect jewelry for a story – so something I got on a trip or something I got from my family. You know it always needs to have a meaning for me. – Julia Restoin Roitfeld • I didn’t mind giving up carnality, jewelry and red meat in return for comradeship and an afterlife. – Margaret Millar • I don’t buy jewelry just for the aesthetic side. – Julia Restoin Roitfeld • I feel naked without jewelry. – Olivia Thirlby • I had a strong identity in mind but then of course I had to trust Didier Dubot’s expertise. They’ve been doing jewelry for so many years. – Julia Restoin Roitfeld • I had much rather be adorned by beauty of character than by jewels. Jewels are the gift of fortune, character comes from within. – Plautus • I had very good dentures once. Some magnificent gold work. It’s the only form of jewelry a man can wear that women fully appreciate. – Graham Greene • I hate imitation jewelry, dark lipstick and most of all a shrill voice. This has spoiled many a picture of feminine loveliness. – Ray Milland • I have been making wire jewelry – and think I’ll really do something with it, eventually. – Alexander Calder • I have seen women looking at jewelry ads with a misty eye and one hand resting on the heart, and I only know what they’re feeling because that’s how I read the seed catalogs in January. – Barbara Kingsolver • I have tons of jewelry. I like to wear a lot of it – Amber Tamblyn • I hope that when girls see my clothes, my shoes, or my outrageous jewelry collection, they feel the thrill of wanting more for themselves too. I love what my friend Andre Leon Talley said: “If you are successful, people want to see it. They want to share in your dream”. – Kimora Lee Simmons • I hope that women everywhere will wear this jewelry and feel the passion and love that is, to me, the real spirit of True Harmony. – Carol Alt • I just love clothes! I’m a girl who loves clothes, accessories, shoes, bags and jewelry. – Kelly Rowland • I like black for clothes, small items, and jewelry. It’s a color that can’t be violated by any other colors. A color that simply keeps being itself. A color that sinks more somberly than any other color, yet asserts itself more than all other colors. It’s a passionate gallant color. Anything is wonderful if it transcends things rather than being halfway. – Yana Toboso • I like colonic irrigation because sometimes you find old jewelry.- Joan Rivers • I like jewelry. Big rings, big necklaces. Shoes, belts, luggage. – Janel Parrish • I like to be dressy casual. I wear jeans and nice sneakers. I wear nice clothes, but not super dressed up. I don’t wear too much jewelry. I keep it simple and maybe wear just a little chain. – Vinny Guadagnino • I love how significant jewelry is throughout the world and throughout time. People have been adorning themselves with jewelry for years and its one of the oldest forms of art and design. This is something that has and will always inspire me. – Pamela Love • I love jewelry – rings, earrings, bracelets, necklaces, you name it. – Sofia Vergara • I love photography. I like to write. I like coaching. I’ve made jewelry. I’m very creative. – Diandra Asbaty • I love rewriting because that is where and how you discover the story. Its like you have this skeleton, and you get to put flesh on it and hair and clothes and really wonderful jewelry. – Caroline Leavitt • I love rhinestones, faux jewelry. – Adriana Trigiani • I love to be casual and comfortable, but I also love the easy glamour of wearing jewelry all the time. – Elizabeth Taylor • I love to shop. Clothes, electronics, and I love jewelry, especially yellow gold. – Apolo Ohno • I make jewelry occasionally. I’m not a hobbyist. I’m a reader, I’m a lover of books, I like to watch movies, but mostly a lot of nothing. I’m quite content doing very little. – Janeane Garofalo • I might not wear chains or I may just wear a watch or I may not wear any jewelry at all or I may just go all out on an outfit or just rock some basic s*** just a pair of jeans, a t-shirt and ones. But, I still standout more than a lot of people in the room so I can’t really describe it but I know from the outside looking in people can explain better than I can. – Lil Herb • I never had a fondness for gems or the extravagance of Harry Winston or Van Cleef & Arpels. I’ve always liked the more flamboyant, imaginative things. I lusted after costume jewelry. My husband was a very lucky man. – Iris Apfel • I obviously have a great love and appreciation of jewelry, thanks to my mother, much to the dismay of both my father and my boyfriends. – Ivanka Trump • I really just appreciate good jewelry, clarity, gold. I think gold is made for kings and pharaohs – that’s what I am. That’s why I rock gold and, you know, stuff like that. – Big Sean • I really learned a lot from collecting clothes because I got to go back into the history of fashion and fashion photography and jewelry. It changed how I felt about fashion and about what I did forever because I used to look a little bit down on myself for it. – Stephanie Seymour • I really love Paul Smith. And Chrome Hearts. They make the most beautiful, high-end leather and outerwear and jewelry you’ve ever seen. But I’m not a big fan of shopping. I certainly am a fan of clothes and especially people that put time into the construction of them. – Dean Winters • I remember opening my dad’s closet and there were, like, 40 suits, every color of the rainbow, plaid and winter and summer. He had two jewelry boxes full of watches and lighters and cuff links. And just… he was that guy. He was probably unfulfilled in his life in many ways. – Jon Hamm • I remove my wedding rings and put them in the jewelry box. So many others have done this. I am not the only one. I am not the only one. But here, I am the only one. – Elizabeth Berg • I think it’s a tribute to the artistic importance of hip-hop culture and what hip-hop has brought into music and fashion and jewelry that it is being adapted or imitated or is inspiring variations or new types of art or new types of music. – Simon de Pury • I think I’ve revived the costume-jewelry industry. – Madeleine Albright • I think jewelry can change an outfit more than anything else. Transformation, punch, individuality: One or all of the above are why you should wear jewelry. – Iris Apfel • I think swag is very important to rappers. It’s the overall appearance and style of an artist – these blue shorts and this blue hat and this $80,000 chain, this jewelry and all these tattoos, that’s swag. – Soulja Boy • I think that the lack of intuition in fashion today is one of the most dangerous things. My fear is that our business is turning into a bag business, and it’s all about the bag. But it’s not only about the bag. It’s about the women. And it’s not about a bag or a shoe or the jewelry. It’s only about women. . . . Being almost politically correct and doing only what you expect without the ability to make mistakes is very dangerous to fashion. We have to go with our heart. We have to go with our intuition. – Alber Elbaz • I think there is going to be a whole market and we’ll start to see hip-hop jewelry regularly in jewelry auctions around the world. Therefore, anybody who gets on the train early can only do well financially in the long run. – Simon de Pury • I treat clothing or a piece of jewelry like it was a piece of art. – Daphne Guinness • I used to collect vintage clothing – exquisite lace dresses, embroidered shawls and ornate jewelry – but that’s just not me any more. – Britt Ekland • I used to think that if I had success I would have freedom. But I have less freedom now than I’ve ever had. And what gives me satisfaction is not the jewelry and not the cars. What gives me satisfaction is doing things for others, like children. – Criss Angel • I want a chainsaw very badly, because I think cutting down a tree would be unbelievably satisfying. I have asked for a chainsaw for my birthday, but I think I’ll probably be given jewelry instead. – Susan Orlean • I will not go out with a man who wears more jewelry than me, and I’ll never, ever go to bed with a guy who calls me Babe. Other than that, however, I’m real flexible. – Linda Sunshine • I won’t wear rings and jewelry on the stage because I don’t want you looking at my hands. I want you hearing what I’m saying. – Mavis Staples • I’m busy sorting through our new collection of rhinestone jewelry. Should anyone be in the market for sparkly accessories the size of a hubcap, this is the place to get them. Earlier today, a customer picked up one of the enormous chandelier-style offerings and asked, ‘Do those be genuine rhimestones?’ I couldn’t even begin to explain everything that was wrong with her sentence, so I simply replied, ‘Yes. They do be genuine. – Jen Lancaster • I’m reminded of a book my father used to read me,” she said. “A bunch of elves and things get into a huge war over a piece of jewelry that everybody wants but nobody can wear. – Daniel Handler • If a girl says not to get her a birthday present that means get me a birthday present and make sure it’s jewelry. – Kami Garcia • If I go up to Harlem or down to Sixth Street, and I’m not dressed up or I’m not wearing my jewelry, then the people feel I’m talking down to them. People expect to see Mrs. Astor, not some dowdy old lady, and I don’t intend to disappoint. – Brooke Astor • If I’m not feeling good, I load on jewelry. It gives me energy and makes me feel happy. – Kate Hudson • If there was a choice on spending a lot of money on accessories or dress, I always chose accessories. I think jewelry can change an outfit more than anything else. – Iris Apfel • If you don’t know jewelry, know the jeweler. – Warren Buffett • If you don’t know the Jewelry, know the Jeweller – Warren Buffett • If you don’t want people to look at you, Park had thought at the time, don’t wear fishing lures in your hair. Her jewelry box must look like a junk drawer. – Rainbow Rowell • If your dad is anything like mine, then you have no clue what to buy him for Father’s Day. The only Father’s Day tradition in my family is the annual conversation he and I have where I say, ‘Hey, Dad, what do you want for Father’s Day this year?’ and he says, ‘Nothing.’ Then I ask my mom what I should get him and she says, ‘He likes sandalwood soap, dangly jewelry and Chanel No. 5 perfume.’ – Michael Showalter • I’ll work for whoever wants to hire me. Even the jewelry channel. – Dylan Moran • I’m a big rings person…and bracelets…and earrings. I love all of it [Laughs]. One time, I was getting off an airplane and I had been traveling for like a month in Europe, and I came from the airplane right to my mom’s house who I hadn’t seen in awhile, and she looked at me and she goes, “Is it possible to fit any more jewelry on you? Is that actually possible?” And I looked down and, because when I travel I don’t like to pack my jewelry so I end up wearing a ton of it, and I had just had everything on me. And I love buying jewelry when I travel – so there was a lot. – Kate Hudson • Im a hard worker, and everything with me is, if I work hard, I should get paid for it. Everything with me, I try to symbolize something flashy like jewelry or a car. The rubbing hands is a symbol of hustling, so it goes back to the money. – Birdman • I’m crazy about jewelry; swimwear and jewelry. – Candice Swanepoel • I’m going to get up every morning at 6:30 to work out. Then, when I’ve kept with it all week, I give myself something I really want, like a new handbag or a piece of jewelry I’m coveting. – Molly Sims • I’m just disillusioned with the hip-hop sound right now. It’s too materialistic. You know, I’m the kind of guy … I can’t do that. If you track my movement, you’ll never see a picture of me with any girl that wasn’t mine, or my own car. My jewelry, my clothes. What kind of gangsta rapper has a stylist? A stylist?! – Ice T • I’m listening to Gogol Bordello, which is totally random, but I love him. Just finished the new Joan Didion book, Blue Nights, which I loved. I haven’t been to the movies in God knows how long. I haven’t been doing anything but living in a bubble, making jewelry! – Pamela Love • I’m not a huge jewelry fan. – Felicity Jones • I’m not into jewelry. I’ve got some earrings but they’re not too expensive. There are guys who drop a hundred grand for a chain. The public’s got it right – a lot of NBA stars are arrogant and like to spend lots of money and have lots of girlfriends and all that. – Andrew Bogut • I’m not normally a jewelry person. I’m supposed to be a working class champion and all, and I don’t like to rub my success in people’s faces. – Bubba Sparxxx • Imagine wasting all that perfectly good anger on paranoid fantasies. Not since Emily Litella got upset about “Soviet jewelry” has there been such a waste of anger. You will notice a certain theme to these Emily Litella Moments. Behind them all is a touching faith that someone, somewhere is actually in charge of what’s happening – a proposition I beg leave to doubt. – Molly Ivins • In a way, there’s nothing more intimate than a piece of jewelry. A painting is hung on somebody’s wall. You put a piece of furniture in your home. But jewelry is worn by a person, so there is a fascination with the history of a piece. – Simon de Pury • In both business and personal life, I’ve always found that travel inspires me more than anything else I do. Evidence of the languages, cultures, scenery, food, and design sensibilities that I discover all over the world can be found in every piece of my jewelry. – Ivanka Trump • I’ve always loved the fashion of the ’30s and everything that came with the Art Deco era – the jewelry and the glamour. – Emmy Rossum • I’ve been designing my own pieces for a long time. My mother’s a jewelry designer, so we knew at some point we were going to do a line and dive into the fashion world. – Christian Serratos • I’ve been on a plane before with more money in jewelry than my life insurance policy, and it’s one of the scariest feelings in the world… if you lose it, you have to pay for it yourself, and you don’t even get to keep it! – Rumer Willis • I’ve borrowed tons of jewelry. Most people [in Hollywood] do. But it’s your responsibility to keep track of it. – Rumer Willis • I’ve never in my life bought a big piece of jewelry – like, ‘I’m gonna get myself a big piece of jewelry!’ Songwriters’ lives are unstable and up and down. Even though mine has sort of has followed more of a going toward the sky trajectory. – Kara DioGuardi • I’ve read about all the sales today. If you’re an auto dealer, you’re feeling it. If you’re a furniture retailer like we are, you’re feeling it. If you’re a jewelry retailer, you’re feeling it. I know some of these businesses because we’re in them. Yeah, it’s being felt, but it will be felt big time more if we don’t do something about it, what’s going on. – Warren Buffett • I’ve teamed up with BaubleBar to curate a collection of gorgeous jewelry pieces. I worked closely with the BaubleBar team to design a collection that encompasses my style and all of my go to pieces. – Ashley Madekwe • Jewellery takes people’s minds off your wrinkles. – Sarah Phillips • Jewelry and pins have been worn throughout history as symbols of power, sending messages. Interestingly enough, it was mostly men who wore the jewelry in various times, and obviously crowns were part of signals that were being sent throughout history by people of rank. – Madeleine Albright • Jewelry is fine on some guys, but it’s not for me. – Ross Kemp • Jewelry is incredibly feminine, and reflects the grace and beauty of a women’s style like nothing else. – Ivanka Trump • Jewelry is something that has to do with emotion. That aspect of jewelry really interests me. – Ann Demeulemeester • Jewelry is the most transformative thing you can wear. – Iris Apfel • Jewelry should not upstage you. I pick one hot point on my body that I’m going to highlight. Let one area do the singing – you don’t want to hear three songs at once. – Padma Lakshmi • Jewelry takes people’s minds off your wrinkles. – Sonja Henie • Jewelry, to me, is a pain in the derriere, because you have to be watching it all the time. – Eartha Kitt • Kindness is not something that we put on for certain occasions, like a piece of jewelry; rather, it is an attribute of God’s that He desires to reproduce in us. – Charles Stanley • Knowledge cannot be stolen from us. It cannot be bought or sold. We may be poor, and the sheriff may come and sell our furniture, or drive away our cow, or take our pet lamb, and leave us homeless and penniless; but he cannot lay the law’s hand upon the jewelry of our minds. – Elihu Burritt • Lust is the sin that gets me excited. Luckily, because I’m married, I also get really good jewelry out of it. – Heather Locklear • Marco Polo had seen the inhabitants of Zipangu place rose-colored pearls in the mouths of the dead. A sea-monster had been enamoured of the pearl that the diver brought to King Perozes, and had slain the thief, and mourned for seven moons over its loss. – Oscar Wilde • McCain was introduced at the convention last night by his wife — I won’t say ‘trophy wife’ — but she did $300,000 worth of clothes and jewelry on, no matter to the party of the little guy. But Cindy McCain talked about how his character, honor and integrity made him the exact kind of married man she was looking to pick up at a bar. – Bill Maher • Men who have a pierced ear are better prepared for marriage – they’ve experienced pain and bought jewelry. – Rita Rudner • Mock jewelry on a woman is tangible vulgarity. – Bayard Taylor • My approach to jewelry has always been to keep it very simple, but if you want to wear something, make sure it is exquisite and lovely and will stand out. – Sophie Cookson • My dad was a jingle writer, and my mom was a jewelry designer and musician. – Reeve Carney • My everyday look has definitely become more low maintenance, but accessories are everything. A structured bag, statement jewelry or a cute scarf can add polish to any outfit! – Adriana Lima • My favorite jewelry, it’s just what I’m feeling at the time. – Erykah Badu • My favourite thing in my wardrobe is my jewelry. – Kate Reardon • My grill is intended to be discreet. It’s there because I enjoy jewelry. – Jill Scott • My husband gave me a necklace. It’s fake. I requested fake. Maybe I’m paranoid, but in this day and age, I don’t want something around my neck that’s worth more than my head. – Rita Rudner • My inspiration is always love and history, and my passion to a fault is craftsmanship and responsibility. Those are the simplest things. It goes beyond jewelry. It’s every part of my life. – Waris Ahluwalia • My parents were glad to see that my new husband looks like a ‘regular guy’-no earring or anything. But really I think a man with an earring is better prepared for marriage. I mean, he’s already experienced pain and bought jewelry. – Rita Rudner • My style is ghetto chic. I love tacky jewelry, mega heels, high-waisted shorts, catsuits. – Jessie J • My years of living the jet-set life were fun, but they weren’t fulfilling. The perks and benefits were lovely, but all of the fabulous furs, fancy jewelry and fun fetes simply weren’t enough to fill my soul. – Sandra Lee • Next to gold and jewelry, health is the most important thing you can have. – Phyllis Diller • Nice jewelry and a boys corpse. Oh you’re so pretty. – Koushun Takami • Not on one strand are all life’s jewels strung. – William Morris • Not the brightest gem in the jewelry shop, but you’ve got to admire his single-minded dedication to drug abuse. – John Green • Nothing in life is fun for the whole family. There are no massage parlors with ice cream and free jewelry. – Jerry Seinfeld • Seriously. Who needed a real lover when you had a handsome, affectionate man who adored you, put a beautiful house over your head, gave you a great job, lavished you with fabulous clothes, shoes, purses and jewelry and would never break your heart? – Kristen Ashley • She is mine own, And I as rich in having such a jewel As twenty seas, if all their sand were pearl, The water nectar, and the rocks pure gold. – William Shakespeare • Some say the economy means that you have to persuade people to invest in clothes – to buy less things but more expensive things. I disagree – invest in jewelry, or a house, maybe, but not in fashion. – Donatella Versace • Studing jewelry gives you an incredible technical background. If you can work on very, very small things, then, I think, typically you find it easier to go bigger rather than the other way around. I think a lot of architects have struggled with small things. Whereas if you start small, it’s easier to get bigger. – Marc Newson • Sun and moon have no light left, earth is dark; Our women’s world is sunk so deep, who can help us? Jewelry sold to pay this trip across the seas, Cut off from my family I leave my native land. Unbinding my feet I clean out a thousand years of poison, With heated heart arouse all women’s spirits. Alas, this delicate kerchief here Is half stained with blood, and half with tears. – Qiu Jin • Sweet are the uses of adversity which, like the toad, ugly and venomous, wears yet a precious jewel in his head. – William Shakespeare • That whole week, we started to divide things into those two categories: anything or something. A piece of jewelry bougth at a department store: anything. A piece of jewelry made by hand: something. A dollar: anything. A sand dollar: something. A gift certificate: anything. An IOU for two hours of starwatching: something. A drunk kiss at a party: anything. A sober kiss alone in a park: something. – David Levithan • The best legacy you could leave is not some building that is names after you or a piece of jewelry but rather a world that has been impacted and touched by your presence, your joy, and your positive actions. – Jon Gordon • The children break all my jewelry, so everything I wear is cheap – from Topshop or Dorothy Perkins. – Sally Phillips • The countless gold of a merry heart, The rubies and pearls of a loving eye, The indolent never can bring to the mart, Nor the secret hoard up in his treasury. – William Blake • The difference between false memories and true ones is the same as for jewels: it is always the false ones that look the most real, the most brilliant. – Salvador Dali • The earth is like a beautiful bride who needs no manmade jewels to heighten her loveliness. – Khalil Gibran • The Female Once-Over – a process by which one woman creates a detailed profile of another woman based upon about a million subtle details of clothing, jewelry, makeup, and body type, and then decides how much of a social threat she might be. Men have a parallel process, but it’s binary: Does he have beer? If yes, will he share with me? – Jim Butcher • The grossest form of this injury of the body to ornament it, is in tattooing. Next, the piercing the ear all around its rim, piercing the nose and the lips to introduce rings or bars of jewelry. – Julia McNair Wright • The jewelry business is a very, very tough business – tougher than the computer business. You truly have to understand how to take care of your customers. • The jewelry stores say, ‘Tell your wife you love her with a diamond,’ while wives tell you they love you with, ‘Ok, but just because it’s Valentine’s Day.’ – George Lopez • The kinds of things I like with crystals are the really beautiful costume jewelry, vintage pieces, and they usually have that diamond shape. – Zoe Kravitz • The leather vests are work vests, supposed to look like factory workers. They’re actually the vests we use in the studio when we make jewelry. – Pamela Love • The most precious jewels are not made of stone, but of flesh. – Robert Ludlum • The only gift my dad ever bought me is still in my jewelry box. It died at 10 minutes to 11 decades ago, but the gold Caravelle watch keeps my dad alive. A watch isn’t about keeping time. It’s about stopping it. – Regina Brett • The ultimate in futility is owning important jewelry. Insurers often insist on the wearing of paste replicas because necks with real rocks around ’em risk wringing. – Malcolm Forbes • The writing process for a short story feels more like field geology, where you keep turning the thing over and over, noting its qualities in detail, hammering at it, putting it near flame, pouring different acids on it, and then finally you figure out what it is, or you just give up and mount it on a ring and have an awkward chunky piece of jewelry that seems weirdly dominating but that you for some reason like. I could be wrong about field geology here. – Rivka Galchen • There were no jewelry hidden. Walt wanted this atmosphere: They were supposed to live here, they’ve been outside somewhere, but they could come back at any minute and catch us. – John Hench • There’s nothing essentially romantic about things like roses or jewelry. Romance starts as some blank concept, and then you just fill it in with objects so you have something to point to when you want to make it real. – Andrea Seigel • To me, jewelry is a natural progression and there is something so meaningful and magical about creating that one of a kind, special piece. – Pamela Love • We must buy jewelry; it identifies us with our tribe, just as body piercing identifies those of a different tribe. – Paulo Coelho • We passed hieroglyphic scrolls, gold jewelry, sarcophagi, statues of pharaohs, and huge chunks of limestone. Why would someone display a rock? Aren’t there enough of those in the world? – Rick Riordan • We used to have MTV and all these ways we can show our videos, and it was these rap shows, and it was everything. And then it became not cool to be conscious; it became cool to just hang out. Escapism rap became the norm. And, when I say “escapism rap”, I mean getting high, get your cars, get your money, get your jewelry, go to the club, have your women, and it just became all about escaping your reality and not making your reality better on a real tip; not just on the have fun tip. – Ice Cube • We were broke in a way that only kids can be broke. Our toes were black with dye from wearing boots that weren’t waterproof. We had infected ear lobes and green rings around our fingers from cheap jewelry. No one ever even had a chocolate bar. – Heather O’Neill • Wear a fabulous smile, great jewelry and know that you are totally and utterly in control. – Donatella Versace • Wearing a breathable fabric is the most important thing for me. I also love to keep it simple and keep the number of garments Im wearing ideally at one (a sundress for example), and then add some great jewelry. – Hilary Rhoda • Well, I always tried to look nice and be feminine even in the worst tragedies and crisis, there’s no reason to add to everyone’s misery by looking miserable yourself. That’s my philosophy. This is why I always wore makeup and jewelry into the jungle-nothing too extravagant, but maybe just a nice gold bracelet and some earrings, a little lipstick, good perfume. Just enough to show that I still had my self-respect. – Elizabeth Gilbert • Well, I never studied design and I went to art school to study art, you know, sculpture and things like that, and ended up making things like sculpture and started making chairs and jewelry together and that’s how I started. – Marc Newson • Well… I had braces and I had to wear headgear! I loved my braces, actually. For me, they were like a piece of jewelry! Instead of the silver or pewter I had gold braces. It was so much fun, I loved them. I got to change the colors and stuff and I had the rubber bands. – Jordin Sparks • What can I say about my jewelry? It speaks for itself. To me, style is to be simple. – Elsa Peretti • What I love about jewelry is you can change it for something else without surgery. – Joan Rivers • When I wear jewelry it needs to really mean something. – Julia Restoin Roitfeld • When I went to stay with I’m, he asked me for something of my fathers to make the tracking easier. I gave him the Morgenstern ring. He said he‘d let me know if he senses Valentine anywhere in the city, but so far he hasn’t.” “Maybe he just wanted your ring,” Clary said. “He sure wears lot of jewelry. – Cassandra Clare • When I’m in the house of God, I don’t wear my jewelry, if you’re looking for my jewelry. All you see is my heart of gold. – Mr. T • Whether I’m making a recipe or a piece of jewelry or a white-rose-and-jasmine tea or the perfume, I like to think of myself as a happy little sorceress, and if I could just have a little general store with all that stuff and give people a sense of my taste, that would be lovely. – Padma Lakshmi • Will the people in the cheaper seats clap your hands? And the rest of you, if you’ll just rattle your jewelry. – John Lennon • With melted opals for my milk, Pearl-leaf for my cracker. – Gwendolyn Brooks • Within each piece, I create an intriguing balance between jewelry and the body, and an intensity which draws others to it. – Sarah Richardson • Wives are good on paper, at least. until they turn into harpies with sharp claws and open check books. Then they’re kind of frightening. And they put on all kinds of makeup and parade around the street with their shopping cart yelling “Sale on aisle seven!” at anyone who will listen. Their wooden clog sandals make a helluva racket on linoleum tile. Their plastic jewelry clatters like the bones of little children. – Rob Campbell • Women like jewelry. They’re like racoons: show them some shiny stuff and they’ll follow you home. – Alonzo Bodden • Working-girls, in pairs and groups and swarms, loitered by these windows, choosing their future boudoirs from some resplendent display which included even a man’s silk pajamas laid domestically across the bed. They stood in front of the jewelry stores and picked out their engagement rings, and their wedding rings and their platinum wrist watches, and then drifted on to inspect the feather fans and opera cloaks; meanwhile digesting the sandwiches and Sundaes they had eaten for lunch. – F. Scott Fitzgerald • Yeah, my role is gonna be a character by the name of Yondu. And there’s gonna be more of Yondu. Yondu is gonna be even more handsome. Perhaps maybe Yondu will add some more bling to his teeth and wear some more jewelry. I don’t know. It’s gonna be a lot of fun. I’ve got my fingers crossed that we’ll flush out the character even more. – Michael Rooker • Yes, your jewelry choices make a difference. When you invest in ethical, heirloom-quality jewelry, you’re also investing in the future. Your purchase supports a creative community of like-minded humanitarians, out there doing important work. – Zoe Helene • You don’t want your jewelry to make you look fat. A lot of what’s out there now does – you just wind up looking like a Christmas tree. – Padma Lakshmi • You just don’t notice the time of your own metamorphosis. Until you do. Every once in a while time dissolves and you remember what you liked as a kid. You jump on your hotel bed, order dessert first, decide to put every piece of jewelry you own on your body and leave the house. Why? Because you can. Because you’re the boss. Because… Ooooh. Shiny. – Sloane Crosley • You know, my uncle wore a lot of jewelry, a lot of gold chains. – 2 Chainz • You know,” I said, holding my ground. “I gotta tell you. The goatee thing? Yeah, way over. And you know a little jewelry really does go a long way. Just something you might want to consider. I’m actually glad you stopped by, because I have a couple things I’ve been meaning to say to you. Number one, about your wife? Yeah, she’s a skank. And number two, you know that whole thing where you killed Jesse and then buried his remains out back there? Yeah, way un-cool. – Meg Cabot • You never have to buy an issue of Cosmo again to be the ‘Best Lover He’s Ever Had.’ Just remember this phrase: ‘Oh my goodness, I don’t know if that will fit.’ Then start mentally picking out jewelry.- Lisa Ann Walter • You should not say anything that you cannot put your totality behind. The total value of you is that whatever you say, you stick with it. When you don’t stick with what you say, you have no value, and your decoration and your jewelry and your sex and your person have no value. Real communication is the faculty of a human that whatever you say, you stick with it. – Harbhajan Singh Yogi
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24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards Nominees
SAG Award Red Carpet View. Photo by Naomi Richard
Nominations Announced for the 24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards®
Ceremony Will Be Simulcast Live on Sunday, January 21, 2018, on TNT and TBS at 8 p.m. (ET)/5 p.m. (PT)
Para leer en español, haga clic aquí: sagawards.org/kNomsEsp
LOS ANGELES (Dec. 13, 2017) – Nominees for the 24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards ® for outstanding individual, cast and ensemble performances in film and television of 2017, as well as the honorees for outstanding action performances by film and television stunt ensembles were announced this morning at the Pacific Design Center’s SilverScreen Theater in West Hollywood.
SAG-AFTRA President Gabrielle Carteris introduced Olivia Munn ( X-Men: Apocalypse , The Predator ) and Niecy Nash ( Claws, The Soul Man ), who announced the nominees for this year’s Actors® live on TNT, TBS, truTV, tntdrama.com/sagawards , truTV.com and sagawards.org , TNT/TBS apps, and TNT/TBS Facebook, Twitter and YouTube channels. Prior to that, SAG Awards Committee Chair JoBeth Williams and Committee Member Elizabeth McLaughlin announced the honorees for outstanding action performances by film and television stunt ensembles.
The complete list of 24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards nominations follows this notice.
The 24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards® presented by SAG-AFTRA with Screen Actors Guild Awards, LLC is produced by Avalon Harbor Entertainment, Inc. and will be simulcast live on TNT and TBS on Sunday, Jan. 21, 2018 at 8 p.m. (ET) / 5 p.m. (PT). TNT & TBS subscribers can also watch the SAG Awards live through the networks' websites and mobile apps. In addition, TNT will present a special encore of the ceremony at 11 p.m. (ET)/8 p.m. (PT) that same evening.
Prior to the televised ceremony, the honorees for outstanding action performances by film and television stunt ensembles will be announced during the SAG Awards Red Carpet Pre-Show webcast.
One of the awards season’s premier events, the SAG Awards annually celebrates the outstanding motion pictures and television performances from the previous calendar year. Of the top industry honors presented to actors, only the SAG Awards are selected entirely by performers’ peers in SAG-AFTRA. The SAG Awards was the first televised awards show to acknowledge the work of union members and the first to present awards to motion picture casts and television ensembles.
Two nominating panels — one for television and one for film — each composed of 2,500 randomly selected union members from across the United States, chose this year’s nominees. Final voting information will be sent to the 121,544 SAG-AFTRA members in good standing across the country, who may vote on all categories. In keeping with the SAG Awards’ commitment to sustainable practices, online voting is encouraged and paper ballots are available only upon request received by Friday, Jan. 8, 2018. All votes must be received at Integrity Voting Systems by noon on Friday, Jan. 19. Results will be tallied and sealed until the envelopes are opened by the presenters live onstage at the 24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards ceremony on Jan. 21, 2018.
The Screen Actors Guild Post-Awards Gala benefiting the SAG-AFTRA Foundation will be hosted for the 22nd consecutive year by PEOPLE and the Entertainment Industry Foundation (EIF), joined this year by TNT & TBS, to honor the SAG-AFTRA Foundation and actors’ philanthropic activities. For more information about the SAG Awards®, SAG-AFTRA, TNT & TBS, visit sagawards.org/about.
Requests for photos and graphics for the 24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards should be addressed to [email protected]
Connect with the SAG Awards®
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The 24th ANNUAL SCREEN ACTORS GUILD AWARDS ® NOMINATIONS
The Theatrical Motion Picture Nominees are:
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role
JUDI DENCH / Queen Victoria – “VICTORIA & ABDUL” (Focus Features) SALLY HAWKINS / Elisa Esposito – “THE SHAPE OF WATER” (Fox Searchlight) FRANCES McDORMAND / Mildred – “THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI” (Fox Searchlight) MARGOT ROBBIE / Tonya Harding – “I, TONYA” (Neon) SAOIRSE RONAN / Lady Bird McPherson – “LADY BIRD” (A24)
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role
TIMOTHÉE CHALAMET / Elio – “CALL ME BY YOUR NAME” (Sony Pictures Classics) JAMES FRANCO / Tommy Wiseau – “THE DISASTER ARTIST” (A24) DANIEL KALUUYA / Chris Washington – “GET OUT” (Universal Pictures) GARY OLDMAN / Winston Churchill – “DARKEST HOUR” (Focus Features) DENZEL WASHINGTON / Roman J. Israel, Esq. – “ROMAN J. ISRAEL, ESQ.” (Columbia Pictures)
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role
MARY J. BLIGE / Florence Jackson – “MUDBOUND” (Netflix) HONG CHAU / Ngoc Lan Tran – “DOWNSIZING” (Paramount Pictures) HOLLY HUNTER / Beth – “THE BIG SICK” (Amazon Studios) ALLISON JANNEY / LaVona Golden – “I, TONYA” (Neon) LAURIE METCALF / Marion McPherson – “LADY BIRD” (A24)
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role
STEVE CARELL / Bobby Riggs – “BATTLE OF THE SEXES” (Fox Searchlight) WILLEM DAFOE / Bobby – “THE FLORIDA PROJECT” (A24) WOODY HARRELSON / Willoughby – “THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI” (Fox Searchlight) RICHARD JENKINS / Giles – “THE SHAPE OF WATER” (Fox Searchlight)| SAM ROCKWELL / Dixon – “THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI” (Fox Searchlight)
Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture
THE BIG SICK (Amazon Studios) ADEEL AKHTAR / Naveed HOLLY HUNTER / Beth ZOE KAZAN / Emily ANUPAM KHER / Azmat KUMAIL NANJIANI / Kumail RAY ROMANO / Terry ZENOBIA SHROFF / Sharmeen
GET OUT (Universal Pictures) CALEB LANDRY JONES / Jeremy Armitage DANIEL KALUUYA / Chris Washington CATHERINE KEENER / Missy Armitage STEPHEN ROOT / Jim Hudson LAKEITH STANFIELD / Andrew/Logan King BRADLEY WHITFORD / Dean Armitage ALLISON WILLIAMS / Rose Armitage
LADY BIRD (A24) TIMOTHÉE CHALAMET / Kyle Scheible BEANIE FELDSTEIN / Julie Steffans LUCAS HEDGES / Danny O’Neill TRACY LETTS / Larry McPherson STEPHEN McKINLEY HENDERSON / Father Leviatch LAURIE METCALF / Marion McPherson JORDAN RODRIGUES / Miguel McPherson SAOIRSE RONAN / Lady Bird McPherson ODEYA RUSH / Jenna Walton MARIELLE SCOTT / Shelly Yuhan LOIS SMITH / Sister Sarah Joan
MUDBOUND (Netflix) JONATHAN BANKS / Pappy McAllan MARY J. BLIGE / Florence Jackson JASON CLARKE / Henry McAllan GARRETT HEDLUND / Jamie McAllan JASON MITCHELL / Ronsel Jackson ROB MORGAN / Hap Jackson CAREY MULLIGAN / Laura McAllan
THREE BILLBOARDS OUTSIDE EBBING, MISSOURI (Fox Searchlight) ABBIE CORNISH / Anne PETER DINKLAGE / James WOODY HARRELSON / Willoughby JOHN HAWKES / Charlie LUCAS HEDGES / Robbie ŽELJKO IVANEK / Desk Sgt. CALEB LANDRY JONES / Red Welby FRANCES McDORMAND / Mildred CLARKE PETERS / Abercrombie SAM ROCKWELL / Dixon SAMARA WEAVING / Penelope
Outstanding Action Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Motion Picture
“BABY DRIVER” (TriStar Pictures and MRC) “DUNKIRK” (Warner Bros. Pictures) “LOGAN” (20 th Century Fox) “WAR FOR THE PLANET OF THE APES” (20 th Century Fox) “WONDER WOMAN” (Warner Bros. Pictures)
Red Carpet View Founder Naomi Richard in photo pit during 2016 SAG Awards. Photo by Richard Nichols.
The Television Nominees are:
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Television Movie or Limited Series
LAURA DERN / Renata Klein – “BIG LITTLE LIES” (HBO) NICOLE KIDMAN / Celeste Wright – “BIG LITTLE LIES” (HBO) JESSICA LANGE / Joan Crawford – “FEUD: BETTE AND JOAN” (FX Networks) SUSAN SARANDON / Bette Davis – “FEUD: BETTE AND JOAN” (FX Networks) REESE WITHERSPOON / Madeline MacKenzie – “BIG LITTLE LIES” (HBO)
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Television Movie or Limited Series
BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH / Sherlock Holmes – “SHERLOCK: THE LYING DETECTIVE” (WGBH/Masterpiece) JEFF DANIELS / Frank Griffin – “GODLESS” (Netflix) ROBERT DE NIRO / Bernie Madoff – “THE WIZARD OF LIES” (HBO) GEOFFREY RUSH / Albert Einstein – “GENIUS” (National Geographic) ALEXANDER SKARSGÅRD / Perry Wright – “BIG LITTLE LIES” (HBO)
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series
MILLIE BOBBY BROWN / Eleven – “STRANGER THINGS” (Netflix) CLAIRE FOY / Queen Elizabeth II – “THE CROWN” (Netflix) LAURA LINNEY / Wendy Byrde – “OZARK” (Netflix) ELISABETH MOSS / Offred/June – “THE HANDMAID’S TALE” (Hulu) ROBIN WRIGHT / Claire Underwood – “HOUSE OF CARDS” (Netflix)
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series
JASON BATEMAN / Martin “Marty” Byrde – “OZARK” (Netflix) STERLING K. BROWN / Randall Pearson – “THIS IS US” (NBC) PETER DINKLAGE / Tyrion Lannister – “GAME OF THRONES” (HBO) DAVID HARBOUR / Jim Hopper – “STRANGER THINGS” (Netflix) BOB ODENKIRK / Jimmy McGill/Saul Goodman – “BETTER CALL SAUL” (AMC)
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Comedy Series
UZO ADUBA / Suzanne “Crazy Eyes” Warren – “ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK” (Netflix) ALISON BRIE / Ruth Wilder – “GLOW” (Netflix) JANE FONDA / Grace Hanson – “GRACE AND FRANKIE” (Netflix) JULIA LOUIS-DREYFUS / Selina Meyer – “VEEP” (HBO) LILY TOMLIN / Frankie Bergstein – “GRACE AND FRANKIE” (Netflix)
Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Comedy Series
ANTHONY ANDERSON / Andre “Dre” Johnson – “BLACK-ISH” (ABC) AZIZ ANSARI / Dev – “MASTER OF NONE” (Netflix) LARRY DAVID / Himself – “CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM” (HBO) SEAN HAYES / Jack McFarland – “WILL & GRACE” (NBC) WILLIAM H. MACY / Frank Gallagher – “SHAMELESS” (Showtime) MARC MARON / Sam Sylvia – “GLOW” (Netflix)
Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series
THE CROWN (Netflix) CLAIRE FOY / Queen Elizabeth II VICTORIA HAMILTON / Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother VANESSA KIRBY / Princess Margaret ANTON LESSER / Prime Minister Harold Macmillan MATT SMITH / Philip, Duke of Edinburgh
GAME OF THRONES (HBO)
ALFIE ALLEN / Theon Greyjoy JACOB ANDERSON / Grey Worm PILOU ASBÆK / Euron Greyjoy HAFÞÓR JÚLÍUS BJÖRNSSON / The Mountain JOHN BRADLEY / Samwell Tarly JIM BROADBENT / Archmaester Ebrose GWENDOLINE CHRISTIE / Brienne EMILIA CLARKE / Daenerys Targaryen NIKOLAJ COSTER-WALDAU / Jaime Lannister LIAM CUNNINGHAM / Davos Seaworth PETER DINKLAGE / Tyrion Lannister RICHARD DORMER / Beric Dondarrion NATHALIE EMMANUEL / Missandei JAMES FAULKNER / Randyll Tarly JEROME FLYNN / Bronn AIDAN GILLEN / Petyr Baelish IAIN GLEN / Jorah Mormont KIT HARINGTON / Jon Snow LENA HEADEY / Cersei Lannister ISAAC HEMPSTEAD WRIGHT / Bran Stark CONLETH HILL / Varys KRISTOFER HIVJU / Tormund Giantsbane TOM HOPPER / Dickon Tarly ANTON LESSER / Qyburn RORY McCANN / The Hound STAZ NAIR / Qhono RICHARD RYCROFT / Maester Wolkan SOPHIE TURNER / Sansa Stark RUPERT VANSITTART / Yohn Royce MAISIE WILLIAMS / Arya Stark
THE HANDMAID’S TALE (Hulu)
MADELINE BREWER / Janine/Ofwarren/Ofdaniel AMANDA BRUGEL / Rita ANN DOWD / Aunt Lydia O-T FAGBENLE / Luke JOSEPH FIENNES / Commander Waterford TATTIAWNA JONES / Ofglen #2 MAX MINGHELLA / Nick Blaine ELISABETH MOSS / Offred/June YVONNE STRAHOVSKI / Serena Joy SAMIRA WILEY / Moira
STRANGER THINGS (Netflix)
SEAN ASTIN / Bob Newby MILLIE BOBBY BROWN / Eleven CARA BUONO / Karen Wheeler JOE CHREST / Ted Wheeler CATHERINE CURTIN / Claudia Henderson (Dustin’s Mom) NATALIA DYER / Nancy Wheeler DAVID HARBOUR / Jim Hopper CHARLIE HEATON / Jonathan Byers JOE KEERY / Steve Harrington GATEN MATARAZZO / Dustin Henderson CALEB McLAUGHLIN / Lucas Sinclair DACRE MONTGOMERY / Billy PAUL REISER / Dr. Owens WINONA RYDER / Joyce Byers NOAH SCHNAPP / Will Byers SADIE SINK / Max FINN WOLFHARD / Mike Wheeler
THIS IS US (NBC)
ERIS BAKER / Tess Pearson ALEXANDRA BRECKENRIDGE / Sophie STERLING K. BROWN / Randall Pearson LONNIE CHAVIS / Young Randall JUSTIN HARTLEY / Kevin Pearson FAITHE HERMAN / Annie Pearson RON CEPHAS JONES / William Hill CHRISSY METZ / Kate Pearson MANDY MOORE / Rebecca Pearson CHRIS SULLIVAN / Toby Damon MILO VENTIMIGLIA / Jack Pearson SUSAN KELECHI WATSON / Beth Pearson HANNAH ZEILE / Teenage Kate
Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series
BLACK-ISH (ABC) ANTHONY ANDERSON / Andre “Dre” Johnson MILES BROWN / Jack Johnson DEON COLE / Charlie Telphy LAURENCE FISHBURNE / Pops JENIFER LEWIS / Ruby PETER MACKENZIE / Mr. Stevens MARSAI MARTIN / Diane Johnson JEFF MEACHAM / Josh TRACEE ELLIS ROSS / Dr. Rainbow Johnson MARCUS SCRIBNER / Andre Johnson, Jr. YARA SHAHIDI / Zoey Johnson
CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM (HBO)
TED DANSON / Himself LARRY DAVID / Himself SUSIE ESSMAN / Susie Greene JEFF GARLIN / Jeff Greene CHERYL HINES / Cheryl David JB SMOOVE / Leon Black
GLOW (Netflix)
BRITT BARON / Justine Biagi ALISON BRIE / Ruth Wilder KIMMY GATEWOOD / Stacey Beswick BETTY GILPIN / Debbie Eagan REBEKKA JOHNSON / Dawn Rivecca CHRIS LOWELL / Bash SUNITA MANI / Arthie Premkumar MARC MARON / Sam Sylvia KATE NASH / Rhonda Richardson SYDELLE NOEL / Cherry Bang MARIANNA PALKA / Reggie Walsh GAYLE RANKIN / Sheila the She-Wolf BASHIR SALAHUDDIN / Keith RICH SOMMER / Mark KIA STEVENS / Tammé Dawson JACKIE TOHN / Melanie Rosen ELLEN WONG / Jenny Chey BRITNEY YOUNG / Carmen Wade
ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK (Netflix)
UZO ADUBA / Suzanne “Crazy Eyes” Warren EMILY ALTHAUS / Maureen Kukudio DANIELLE BROOKS / Tasha “Taystee” Jefferson ROSAL COLÓN / Ouija JACKIE CRUZ / Marisol “Flaca” Gonzales FRANCESCA CURRAN / Helen Van Maele DANIELLA DE JESÚS / Zirconia LEA DeLARIA / Big Boo NICK DILLENBURG / CO Blake ASIA KATE DILLON / Brandy Epps BETH DOVER / Linda Ferguson KIMIKO GLENN / Brook Soso ANNIE GOLDEN / Norma Romano LAURA GÓMEZ / Blanca Flores DIANE GUERRERO / Maritza Ramos EVAN ARTHUR HALL / CO Stratman MICHAEL J. HARNEY / Sam Healy BRAD WILLIAM HENKE / Desi Piscatella MIKE HOUSTON / CO Lee Dixon VICKY JEUDY / Janae Watson KELLY KARBACZ / Kasey Sankey JULIE LAKE / Angie Rice SELENIS LEYVA / Gloria Mendoza NATASHA LYONNE / Nicky Nichols TARYN MANNING / Tiffany “Pennsatucky” Doggett ADRIENNE C. MOORE / Cindy Hayes MIRIAM MORALES / Pidge KATE MULGREW / Galina “Red” Reznikov EMMA MYLES / Leanne Taylor JOHN PALLADINO / Josh MATT PETERS / Joel Luschek JESSICA PIMENTEL / Maria Ruiz DASCHA POLANCO / Dayanara Diaz LAURA PREPON / Alex Vause JOLENE PURDY / Stephanie Hapakuka ELIZABETH RODRIGUEZ / Aleida Diaz NICK SANDOW / Joe Caputo ABIGAIL SAVAGE / Gina Murphy TAYLOR SCHILLING / Piper Chapman CONSTANCE SHULMAN / Yoga Jones DALE SOULES / Frieda Berlin YAEL STONE / Lorna Morello EMILY TARVER / CO Artesian McCullough MICHAEL TORPEY / CO Thomas Humphrey LIN TUCCI / Anita DeMarco
VEEP (HBO)
DAN BAKKEDAHL / Roger Furlong ANNA CHLUMSKY / Amy Brookheimer GARY COLE / Kent Davison MARGARET COLIN / Jane McCabe KEVIN DUNN / Ben Cafferty CLEA DUVALL / Marjorie Palmiotti NELSON FRANKLIN / Will TONY HALE / Gary Walsh JULIA LOUIS-DREYFUS / Selina Meyer SAM RICHARDSON / Richard Splett PAUL SCHEER / Stevie REID SCOTT / Dan Egan TIMOTHY SIMONS / Jonah Ryan SARAH SUTHERLAND / Catherine Meyer MATT WALSH / Mike McLintock
Outstanding Action Performance by a Stunt Ensemble in a Comedy or Drama Series
GAME OF THRONES (HBO) GLOW (Netflix) HOMELAND (Showtime) STRANGER THINGS (Netflix) THE WALKING DEAD (AMC)
LIFE ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
54th SAG Life Achievement Award
MORGAN FREEMAN
# # #
#Film#TV#Television#SAG Awards#2018 SAG Awards#24th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards#24TH SAG AWARDS#2018 sag award nominations#Naomi Richard#Naomi Jean Richard#NaomiJRichard
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19 New Ways To Make $1,000 a Month Working From Home
When I first launched my blog, I wanted to make an extra $800 a month, so that I could continue to participate in my weekly exercise classes, pay for my daughter’s baby and me classes, and enjoy my weekly Starbuck's habit.
Even though I was working 10 hours a week as a social media manager, the money I made from that job covered bills, food, and my blogging expenses. To cover my extracurricular activities, I sold things online and at thrift stores, I participated in paid focus groups and even worked an occasional weekend shift at my old nursing job.
Fortunately, my blog gained traction quickly, and within three months I started earning money from it. Today my blog is my primary source of income. The point of my story is, if there is a will there is a way. If you need to make $500 a month – you can do it. If you need to make $1,000 a month — you can do it.
Here are some ideas, stories, and ways for you to get started bringing in the cash!
1. Teacher Document Creator – $500 – $1,500 a month
I am a teacher turned stay at home mom. When I first left the classroom, I discovered a website called Teachers Pay Teachers. It is an open marketplace where teachers create resources that they sell to other teachers. I joined the site and opened my own store on the site called Sara J Creations. I create and design digital activities that other
teachers, parents, tutors, etc. can purchase and download. It is an
awesome way to use the creative teacher part of my brain while getting to stay at home and raise my family. It helps keep me up to date on best practices and connect with other teachers and moms. I started out slow only earning a few dollars a month but I now earn anywhere from $500-$1,500 a month. – Sara Jonckheere
If you'd like to find out more about making money with Teachers Pay Teachers, check out this post.
2. Astrologer – $1,000 a month
I'm Astrologer and do phone readings and appear at parties doing readings. I make over $1,000 a month from working my business from my home. – Suzan Hayden
3. Pet Blogger – $1,000 a month
I currently earn $1,000 through my dog nutrition blog Keep the Tail Wagging. I write about raw feeding and dog nutrition and I make money through freelance writing, affiliate marketing, blog sponsorship and I'm now beginning to create products for sale and will be adding a membership feature to my site next month. I got started as a pet blogger, because I was so crazy about my dogs and needed an outlet other than friends and coworkers. I transitioned to writing about raw feeding in 2014 and my traffic and revenue spiked and I realized I was on to something. On average, I make $1,000 a month. – Kimberly Gauthier
4. Complete Short Tasks – $1,200 a month
Fiverr is an online platform where you post tasks that you’re willing to complete for $5.00. People sell everything from writing services, design services, voice over services, to making phone calls, and videos. Once you make a sale, Fiverr will keep of fee of $1.00 and payments will be made via PayPal. Doesn’t sound like much money? Connie Brentford is making good money on Fiverr, she even wrote an e-book about it, How I Made An Extra $1,200 Per Month At Home Using One Free Website.
5. eBay and Amazon FBA Seller – $1,200+ a month
When I first started my stay-at-home business pursuits, I began in stock trading, then added reselling on eBay, and then Amazon FBA. As I continued to add income streams, Amazon FBA stayed #1 as my personal favorite and as my most profitable income source. The first year, I started with reselling on eBay. The first month, I made $400, then $600, then $800. I worked it up to $1,200 a month working part-time, the first year. When I added Amazon FBA, I instantly doubled my income. When I went full-time, I then doubled my income again. – Tracy Smith
6. Haircare Creator – $1,000 – $2,000 a month
I've always had a big entrepreneurial spirit. However, as any mom knows, having young ones at home does not allow for much free time to pursue those passions. Many of my ideas were also very large in scope. That is, until I came up with an idea for a hair product about 18 months ago. This product concept would absorb oil and cover roots, allowing busy women more time between shampooing and salon visits. Slowly, during nap time and after the little ones were asleep, I worked on my idea, stalked beauty counters, and consulted a chemist. In 2014, I launched Saving Grace Beauty, LLC. My average monthly income is $1,000-2,000.- Erica Harriss
7. Cloth Diapering Blogger and Marketer – $1,300 a month
I started ChangeDiapers.com in 2009 as a blog about cloth diapering. Over the years I have picked up clients via word of mouth doing social media management and other marketing tasks for cloth diaper companies and D.C. area businesses. I net about $1,300 a month after expenses and taxes. – Maria Moser
8. Graphic Designer – $1,600 a month
I work from home as a graphic designer. I originally worked for the company when it was based in my home town. The company relocated and I was laid off. Later I was offered a freelance position with them. I make roughly $1,600 a month from home. – Randi Sparkman
9. Home Referral Consultant – $3,000 a month
I make more than $3,000 a month pre-screening and referring home improvement contractors. I came up with the idea for this type of service after my husband and I purchased our first home and realized how difficult it was to find reliable home improvement contractors. My business is like an outsourced sales and marketing force for local contractors and a personal concierge-type service for local homeowners. Contractors pay me a pre-negotiated commission for work secured and my service is free my clients. I've also recently launched Aging In Place Referrals as a resource for aging Baby Boomers looking for reliable contractors. – Debra Cohen
10. Freelance Writer and Blogger – $3,500 a month
I started blogging a little over two years ago about my personal financial journey. As a full-time actress, money had always been tight and I was tired of working as a waitress or babysitter just to scrape by in between gigs. As I shared my stories, I found they were resonating with people and I became increasingly involved in the personal finance world guest posting for other bloggers and pitching to media. A few months later I was offered a weekly contributor spot on US News & World Report. The position was unpaid, but my articles got picked up by major media outlets, giving me exposure and credibility. Within a few months, I was making over $1,000 each month freelance writing. Now I work for bigger corporate clients and collect proceeds from my recently released book. My income in 2015 has averaged around $3,500 a month. – Stefanie O'Connell
11. Chloe + Isabel Merchandiser – $4,000 a month
I found Chloe + Isabel when a gorgeous statement necklace was featured in Glamour magazine. When I came across the company, I wanted to switch careers. I always loved the idea of being in the fashion industry and have a really strong interest in entrepreneurs. I wanted to be my own boss and Chloe + Isabel was the perfect opportunity for me to reinvent my life. The average sales for a pop-up (show) is about $1,000. Because of Chloe + Isabel's generous commission structure for those that achieve business milestones, I earn 40% commission, so $400 a pop-up. I also manage one of the larger teams at Chloe + Isabel through our leadership team, so annually, I earn about $50,000. – Gina Lukas
12. Marketing and PR – $6,800 a month
My business is Famous in Your Field. It's a marketing and PR consulting business that I run from my home office. My clients
are small business owners and professionals, based all across the U.S. I typically work from 9am to 4pm, while my two children are in school.
Last year's revenues were $82,000, which works out to a monthly income of about $6,800. – Lori Nash Byron
13. Affiliate Marketing and Blogging – $7,000 – $9,000 a month
Blogging was at first a hobby for to me for a way to express my opinions. During my blogging journey which started in 2008, I learned that I could make an income from my blog through affiliate programs so I started to include affiliate links in my posts and it has become a way for me to make money from my blog. I am now making $7,000-$9,000 a month with my blog through affiliate marketing. – Louida Martin
14. Certified Online Business Manager – $8,000 a month
I started my business in 2011 working as a VA. I learned everything I possibly could and found out I had a real passion for online business systems and technology. Shortly, my business was fully booked and I hung up my bookkeeping hat. Knowing I wanted to learn more, I went from being a VA to a Certified Online Business Manager where I helped busy entrepreneurs organize, run and grow
their online business. I currently make about $8,000 a month, but when I first started part time it was around $1,000 a month. – Sara Wagners
15. Virtual Assistant – $8,300+ a month
I started my VA business December 1, 2008, and it’s been quite the journey. My hope was to replace my income (I was earning $82,000) within three years. By year two I had grossed over $60K, and by year three I had grossed more than $100K. – Michelle Mangen
16. Direct Sales Consultant – $8,300 a month
In the fall of 2000, I signed up with the direct sales company, Tastefully Simple. I have made a six figure income for years, but the intangible that is given to me through my job is more significant than the dollars. I have more friends, in more places than I ever could have imagined. I have traveled to over twenty places I would have never seen or afforded otherwise (many with my husband and totally free)!
We moved to our dream home on the water a few years ago while the kids are still home to enjoy it instead of after we retire. My three boys can not only go to college but choose where they want to go. I can’t put a price tag on financial freedom, but it is certainly an incredible deal for partying for a living – don’t you think? – Karen Huntley
17. Entrepreneurial Coach – $15,000 – $20,000+ a month
I run a business that provides training, support, and strategy consulting to doctors, therapists, coaches, thought leaders, and other idea-driven business owners. I work completely from home, although I travel regularly to speak and teach. I got started working from home after my daughter was born. My first website launched in January 2009 and I've been working on this iteration of my business for about five years. Most months, revenue for my business is about $15-$20k dollars. But it also pushes to $30-100k several times throughout the year. – Tara Gentile
18. Virtual Assistant – $30,000 a month
My company now turns over around $30,000 a month; I love to inspire other virtual assistants to go out there and really push the limits of their business which is why I have now posted two income reports, one in January this year and one from 3 years ago showing the company’s progresso. – Michelle Dale
19. Blogger and Course Creator – $90,000+ a month
I run a blog and coaching business. I make an average of $70,000 a month, and in July of 2016, I made over $112,000. I started my business on the side of my full-time job. It all started as just a blog, and then it quickly grew from there. – Michelle Schroeder
How are you making money from home?
Whichever of these practical ideas you choose, you’ll be well on your way to earning extra money in any given month.
400+ Business Ideas To Choose from to start Your Business - Click Here
via Blogger http://ift.tt/2rvfz5n
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[TASK 114: PANAMA]
In celebration of September 15th to October 15th being Latinx Heritage Month, here’s a masterlist below compiled of over 320+ Panamanian faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever faceclaim or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK - examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F:
TW3 Girl / Nancy Ames / Nancy Hamilton Alfaro (1937) 1/4 Panamanian, 3/4 Possibly Other - singer-songwriter.
Norma Tanega (1939) Panamanian / Filipina - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and percussionist.
Esthercita Nieto / Esther Nieto (1944) Panamanian - singer.
Carlota Lozano (1945) Panamanian - trainer and Miss Panama World 1967.
Soledad St. Hilaire (1950) Panamanian - actress.
Vielka Chu (1952) Panamanian - actress.
Nyra Soberón Torchia (1955) Panamanian - actress.
Consuelo Tomás (1957) Panamanian - actress, playwright, and poet.
Gloria Karamañites (1960) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 1980.
Nilena Zisopulos (1962) Panamanian [Greek] - actress and singer.
Iguandili López (1962) Panamanian - actress.
Paulette Thomas / Olga Paulette Thomas Horly (1964) Panamanian - actress and singer.
Rebecca Ferratti (1964) Panamanian, Italian, Swiss, French, English - actress, model, and dancer.
Gabriela Deleuze (1965) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 1987.
Gilda García (1965) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 1986.
Noris Joffre (1966) Panamanian / Irish - actress and comedian.
Tania Hyman (1967) Panamanian - actress, model, tv presenter, and blogger.
Melissa De Sousa (1967) Panamanian - actress.
Rita Verreos (1968) Venezuelan [Panamanian, Greek] - actress, model, tv host, reality tv contestant, and Miss Venezuela 1988 contestant.
Klea Scott (1968) Panamanian - actress.
Daphne Rubin-Vega (1969) Panamanian - actress, singer-songwriter, and dancer.
Michele Sage (1969) Panamanian - model and Señorita Panamá 1994.
Liz De León (1969) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 1990.
Sandra Sandoval (1970) Panamanian - singer.
Gloria Quintana (1970) Panamanian - tv host, tv personality, and former model.
Reyna Royo (1971) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 1995.
María Sofía Velásquez (1971) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 1993.
Cibeles De Freitas (1971) Panamanian - tv presenter, newscaster, public speaker, and blogger.
Marisela Moreno (1972) Panamanian - model and Señorita Panamá 1995.
Lori Heuring (1973) Panamanian - actress.
Tacori Blu / Sharmalee Burnett (1973) Panamanian, Irish, German, English - porn actress and nude model.
Mercedes Molto (1974) Panamanian / Spanish - actress.
Erika Ender / Erika Ender Simoes (1974) Panamanian / Brazilian - actress, singer-songwriter, producer, and fashion designer.
Mirta Rodríguez (1974) Panamanian - actress and tv presenter.
Susan Elizabeth Castillo (1974) Panamanian - tv host.
Tracie Spencer (1976) Panamanian, French / Louisiana Creole, Unspecified Native American - actress, singer-songwriter, and model.
Lía Borrero (1976) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama International 1998.
Tanisha Drummond (1976) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 1998.
Caramel (1977) Panamanian - porn actress.
Patricia De Leon (1978) Panamanian - actress, model, tv host, and Miss Panama 1995.
Marianela Salazar (1978) Panamanian - model, tv host, and Señorita Panamá 1999.
Carolina Fabrega (1978) Panamanian - tv host.
Yamani Saied (1978) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 1998.
Tatyana Ali (1979) Afro Panamanian / Indo Trinidadian - actress and singer.
Joysi Love / Johanna Mendoza Romero (1979) Panamanian - singer.
Ivette Cordovez (1979) Panamanian - actress, model, tv presenter, and Señorita Panamá 2000.
Juliette Roy (1979) Panamanian - actress.
Justine Pasek / Yostin Lissette Pasek Patiño (1979) Panamanian / Polish - model and Miss Universe 2002.
Priscilla Moreno (1979) Panamanian - singer.
Emayatzy Corinealdi (1980) Afro Panamanian / African-American - actress.
Ingrid de Ycaza (1980) Panamanian - actress, singer-songwriter, and tv presenter.
Jordana Brewster (1980) Panamanian [Brazilian / English, Scottish, Irish] - actress and model.
Analía Núñez / Analía Verónica Núñez Sagripanti (1980) Panamanian - model, Miss Panama Universe 2000, and Señorita Panamá 1999.
Liza Hernandez (1980) Panamanian - model.
Massiel Rodriguez (1980) Panamanian - tv host.
Keeani Lei (1981) Panamanian - porn actress.
Estelita Quintero (1981) Panamanian - actress, model, and musician.
Jessica Rodríguez / Jessica Patricia Rodríguez Clark (1981) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 2004.
Brianna Meighan (1982) Panamanian - actress, model, tv personality, and writer.
Giselle Bissot (1982) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2006.
Monique Alexander (1982) Panamanian, Portuguese, Russian, German - porn actress and nude model.
Stefanie de Roux (1982) Panamanian - model, tv host, and Miss Panama Universe 2003.
Irina Castillo (1982) Afro Panamanian - model (Instagram: icastillow)
Tessa Thompson (1983) Afro Panamanian / Mexican, English, German, Scottish, Irish - actress.
Lorna / Lorna Aponte (1983) Panamanian - reggaeton singer.
Patty Castillo (1983) Panamanian - model and tv host.
Shassia Ubillús (1983) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Earth 2008.
María Alessandra Mezquita (1983) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 2006.
Rosa María Hernández (1983) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 2005.
Anabella Hale (1983) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama International 2004.
Windy Girk (1983) Panamanian - youtuber.
Amber Swallows (1984) Panamanian - porn actress.
Annabel Miguelena (1984) Panamanian - actress, dancer, and writer.
Yamilka Pitre (1984) Afro Panamanian - singer.
Mayte Sánchez (1984) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama International 2006.
Lucía Matamoros (1984) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama International 2005.
Jessica Chavez G. (1984) Panamanian - tv presenter and instagrammer.
Catherine / Catherine Adames (1985) Panamanian - singer.
Adriana Guardia (1985) Panamanian - instagrammer.
Rachel Smith (1985) Panamanian - actress, tv host, model, and Miss USA 2007.
Alexis Texas (1985) Panamanian [German] - porn actress.
Leenuh Rae (1985) Panamanian - porn actress.
Sharon Aguilar (1986) Panamanian / Unspecified - singer-songwriter, guitarist, violinist, and mandolin player.
Massiel Mas (1986) Panamanian - actress and tv presenter.
Shey Ling Him (1986) Panamanian [Chinese] - model and Miss Panama World 2007.
Karen Peralta (1986) Panamanian - singer and tv presenter.
Ana Ibáñez (1986) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Earth 2012.
Stephanie Vander Werf (1986) Panamanian [Dutch] - model, tv host, and Miss Panama 2012.
Diana Broce (1986) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 2009.
Sorangel Matos (1986) Panamanian - actress, model, and Miss Panama Universe 2007.
Marcy Roche (1986) Panamanian, Cuban, Irish, Polish, Russian - actress and producer.
Paola Vaprio (1986) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2010.
Nadege Herrera (1986) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2009.
Casey Parker / Wesley Flores / Teresa Harp (1986) Panamanian [Unspecified White] - porn actress and model.
Andrea Pérez Meana (1987) Panamanian - actress, tv host, and dancer.
Sara Bello (1987) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Intercontinental 2013.
Irene Núñez (1987) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2011.
Anyolí Ábrego (1987) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 2010.
Whitney Stevens (1987) Panamanian [Unspecified White] - porn actress.
Meisa Kuroki / Satsuki Shimabukuro (1988) 1/4 Panamanian, 3/4 Japanese - actress, model, and singer.
Alejandra Araúz (1988) Panamanian - actress.
Joyce Jacobi (1988) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama International 2009.
Marelissa Him (1988) Panamanian [1/4 Chinese, 3/4 Unspecified Other] - model and Miss Panama Earth 2011.
Brooke Hogan / Brooke Bollea (1988) Panamanian, Italian, Irish, Scottish, French, English / German, Swedish - actress, singer-songwriter, pianist, model, and reality tv star.
Maricely González (1988) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2012.
Kate Rodriguez (1989) Panamanian - model and tv personality.
Marcela Amor Barnes (1989) Panamanian, Jamaican, Spanish, Possibly Other - vlogger and tv host.
Karen Jordán (1989) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama International 2012.
Carolina Dementiev (1989) Panamanian [Russian] - model, tv host, and Miss Panama Universe 2008.
Ana Victoria Esquivel (1989) Panamanian - actress and makeup artist.
María Gallimore (1989) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Earth 2014.
Giosue Cozzarelli (1989) Panamanian [Italian] - model, youtuber, and Señorita Panamá Realmente Bella 2009.
MissLizHeart (1989) Panamanian - youtuber.
Isabeau Méndez (1990) Panamanian - actress, singer, and model.
Virginia Hernández (1990) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2013.
Carolina Brid (1990) Panamanian - actress, model, tv host, and Miss Panama 2013.
Anne Lorain Lanier (1990) Panamanian - singer.
Keity Drennan (1990) Panamanian [Indian] / Unspecified Other - model and Miss Panama 2016.
Destiny Austin (1990) Panamanian, English - actress.
Yinnela Yohan Yero Torres (1990) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Supranational 2013.
Nicole Morrell (1990) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Earth 2010.
Clarissa Abrego (1990) Panamanian - tv host.
Julissa Lobo (1990) Panamanian - instagrammer.
Gaby Garrido (1991) Panamanian - actress.
Samantha Robinson (1991) Panamanian / English - actress.
Alessandra Bueno (1991) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2016.
Margarita Henriquez (1991) Panamanian - singer.
Yomatzy Hazlewood (1991) Afro Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 2014.
Gladys Brandao (1991) Panamanian - actress, model, tv host, and Miss Panama 2015.
Raiza Erlenbaugh (1991) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2014.
Lily LaBeau (1991) Panamanian / Irish - porn actress and nude model.
Sheldry Saez / Sheldry Nazareth Sáez Bustavino (1992) Panamanian - model, tv host, dancer, and Miss Panama 2011.
Johanna Batista (1992) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Earth 2013.
Rake Martinez (1992) Panamanian - youtuber and instagrammer.
Genesis Arjona (1992) Panamanian - model and tv presenter.
Lyra Law (1992) Panamanian, Bolivian, French - porn actress.
Amanda Grace Benitez (1993) Panamanian / Hungarian - actress.
Delany Precilla (1993) Panamanian - model, tv presenter, and Miss Wyndham Playa Blanca Panama 2014.
Rosa Montezuma (1993) Panamanian [Ngäbe, Buglé] - model and Miss Panama 2018.
Diana Jaén (1993) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2015.
Erika Parker (1993) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2017.
Shadia Martin (1993) Panamanian - actress.
Monica Gronchi (1994) Panamanian - actress.
Darelys Santos (1994) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama International 2017.
Aileen Bernal (1994) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama International 2014.
Betzy Madrid (1994) Panamanian - model and Señorita Panamá 2013.
Dayana Saez (1994) Panamanian - singer.
Carmen Jaramillo (1994 or 1995) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Earth 2015.
Liz Grimaldo / Elizabeth Grimaldo (1995) Panamanian - singer-songwriter and actress.
Shirel Ortiz (1995) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama International 2018.
Julianne Brittón (1995) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2017.
Nicole Pinto (1995) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama World 2014.
Ingrid Suarez (1996) Panamanian - model.
Laura de Sanctis (1996) Panamanian - actress, model, and Miss Panama Universe 2017.
Madi Melendez (1996) Panamanian - youtuber.
Alisson Staff (1997) Panamanian - singer.
Deja Good (1997) Afro Panamanian - model and youtuber.
Jaennin Donato (1997) Panamanian - instagrammer.
Milagros Nicole Rodriguez (1997) Panamanian - model and Reina Teen Intercontinental 2016.
Natalie Whittington (1997 or 1998) Afro Panamanian - model.
Josenid / Josenid Adamaris Quintero Gallardo (1998) Panamanian - singer.
Solaris Barba (1999) Panamanian - model, dancer, and Señorita Panamá 2018.
Baby Ariel / Ariel Martin (2000) Panamanian / Unspecified - singer, model, vlogger, Musical.ly star, and TikTok star.
Monique Mojica (?) Panamanian [Kuna], Rappahannock - actress, director, and playwright.
Nathalie Merchant (?) Panamanian, Jamaican / Romanian - actress.
Michela Carattini (?) Panamanian / Unspecified - actress, singer, dancer, and writer.
Anji Ray (?) Afro Panamanian - actress, comedian, and writer.
Joanna M. Lewis / Joanna Gordon / Joanna Ellison (?) Panamanian, African-American - actress.
Diana Milena (?) Panamanian - model, tv host, and filmmaker.
Melanie Kastner (?) Panamanian, Austrian, Possibly Other - actress and producer.
Tanya Aparicio (?) Panamanian - pianist.
Alexandra Wehr (?) Panamanian, Calabrian / Irish, Polish - actress.
Cristina Sasso (?) Panamanian - actress and filmmaker.
Kimberly Jessy (?) Panamanian, Colombian / Possibly Other - actress, singer, and filmmaker.
Zaima Beleño (?) Panamanian - actress, singer, vedette, and dancer.
Chavelita Pinzón (?) Panamanian - musician.
Ana María de Panamá (?) Panamanian - singer and tv host.
Debra Ann Townes (?) Panamanian, Jamaican / African-American, Unspecified Native American - actress.
Mardi Jones (?) Panamanian - actress, stuntwoman, singer, and professional bullrider.
Giselle González (?) Panamanian - model and Miss Panama Universe 1992.
Ana Orillac (?) Panamanian - model and Señorita Panamá 1991.
Miroslava Morales (?) Afro Panamanian - actress, singer, and director.
Seiky Stephanie (?) Panamanian - beauty queen, model (Instagram: seiky_)
_lovenye (?) Afro Panamanian - model (Instagram: _lovenye)
Jeseniá Cheveria (?) Panamanian, Jamaican - YouTuber.
Heather Banie (?) Panamanian - YouTuber.
Donnetta Lavinia Grays (?) Panamanian - actress.
Carolina Eastwood (?) Panamanian - reality star.
Loreni Delgado (?) Panamanian - actress.
Kristy Munden (?) Panamanian - actress.
Delia Goldson (?) Panamanian - actress.
Raven Pease (?) Panamanian - actress.
M:
Meñique / Miguel Ángel Barcasnegras (1933) Panamanian - singer-songwriter.
Pedrito / Pedro Altamiranda (1935) Panamanian - singer and composer.
Dorindo Cárdenas (1936) Panamanian - singer, accordionist, and composer.
Ceferino Nieto (1937) Panamanian - singer and accordionist.
Carlos Garnett (1938) Panamanian - saxophonist.
Yaphet Kotto (1939) Afro Panamanian Jewish / Cameroonian Jewish - actor.
Carlos Ward (1940) Panamanian - saxophonist and flutist.
Billy Cobham / William Cobham Jr (1944) Afro Panamanian - drummer-songwriter.
Carlos Carrasco (1948) Panamanian - actor.
Ruben Blades (1948) Panamanian [Afro Cuban / Colombian] - actor and singer-songwriter.
Ulpiano Vergara (1948) Panamanian - singer and accordionist.
Jaime Murrell (1949) Panamanian - composer.
Roberto Durán (1951) Panamanian - actor.
Leo Wiznitzer (1951) Panamanian - actor.
Alex Blake / Alejandro Blake Fearon Jr. (1951) Panamanian - bassist and guitarist.
Osvaldo Ayala (1952) Panamanian - singer and accordionist.
Omar Moreno (1952) Panamanian - actor.
Lucho de Sedas / Luis Rey de Sedas (1953) Panamanian - singer and guitarist.
John Chetro-Szivos (1954) Panamanian - actor.
Miguel Bosé / Luis Miguel González Bosé (1956) Panamanian [Romani, Spanish / Italian] - actor and singer.
Andrés Poveda (1956 or 1957) Panamanian - actor and comedian.
Omar Alfanno / Omar Enrique Alfanno Velásquez (1957) Panamanian - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
Alvin Powell (1959) Panamanian - actor.
Renato / Leonardo Renato Aulder (1961) Panamanian - singer.
Roberto Blades (1962) Panamanian - singer.
Juan Chen (1963) Panamanian - actor.
Jorome Melendez (1963) Panamanian [Spanish, German], Peruvian / Puerto Rican - actor and singer.
Eddy Vasquez / Antonio Eduardo Vasquez (1964) Afro Panamanian - tv presenter, radio presenter, and speaker.
Roberto Kelly (1964) Panamanian - actor.
Danilo Pérez (1965) Panamanian - pianist and composer.
Gaby / El Meneíto / El Meneaíto / Winston Alfaro Brown Jr (1965) Panamanian - singer-songwriter and rapper.
Daniel Kuzniecka (1965) Panamanian [Polish Jewish / Uruguayan] - actor, producer, and screenwriter.
Aaron Zebede (1966) Panamanian - actor, producer, and director.
DJ Clark Kent (1966) Afro Panamanian - DJ and producer.
Federico Fong (1967) Panamanian [Chinese] / Unspecified White - bassist, pianist, and producer.
Samy Sandoval (1968) Panamanian - singer.
Gringo el Original / Jaime Davidson (1968) Afro Panamanian - singer.
El Chombo / Rodney Sebastian Clark Donalds (1969) Panamanian - musician and producer.
Rigoman / Rigoberto Hayns (1969) Panamanian - singer.
Tyson Beckford (1970) Afro Panamanian, Jamaican [Afro Jamaican, Chinese] - actor and model.
Rolando Boyce (1970) Afro Panamanian - actor.
The Apache Ness / Apache Ness / Ness and Sensational / Ness y Los Sensacionales / Ernest Brown (1971) Panamanian - singer and guitarist.
Tiger Mendez (1971) Panamanian [Cuban] - actor.
Jorge Ameer (1972) Panamanian - actor and filmmaker.
DJ Black / Ricardo Alexander O’Neil Weeks (1972) Afro Panamanian - rapper-songwriter and DJ.
Rod Carrillo (1972) Panamanian - DJ, remixer, and record producer.
Daniel Amores (1973) Panamanian - actor.
J. August Richards / Jaime Augusto Richards III (1973) Afro Panamanian - actor.
Randy Dominguez (1973) Panamanian - actor, singer, and speaker.
Aldo Ranks / Aldo Vargas (1973) Panamanian - singer.
Fernando Huc (1973) Panamanian [Colombian / Spanish, French] - actor.
Japanese / Leavitt Zambrano (1973) Panamanian [Afro Panamanian, Japanese] - singer.
Gary Anthony Stennette (1973) Panamanian - actor.
Vincent Laresca (1974) Panamanian - actor.
Samuel Robles (1974) Panamanian - composer, conductor, and writer.
Rolando Sterling (1975) Panamanian - actor and tv host.
Alejandro Lagrotta (1975) Panamanian - singer, composer, producer, and arranger.
Latin Fresh / Roberto de los Ríos Reyes (1975) Afro Panamanian - singer.
Jimmy Bad Boy / Guillermo Rodríguez Alveo (1976) Panamanian - singer and rapper.
El Roockie / The Roockie / Iván Vladimir Banista Castillo (1977) Panamanian - singer.
Miguel Boloboski (1977) Panamanian - actor.
Aloe Blacc / Egbert Nathaniel Dawkins III (1979) Afro Panamanian - actor, singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and producer.
Uncle Murda / Leonard Grant (1979) Afro Panamanian - rapper and actor.
Kafu Banton / Zico Alberto Garibaldi Roberts (1979) Afro Panamanian - singer.
Sam Hoger (1980) Panamanian, Possibly Other - actor, mixed martial artist, and poker player.
Julio González (1980) Panamanian - actor.
Joivan Jiménez (1980) Panamanian - actor and singer-songwriter.
Sacario (1980) Afro Panamanian - rapper-songwriter and filmmaker.
Robin Duran Iglesias (1981) Panamanian - actor and tv host.
Cesar A. Moreno (1981) Panamanian, Puerto Rican, African-American - actor, songwriter, and producer.
Tinomatik / Constantino Ortiz (1981) Panamanian - actor, DJ, tv presenter, and screenwriter.
Juan Gabriel Moreno (1981) Panamanian - actor.
Fred Lammie (1981) Panamanian - youtuber and animator.
Wladimir Uliantzeff (1981) Panamanian - actor and writer.
Joey Montana / Edgardo Antonio Miranda Beiro (1982) Panamanian - singer.
Makano / Hernan Jiménez (1983) Panamanian - singer-songwriter.
Predikador / Víctor Delgado (1983) Panamanian - music producer.
Derek Underwood (1983) Panamanian - actor.
Chalo Panamá / Gonzalo Ruben Quintero Samudio (1983) Panamanian - singer, composer, and producer.
Ricky Rick / Ricardo Ruiz Pérez (1983) Panamanian / Mexican - singer-songwriter, rapper, percussionist, drummer, and guitarist.
Fito Blanko / Roberto E. Testa (1984) Panamanian - singer-songwriter.
Edwin Delarosa (1984) Panamanian - instagrammer.
Roofeeo / Jahphet Landis (1984) Afro Panamanian - DJ, drummer, and music producer.
Agustín De Gracia (1984) Panamanian - instagrammer.
Eddy Lover / Eduardo Mosquera (1985) Afro Panamanian - singer-songwriter.
Samuel Hubner Casado (1985) Panamanian - actor.
Big Baloy / Eric Homero Baloy Mosquera (1985) Afro Panamanian - singer and composer.
Casanova / Caswell Senior (1986) Afro Panamanian, Haitian, Jamaican - rapper-songwriter.
David M. Auge (1986) Panamanian - actor.
Phillipe Legenda (1986) Panamanian - actor.
Gustavo Troncoso (1987) Panamanian - actor.
El Boy C (1988) Afro Panamanian - rapper.
Ricardo Betancourt (1988) Panamanian - rapper.
Abdul Dominguez (1988) Panamanian - rapper.
Domil Leira (1989) Panamanian - actor and tv host.
René Escobar Jr. (1989) Panamanian - actor.
Alejandro Garrido (1989) Panamanian - instagrammer.
Sarunas J. Jackson (1990) Afro Panamanian - actor.
Diego De Obaldia (1990) Panamanian - youtuber.
Rich Lowe (1991) Panamanian / Nigerian - actor, singer-songwriter, dancer, and filmmaker.
JeanPhi La Calidad (1992) Panamanian - singer.
Mauricio Herrerabarría (1992) Panamanian - tv presenter and blogger.
Joalex Quiroz (1992) Panamanian - instagrammer.
Arlet Sanchez (1992) Panamanian - singer.
Gian Varela (1994) Panamanian - DJ and producer.
Javier Vaughan (1994) Panamanian - instagrammer and youtuber.
Jose Pelaez (1995) Panamanian - youtuber and instagrammer.
Abraham Pino (1995) Panamanian - instagrammer.
Yedgar Leonel Velasco Huertas (1995) Panamanian [Unspecified Arab, Possibly Other] - instagrammer.
Boris B. Bishop (1995) Panamanian - actor and musician.
Taylovak Chism (1996) Panamanian / Unspecified Native American, Irish - actor.
Abelardo / Abelardo Chahwan (1996) Panamanian - instagrammer and comedian.
Harold Pezzotti (1997) Panamanian - actor, comedian, and instagrammer.
Christian Robinson (?) Panamanian, African-American - actor.
Nando Boom / Fernando Orlando Brown Mosley (?) Panamanian - singer.
Dicky Ranking / Luis Alberto Williams (?) Panamanian - singer.
Justin Marcel McManus (?) Panamanian, African-American - actor.
Cienfue / Camilo Navarro (?) Panamanian - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
Marcus Paul James (?) Panamanian / Unspecified - actor and singer-songwriter.
Álvaro F. Palacio (?) Panamanian - actor and model.
Robert Vernon (?) Panamanian [Afro Cuban, Colombian] / English - actor.
Big Daddy G / Gary Mason (?) Panamanian - DJ, producer, and director.
Donaldo Prescod (?) Afro Panamanian - actor and filmmaker.
Tito Tovar / Carlos Tovar (?) Panamanian [Unspecified Indigenous, Unspecified White] - musician.
Daddy / Martin Machore (?) Panamanian - singer.
Mach / Peter Machore (?) Panamanian - singer.
Roger Pretto (?) Panamanian - actor.
Luis Beckford (?) Panamanian - actor.
Problematic:
Hulk Hogan / Terry Gene Bollea (1953) Panamanian, Italian, Irish, Scottish, French, English - actor, tv personality, musician, and pro wrestler - Has used the n-word multiple times and made comments that he didn’t approve of his daughter dating a black man solely because the man was black.
Jeremy Renner (1971) Panamanian, Jamaican, German, English, Scottish, Swedish, Irish - actor - Used the n-word twice in a singular interview, repeatedly used the g slur in a singular interview, used the t-word in an interview where he also conflates trans women and crossdressers, defended playing a neo-Nazi character in Ned, and used the w-word to refer to Black Widow.
Tommy Sotomayor / Thomas Jerome Harris (1975) Panamanian - youtuber, radio show host, and commentator - Considers himself a “men’s rights activist” who is against feminism, claimed that Black Americans are more of a threat than guns, considers Black Lives Matter a “thug group”, and has called people who protest with Black Lives Matter the r-word.
Flex / DJ Flex / Félix Danilo Gómez Bosquez (1980) Panamanian - singer-songwriter and DJ - Uses the n-word as a stage name for his Latin America music despite not being black.
Kaya Jones / Chrystal Neria (1984) German, Irish, Scottish, Spanish, Unconfirmed Costa Rican, Unconfirmed Nicaraguan, Unconfirmed Panamanian, Unconfirmed Jamaican, Unconfirmed Chinese, Unconfirmed Colombian, Unconfirmed Unspecified Black, Unconfirmed Jewish / Unspecified White, Unconfirmed Apache - singer, violinist, DJ, model, actress, and dancer - Trump supporter who even has said she would like to put down the first brick in the wall on the Mexican border, has used multiple racial slurs, has compared the residential school system of Native Americans to white people willingly sending their kids to boarding schools, and honestly so much more.
Iris Beilin (1989) Afro Panamanian - youtuber - Did a “Native American”/”Pocahontas” (a real life 12 year old girl who was kidnapped and raped) “inspired” makeup tutorial.
Elisama Mendez (1997) Panamanian - model, youtuber, instagrammer, and TikTok star - Appropriated box braids.
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Bringing The Spirit and Dick Tracy Together, For the First Time
2017 marks the Eisner Centennial, as Will Eisner would have turned 100 years old this month. To help celebrate, Mike Curtis, Joe Staton and the team behind “Dick Tracy” brought The Spirit to the comic strip for the first ever crossover between the two iconic characters.
RELATED: 7 Books You Must Read To Celebrate The Will Eisner Centennial
Dick Tracy is one of the last remaining legacy strips, and since the two took over in 2011, they’ve made a point of bringing other characters into the comic. They’ve had crossovers with other Tribune strips that had already ended, like Little Orphan Annie, the supporting cast of Terry and the Pirates, Gasoline Alley and Snuffy Smith, and they even incorporated the Fearless Fosdick parody of Tracy from “Li’l Abner.” They’ve had references to The Shadow and Doc Savage. They got permission to use the likeness of Boris Karloff to introduce the character he played in 1947’s Dick Tracy Meets Gruesome to the strip for the first time.
In short, they’re having a lot of fun, so we contacted the pair to discuss the latest, and perhaps most unexpected pairing they’ve presented to date.
CBR: You guys ended 2016 with one character’s cancer going into remission, a rousing Sunday of the characters singing “Deck Us All with Boston Charlie,” and the arrival of The Spirit. How did this happen?
Joe Staton: It was Mike.
Mike Curtis: Denis Kitchen, too. Basically we had talked to Denis Kitchen before about another crossover when we used Fearless Fosdick [from “Li’l Abner’]. That went well, so we decided to go after The Spirit and Denis made it all happen.
You guys have had story lines with a lot of other comics characters, not to mention characters and real life people from outside comics. It feels natural to include The Spirit in that sense.
Staton: We’ve been doing lots of other people’s characters. Annie and the supporting cast of Terry and the Pirates are “in house.” The Trib owns them. Snuffy Smith is not a Trib character, but he made a short appearance — there was not a long term commitment there, so we could do what we wanted. With The Spirit, the Eisner estate and Denis would keep an eye on us and make sure we didn’t go astray. We had to be very careful, but they were very good with what they let us do.
Curtis: Very much so. One thing I do want to point out is that I write the script and do roughs, then Joe does pencils and Shelley inks and letters it. We had been sending copies of everything to Denis and the Eisner estate in case they had any last minute changes – or better ideas.
Staton: I did a little explaining of my approach to The Spirit before we got into it. I was taking on the Spirit from a specific earlier part of Will’s strips. Because Tracy and Denny Colt have pretty similar hats most of the time, I wanted to make them a little more distinct. Earlier in the run the Spirit had a hat with a wider brim and a taller crown, and sometimes he had a topcoat. I was trying to make Denny Colt distinct from Dick Tracy.
Mike, talk a little about the story.
Curtis: The hard part was finding something that would be of interest and enough of a challenge for both Dick Tracy and The Spirit. It’s like those “World’s Finest Comics” where you have to have somebody who’s tough enough to take on Superman, Batman and Robin. I won’t give away anything in the story, but Perenelle Flammel, who’s the wife of Nicolas Flammel, is auctioning off her immortality formula. The people who are bidding to buy it are Daddy Warbucks, The Dragon Lady, the Octopus, who sent Mr Carrion over to bid for him, and Diet Smith.
I always enjoy when we have Diet and Warbucks together. Back when we did the Annie crossover, there was one daily that I really enjoyed where they were talking about time travel and Warbucks is ribbing Diet Smith and he says, I know you have a Montauk Chair in there. Things you have to look up like that. I think that makes it a more interesting story and a more interesting strip if the reader can enjoy it on one level, but if they want to dig a little bit, they can enjoy it more.
What do you think the relationship is between Gould and Eisner and their work? Both The Spirit and Dick Tracy are both reactive characters.
Staton: Will’s approach to stories, and to life, was more humanistic than the Gould approach. Tracy keeps order, and The Spirit just wanders into life and sees who’s hanging in there. They’re both crime fighters they both can take a lot of abuse, but they are from different takes on the world. There’s a little bit of that in the crossover too.
Curtis: They’re both reactive characters. In the classic Spirit story “Ten Minutes,” the Spirit shows up for three panels, I think, in the whole story. There’s a lot of Tracy stories where he’s not the lead.
Staton: Sometimes the Tracy villains have stories going on for months before Tracy shows up and gets into things.
This year is the Eisner Centennial, as we were saying; who was Eisner to you?
Staton: When I came into comics, I knew that he was always called the Orson Welles of comics. I think it was just for him opening up possibilities beyond just six boxes on a page, both in terms of the graphics and in terms of the characterizations. The humanity of the characters. Will showed that comics could be a little bit more than people generally thought they were. Will is the great popularizer of the graphic novel and now graphic novels are covering all kinds of territories. Will showed up there was more to be done that more could be done.
Curtis: Did you ever meet Will?
Staton: Somewhere along the line, I actually got an Eisner for a “Superman/Batman Adventures.” Will was giving them out that year, and was signing them all, so I have an Eisner, signed on the back in gold pen by Will. The funny thing is, the plaque is actually the wrong title of the comic. [Laughs] It’s supposed to be “Superman/Batman Adventures,” and it says “Batman and Robin Adventures.” I would never turn it back in to get the correct one, because Will wouldn’t have signed that one. That’s the only time I ever met Will.
You guys are wrapping up the story in April, so people can go back and catch up before the finale. This is one of the longest stories you guys have done on the strip.
Staton: Mike will write long stories that don’t take place in one long stretch. We had a story with Mr Crime for a long time, and there would be other stories intervening and I have no idea how long all that ended up being.
I did want to mention the colors you guys have on the Sunday strips, which really stands out.
Curtis: Shane Fisher is our coloring guy on Sundays, and on gocomics.com they have someone else doing the dailies.
Curtis: There are five of us on the team. There’s Joe and myself, Shelley Pleger does inks and lettering. Shane is our colorist, then we have Walt Rymer, who’s our police advisor — he does the Crimestoppers.
That’s as large of a team as any strip right now.
Staton: I think so. Terry Beatty works pretty much on his own on “The Phantom.” Sometimes I’m amazed what he can do on his own. Sometimes Shelly, our inker, can do most anything.
Curtis: We do need to mention that Shelly is going to be doing the main strip for one story while you take a break.
Staton: When I signed up years ago to do “Tracy,” I had some other things I was planning. Between keeping up with “Tracy” and there being a boon in doing cons, I haven’t been able to concentrate on any other projects, so I’m taking off for one continuity and Shelley is going to be doing the whole strip – pencils, inks and letters – and then I’ll be back on. We have no doubt that she’ll do a brilliant job.
What are you doing when you step away from the strip?
Staton: It’s no secret; Nic Cuti I have the character E-Man, a character that actually owes a lot to Will and to Jack Cole. We have this new story of E-Man, and it’s going to run as three parts in the Charleton Arrow, which handles a lot of characters from Charleton, which is where I started out way back when. I’m actually working on an E-man story right now, and Shelly is working on Tracy
Is there a character you really liked in this story?
Staton: I really like drawing The Spirit. I always wanted a shot at Denny Colt. We bring back our character Doubleup, I always like him. The Dragon Lady shows up. She’s much harder to draw than you would think.
I have to ask, is there a chance we’ll see a collection of the strip one of these years?
Staton: We keep on hoping!
Curtis: Joe and I have collected two stories which we give out at conventions. One of them is the Gruesome story with Brois Karloff. The other is Dick Tracy meets the film pirates, which is Silver Nitrate and Sister Sprocket.
Staton: Those are characters we made up. I thought of them and designed them and they’re certainly in the tradition of Gould, but we made them up out of whole cloth.
The post Bringing The Spirit and Dick Tracy Together, For the First Time appeared first on CBR.
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NT entrance February 2015 photo by Philip Vile
Ivo van Hove follows his acclaimed Hedda Gabler with the world premiere of Network, with Bryan Cranston making his UK stage debut
Anne-Marie Duff returns to the National Theatre in Common, and will appear alongside Rory Kinnear in Macbeth in 2018, directed by Rufus Norris
Award-winning playwright Annie Baker (The Flick) returns with the European premiere of her new play John in the Dorfman
John Tiffany directs the world premiere of Pinocchio
Saint George and the Dragon, Beginning and The Majority continue the NT’s commitment to new work and contemporary stories on our stages
12 new plays, 50% of which are written by women, will open in the next 12 months
People, Places & Things transfers to St Ann’s Warehouse, New York
The NT will tour to 47 venues in 35 towns and cities across the UK in 2017-18
Co-productions with Fuel, Headlong, Out of Joint, Improbable, and West Yorkshire Playhouse
Double the number of Entry Pass tickets for young people under 26
NEW PRODUCTIONS ANNOUNCED OLIVIER THEATRE
AMADEUS – photograph by Seamus Ryan, designed by the NT Graphic Design Studio
SAINT GEORGE AND THE DRAGON Rory Mullarkey’s epic new folk play tells of a knight who became a myth, and a country in need of a story. The world premiere is directed by National Theatre Associate Lyndsey Turner with design by Rae Smith, lighting design by Bruno Poet, music by Grant Olding, choreography by Lynne Page and sound design by Christopher Shutt. Opening in October 2017. Hundreds of Travelex tickets at £15 available per performance.
MACBETH Rufus Norris directs Rory Kinnear and Anne-Marie Duff in Shakespeare’s darkest tragedy 25 years after his last Shakespeare production. Opening in spring 2018. Broadcast to cinemas by NT Live in 2018.
AMADEUS Michael Longhurst’s sell-out production of Peter Shaffer’s masterpiece returns to the Olivier. Lucian Msamati and Adam Gillen once again lead the company of actors, singers and musicians. Amadeus is directed by Michael Longhurst with design by Chloe Lamford, music direction and additional music by Simon Slater, choreography by Imogen Knight, lighting design by Jon Clark and sound design by Paul Arditti. Amadeus is produced in association with Southbank Sinfonia, supported by the Amadeus production syndicate. Opening in January 2018.
LYTTELTON THEATRE NETWORK
Ivo van Hove © Jan Versweyveld
Lee Hall’s new adaptation of the Oscar-winning film by Paddy Chayefsky is directed by Ivo van Hove. Cast includes Tony award winner Bryan Cranston (All the Way, Breaking Bad and Trumbo for which he was nominated for both an Oscar and a BAFTA) in the role of Howard Beale. Set and lighting design by Jan Versweyveld, video design by Tal Yarden, costume design by An D’Huys, music by Eric Sleichim and sound design by Tom Gibbons. Network is produced in association with Patrick Myles, David Luff, Ros Povey and Lee Menzies. Production supported by Marcia Grand for the memory of Richard Grand. Opening in November 2017.
DORFMAN THEATRE THE MAJORITY Following the acclaimed run of Bullet Catch in The Shed, Rob Drummond returns to the National with a new one-man show about democracy. Directed by David Overend and opening in August 2017. Originally co-commissioned with The Arches, Glasgow.
BEGINNING In the early hours of the morning, in the aftermath of a party in north London, two people meet. And nothing will ever be the same for them again. The world premiere of David Eldridge’s new play is directed by Polly Findlay. With design by Fly Davis, lighting design by Jack Knowles and sound design by Paul Arditti. Opening in October 2017.
JOHN Following The Flick in 2016, Annie Baker returns to the Dorfman with her new play, John. James Macdonald directs the European premiere, with a cast including Georgia Engel. Opening in early 2018.
UPDATES ON PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED PRODUCTIONS OLIVIER THEATRE
Tamsin Greig in Gethsemane (2008)-credit Catherine Ashmore
TWELFTH NIGHT Will now run until 13 May, previews from 15 February, press night 22 February. Simon Godwin directs this joyous new production. Tamsin Greig is a transformed Malvolia, performing alongside Adam Best, Oliver Chris, Claire Cordier, Imogen Doel, Mary Doherty, Ammar Duffus, Daniel Ezra, Phoebe Fox, Whitney Kehinde, Emmanuel Kojo, Tamara Lawrance, Andrew Macbean, Doon Mackichan, Tim McMullan, Brad Morrison, Daniel Rigby, Imogen Slaughter, James Wallace and Niky Wardley. The production will be designed by Soutra Gilmour, lighting by James Farncombe, movement by Shelley Maxwell, music by Michael Bruce, sound by Christopher Shutt, and fight direction by Kev McCurdy.
A ship is wrecked on the rocks. Viola is washed ashore but her twin brother Sebastian is lost. Determined to survive on her own, she steps out to explore a new land. So begins a whirlwind of mistaken identity and unrequited love. The nearby households of Olivia and Orsino are overrun with passion. Even Olivia’s uptight housekeeper Malvolia is swept up in the madness. Where music is the food of love and nobody is quite what they seem, anything proves possible. Broadcast to cinemas by NT Live on 6 April.
Director Yael Farber NT lesblancs 2016 credit Johan Persson
SALOMÉ Previews from 2 May, press night 9 May, continuing in the repertoire until 15 July. Salomé in a new version by Yaël Farber The story has been told before, but never like this. An occupied desert nation. A radical from the wilderness on hunger strike. A girl whose mysterious dance will change the course of the world. This charged retelling turns the infamous biblical tale on its head, placing the girl we call Salomé at the centre of a revolution.
Internationally acclaimed director Yaël Farber (Les Blancs) draws on multiple accounts to create her urgent, hypnotic production on the Olivier stage.
Salomé is designed by Susan Hilferty with lighting design by Tim Lutkin, music and sound by Adam Cork, movement direction by Ami Shulman, fight direction by Kate Waters and dramaturgy by Drew Lichtenberg. Cast includes Philip Arditti, Paul Chahidi, Ramzi Choukair, Uriel Emil, Olwen Fouéré, Roseanna Frascona, Aidan Kelly, Yasmin Levy, Theo T J Lowe, Isabella Niloufar, Lubana al Quntar, Raad Rawi and Stanley Townsend. Hundreds of Travelex tickets at £15 available per performance. Broadcast to cinemas by NT Live on 22 June.
COMMON Previews from 30 May, press night 6 June. A co-production with Headlong.
Mary’s the best liar, rogue, thief and faker in this whole septic isle. And she’s back. As the factory smoke of the industrial revolution belches out from the cities, Mary is swept up in the battle of her former home. The common land, belonging to all, is disappearing. D C Moore’s dark and funny new play is an epic tale of unsavoury action and England’s lost land.
Headlong’s Artistic Director, Jeremy Herrin, (People, Places and Things, This House) directs Anne-Marie Duff as Mary. Cast includes Trevor Fox. Design is by Richard Hudson, lighting design by Paule Constable, music by Stephen Warbeck and sound design by Ian Dickinson. Hundreds of Travelex tickets at £15 available per performance.
FOLLIES Further casting has been announced for Follies, which will be directed by Dominic Cooke, book by James Goldman and music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim. Joining Imelda Staunton will be Dame Josephine Barstow, Tracie Bennett, Janie Dee, Peter Forbes and Phillip Quast. Design will be by Vicki Mortimer, choreography by Bill Deamer, musical supervision by Nicholas Skilbeck, orchestrations by Jonathan Tunick, musical direction by Nigel Lilley, lighting design by Paule Constable and sound design by Paul Groothuis. Opening in August 2017.
LYTTELTON THEATRE HEDDA GABLER – Ends 21 March
Just married. Buried alive. Hedda longs to be free… Ruth Wilson plays the title role in a new version of Ibsen’s masterpiece, by Patrick Marber. Directed by Ivo van Hove, set and lighting design by Jan Versweyveld, costume design by An D’Huys, sound design by Tom Gibbons. Production supported by the Williams Charitable Trust. Broadcast to cinemas by NT Live on 9 March.
UGLY LIES THE BONE Previews from 22 February, press night 1 March Ugly Lies the Bone by Lindsey Ferrentino makes its European premiere. ‘Beauty is but skin deep, ugly lies the bone; beauty dies and fades away, but ugly holds its own.’ After three tours in Afghanistan and months in a severe burns unit, Jess finally returns to Florida. In a small town on the Space Coast, as the final shuttle is about the launch, Jess must confront her scars, and a home that may have changed even more than her. Experimenting with pioneering virtual reality therapy, she builds a breathtaking new world where she can escape her pain. There, she begins to restore her relationships, her life and, slowly, herself.
Award-winning playwright Lindsey Ferrentino’s honest and funny new drama is directed by Indhu Rubasingham, with set design by Es Devlin, video design by Luke Halls, costume design by Johanna Coe, lighting design by Oliver Fenwick, music and sound by Ben and Max Ringham, movement direction by Lucy Hind and fight direction by Rachel Brown-Williams and Ruth Cooper-Brown of RC-Annie Ltd. The cast is Marianne Adams, Katy Brittain, Olivia Darnley, Buffy Davis, Kate Fleetwood, Ralf Little, Kris Marshall, Tom Peters and Siân Polhill-Thomas. Hundreds of Travelex tickets at £15 available per performance.
ANGELS IN AMERICA: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes Previews from 11 April, press day 4 May, continuing in repertoire
America in the mid-1980s. In the midst of the AIDS crisis, and a conservative Reagan administration, New Yorkers grapple with life and death, love and sex, heaven and hell.
This new staging of Tony Kushner’s multi-award-winning two-part play is directed by Olivier and Tony award-winning director Marianne Elliott (The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time and War Horse). Part One: Millennium Approaches was first performed at the NT in 1992, and was joined by Perestroika in a double-bill the following year. 2017 marks the 25th anniversary of the shows.
Set design is by Ian MacNeil, costume design by Nicky Gillibrand, lighting design by Paule Constable, choreography and movement by Robby Graham, music by Adrian Sutton, sound design by Ian Dickinson, puppetry direction and movement by Finn Caldwell, puppetry design by Finn Caldwell and Nick Barnes, illusions by Chris Fisher, aerial direction by Gwen Hales and fight direction by Kate Waters.
The cast is Stuart Angell, Mark Arnold, Arun Blair-Mangat, Susan Brown, Laura Caldow, Andrew Garfield, Denise Gough, Kate Harper, John Hastings, Claire Lambert, Nathan Lane, Amanda Lawrence, James McArdle, Becky Namgauds, Nathan Stewart-Jarrett, Russell Tovey, Paksie Vernon, Stan West and Lewis Wilkins.
The Angels in America ballot presented by Delta – each week hundreds of £20 tickets will be released in a ballot for the following week’s performances. Broadcast to cinemas by NT Live – Part One on 20 July, Part Two on 27 July
John Tiffany, credit Tony Rinaldo
PINOCCHIO John Tiffany directs the world premiere of Pinocchio by Dennis Kelly, with songs and score from the Walt Disney film by Leigh Harline, Ned Washington and Paul J. Smith newly adapted by Martin Lowe. With design and puppet co-design by Bob Crowley, lighting design by Paule Constable, music supervision, orchestrations and additional music by Martin Lowe, choreography by Steven Hoggett, puppet co-design and puppetry direction by Toby Olié, sound design by Simon Baker and illusions by Jamie Harrison. Presented by special arrangement with Disney Theatrical Productions. Opening in the Lyttelton in December 2017.
DORFMAN THEATRE SHAKESPEARE FOR YOUNGER AUDIENCES Following highly successful schools performances, these productions can be seen in the Dorfman.
Macbeth 6 – 20 February Amid bloody rebellion and the deafening drums of war, Macbeth and his wife will stop at nothing to fulfil their ambition. Witchcraft, murder, treason and treachery are all at play in this murky world. A bold contemporary retelling of one of Shakespeare’s darkest plays. Suitable for 13yrs+
Romeo and Juliet 11 – 24 February Set against a vibrant urban backdrop bursting full of excitement, colour, dancing and live song, a company of eight tell the most famous love story of all time. Join us for this swift, contemporary celebration of Shakespeare’s masterpiece as we bring Romeo and Juliet to life for a new generation. Suitable for 8 – 12yrs
Shakespeare for younger audiences is supported by: The Ingram Trust, Archie Sherman Charitable Trust, Behrens Foundation, Cleopatra Trust, The Ernest Cook Trust, Jill and David Leuw, Mulberry Trust, The Royal Victoria Hall Foundation and the Topinambour Trust.
MY COUNTRY; A WORK IN PROGRESS 28 February – 22 March, prior to national tour, see p10 for details Britannia has called a meeting, to listen to her people. Form an orderly queue.
In the months following the Brexit vote, a team of interviewers from the NT spoke to people nationwide, hearing their views on Britain, the community they live in, and the referendum. Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy and Director of the NT Rufus Norris put those conversations centre stage in this new production, which opens in London before playing at venues around the country. Designed by Katrina Lindsay, lighting design by Paul Knott, Music by David Shrubsole and sound design by Alex Caplen. The cast for My Country; a work in progress are Seema Bowri, Cavan Clarke, Laura Elphinstone, Adam Ewan, Penny Layden, Stuart McQuarrie and Christian Patterson. Created in collaboration with eight UK arts organisations in association with Cusack Projects Limited.
The NT today announces a new behind-the-scenes BBC Radio 4 documentary, which will track the development of Rufus Norris’ new play My Country: a work in progress. The Radio 4 programme captures the development of the creative process for the NT’s production My Country: a work in progress. It follows the rehearsal process as Rufus Norris, Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy and designer Katrina Lindsay work with the interviewers, their material and the cast to bring to life this current and compelling verbatim play.
LOST WITHOUT WORDS 4 – 18 March A co-production with Improbable. Imagine older actors in their 70s and 80s, actors who have spent their lives being other people, bringing life to other people’s words. Imagine they were on stage with nothing but themselves and no worlds but their own. No script, no map, a different show every night, all they have is a lifetime of theatre to help them find their way.
Lost Without Words is co-directed by Phelim McDermott and Lee Simpson with design by Katrina Lindsay, lighting design by Colin Grenfell and music by Steven Edis. The cast is Georgine Anderson, Caroline Blakiston, Anna Calder-Marshall, Lynn Farleigh, Charles Kay and Tim Preece.
CONSENT Previews from 28 March, press night 4 April, playing until 17 May A co-production with Out of Joint. Consent by Nina Raine will receive its world premiere in the Dorfman Theatre. Why is justice blind? Is she impartial? Or is she blinkered? This powerful, painful and funny play sifts the evidence in a rape case from every side and puts justice in the dock. Directed by Roger Michell with set design by Hildegard Bechtler, costume design by Dinah Collin, lighting design by Rick Fisher and sound design by John Leonard. Cast includes Priyanga Burford, Pip Carter, Ben Chaplin, Heather Craney, Daisy Haggard, Adam James and Anna Maxwell Martin.
BARBER SHOP CHRONICLES Previews from 30 May, press night 7 June, in repertoire until 8 July A co-production with Fuel and West Yorkshire Playhouse. A new play by Inua Ellams, directed by Bijan Sheibani.
Newsroom, political platform, local hot-spot, confession box, preacher-pulpit and football stadium. For generations, African men have gathered in barber shops to discuss the world.
This dynamic new play journeys from a barber shop in London, to Johannesburg, Harare, Kampala, Lagos and Accra. These are places where the banter can be barbed and the truth is always telling.
Barber Shop Chronicles is Inua Ellams’ third play at the National, following the exhilarating The 14th Tale and Black T-shirt Collection.
The production is designed by Rae Smith with lighting design by Jack Knowles, movement direction by Aline David and sound design by Gareth Fry.
Barber Shop Chronicles will play at West Yorkshire Playhouse 12 – 29 July.
MOSQUITOES Mosquitoes by Lucy Kirkwood will have its world premiere in the Dorfman Theatre in July. Rufus Norris will direct this new play about families and particle physics, with a cast that includes Olivia Colman. Designed by Katrina Lindsay, lighting design by Paule Constable, music by Adam Cork, sound design by Paul Arditti and video design by Finn Ross & Ian William Galloway.
Mosquitoes is generously supported by the Edgerton Foundation, the Winton Charitable Foundation, and Rosetrees Trust. This play is a recipient of an Edgerton Foundation New Plays Award.
NATIONAL THEATRE LIVE NT Live has a season of ten new broadcasts to the UK and 55 countries across the globe
Amadeus by Peter Shaffer. Lucian Msamati plays Salieri, with live orchestral accompaniment by Southbank Sinfonia. Broadcast live from the NT on Thursday 2 February.
Saint Joan Josie Rourke directs Gemma Arterton as Joan of Arc in Bernard Shaw’s electrifying classic. Broadcast live from the Donmar Warehouse on Thursday 16 February.
Hedda Gabler by Henrik Ibsen in a new version by Patrick Marber. Ruth Wilson plays the title role in Ivo van Hove’s production. Broadcast live from the NT on Thursday 9 March.
Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare. Tamsin Greig plays Malvolia in Shakespeare’s comedy of mistaken identity. Directed by Simon Godwin. Broadcast live from the NT on Thursday 6 April.
Salomé A radical retelling of the biblical story of one young woman’s political awakening. Directed by Yaël Farber. Broadcast live from the NT on Thursday 22 June.
Peter Pan, Sally Cookson’s wondrously inventive production recorded live during its run at the NT will be broadcast on Saturday 10 June.
Rosencrantz & Guildenstern are Dead by Tom Stoppard. Fifty years after the play premiered at The Old Vic, David Leveaux directs Daniel Radcliffe and Joshua McGuire as Rosencrantz and Guildenstern alongside David Haig as The Player in this iconic mind bending situation comedy. Broadcast live from The Old Vic on Thursday 20 April, this marks the Old Vic’s first collaboration with NT Live.
Angels in America, Marianne Elliott’s new production of Tony Kushner’s two-part play will be broadcast live from the NT. Part 1: Millennium Approaches on Thursday 20 July and Part 2: Perestroika on Thursday 27 July.
Yerma – Billie Piper stars in Yerma as a woman driven to the unthinkable by her desperate desire to have a child. Simon Stone creates a radical new production of Lorca’s achingly powerful masterpiece. Broadcast live from the Young Vic on 31 August.
Macbeth with a cast including Rory Kinnear and Anne-Marie Duff will be broadcast by NT Live in 2018. Find your nearest venue at ntlive.com
NATIONAL THEATRE THROUGHOUT THE UK, IN THE WEST END AND INTERNATIONALLY The NT will tour to 47 venues in 35 towns and cities across the UK in 2017-18
PEOPLE PLACES AND THINGS TRANSFERS TO NEW YORK AND TOURS THE UK THIS AUTUMN The National Theatre, Headlong and St Ann’s Warehouse in association with Bryan Singer Productions will present the National Theatre/Headlong production of People, Places and Things by Duncan Macmillan at St Ann’s Warehouse in New York in October 2017. Directed by Jeremy Herrin, Macmillan’s intoxicating new play opened at the NT’s Dorfman Theatre in autumn 2015, and transferred to the Wyndham’s Theatre in March 2016 where it became the ‘must see’ show of the season. Denise Gough will reprise her award-winning role as Emma. Gough’s raw and heart-breaking performance as an actress whose life has spun recklessly out of control because of her addiction to drink and drugs was unanimously acclaimed by critics and audiences alike, earning her the 2016 Olivier Award and the Critics’ Circle Award for Best Actress. Further cast details and dates to be announced.
Generous support to the National Theatre for People, Places and Things from: Areté Foundation / Betsy & Ed Cohen and Leila Maw Straus MBE.
Duncan Macmillan’s People, Places and Things will also begin a major UK tour with a new cast this autumn, in a co-production between the National Theatre, Headlong, HOME and Exeter Northcott Theatre. Full casting to be announced shortly. The tour begins at HOME, Manchester (22 September – 7 October), and continues to Oxford Playhouse (11 – 14 October), Theatre Royal Bath (17 – 21 October), Bristol Old Vic (24 – 28 October), Exeter Northcott Theatre (31 October – 4 November), Nuffield Southampton Theatres (7 – 11 November) and finish at Liverpool Playhouse Theatre (14 – 18 November).
The set is designed by Bunny Christie, the Olivier and Tony Award winning designer of the NT’s production of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. Costumes are by Christina Cunningham, lighting by James Farncombe, video by Andrzej Goulding and music is composed by Matthew Herbert with Olivier award-winning sound design by Tom Gibbons. Original production sponsored by Neptune Investment Management
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