Showing posts with label Yara Shahidi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yara Shahidi. Show all posts

Monday, August 5, 2019

Yara Shahidi in New York

Yara Shakidi
Ilustration by T.A.

YARA SHAHIDI


By Stephanie LaCava 
Published September 19, 2016
YARA SHAHIDI IN NEW YORK, JULY 2016. SHIRT: DIOR. HAT: LOLA HATS. EARRINGS: FALLON. STYLING: KATELYN GRAY. HAIR: JAWARA FOR DAVINES/BRYANT ARTISTS. MAKEUP: ERIN PARSONS FOR MAC/STREETERS. SPECIAL THANKS: MODERN VICE STUDIOS.
Minnesota-born actress Yara Shahidi has been working since she was 6 weeks old. Back then, it was strictly commercials and print modeling with her family. “You hug your parents, take a bite of cheese, look at the camera,” she recalls fondly. Her feature-film debut came at age 9, alongside Eddie Murphy in the 2009 comedy Imagine That. Now 16, Shahidi is known for her roles as the young Olivia Pope on Scandal and, more recently, Zoey, a clever, phone-obsessed teenager on ABC’s hit sitcom Black-ish. The day before we met in New York, the show’s second season had been nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Comedy Series, and Shahidi tells me how fantastic—and fleeting—the good news is in a summer marked by so much violence around the world. “It’s heartbreaking,” she says of recent events. “I’m apprehensive to open up Twitter and see what the next hashtag is.” An active participant on social media, Shahidi acknowledges that it’s a fantastic tool but also a destructive one. She sees the level of detachment and blasé reposting as compounding the problem of our ever-shortening attention span. “People unite for ten hours and then forget.”
Shahidi is particularly interested in current events, perhaps because they often hit close to home, both for her and for her two brothers, ages 8 and 13. “You don’t see them and think half black, half Iranian—they get a safe pass. We are black Shahidis.” Shahidi’s father is Iranian-American, their last name meaning “witness” in Persian; her mother is African American. Her family has a legacy of social activism, including a grandfather who was a Black Panther, a cousin who was the first Iranian female space tourist, and an aunt currently en route to Rwanda to study reconciliation in war-torn areas. When not on set or in class, Shahidi prepares for speaking engagements across the country. After we talk, she’s headed back to her hotel room to work on a keynote to be delivered at a Cincinnati high school where she’ll represent ABC at the NAACP convention.
Black-ish, which starts its third season this month, has a massive following, Shahidi doesn’t necessarily see acting as a career. She plans to study sociology and is creating content for her own digital series, which she describes as “TED talks for teenagers.” In the meantime, she’s happy working with her second family on the Los Angeles set. “The show finally gave me a way to describe myself,” she says. “Black-ish.”


Yara Shahidi / Special Message

SPECIAL MESSAGE 

BYYARA SHAHIDI


Yara Shahidi is an actress, model, activist and breakout star of ABC’s Emmy- and Golden Globe- nominated comedy series “black-ish.” She stars as popular teen Zoey Johnson, an ambitious, technologically infatuated high school student. Last spring, Freeform announced the “black-ish” spin-off “grown-ish,” starring Shahidi, which will explore Zoey’s transition into adulthood as well as issues facing both students and administrators in the world of higher education.
Yara has been awarded a NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress, a Gracie Award for Female in a Breakthrough Role and, most recently, listed as one of TIME Magazine’s annual 30 Most Influential Teens, for her television contributions and humanitarianism.
As a young scholar, Yara has combined her love for education and empowerment through the formation of Yara’s Club, a partnership with The Young Women’s Leadership Schools (TYWLS) in New York. Yara’s Club is a bi-monthly digital meet-up comprised of high school students that discuss societal issues, self-improvement and higher education. Yara served as a spokesperson for DoSomething.Org and 3M’s STEM campaign, was spotlighted in The New York TimesVariety’s “Youth Impact” and “Next Big Thing” issues, and was named number three on the Celebs to Watch for DoSomething.Org’s 2016 Celebs Gone Good. The standout teen was awarded the Daily Point of Light Award from the Points of Light organization in Detroit, honored at Essence Magazine’s 10th anniversary Black Women in Hollywood Awards and honored with the BET’s Young Star award at the 2017 BET Awards.
Yara recently graduated with honors from The Dwight School in New York and will attend Harvard University, where she will double major in sociology and African-American studies.



Yara Shahidi / ‘I’ll put my career on the line to talk politics’

Yara Shahidi
Illustration by Triunfo Arciniegas


Yara Shahidi: ‘I’ll put my career on the line to talk politics’


The actor, model and activist is no ordinary 19-year-old. She’s filmed with Eddie Murphy and Angelina Jolie, she’s friends with Michelle Obama – and Oprah wants her to be a future US president


Top of her class: Yara Shahidi, on her way to Harvard. Photograph: Brian Guido

Megan Nolan
Sunday 4 August 2019



When Yara Shahidi was a little girl, she ran out of history books to read at school. This was before she had starred opposite Eddie Murphy or Angelina Jolie, before her sitcom roles, when her show business career was limited to a few commercials and modelling gigs. She was six at the time. “I remember I was in one school programme where I finished all my history course material a month early,” she says. “So Mama got me a supplementary curriculum and started back with Mesopotamian history. Might as well go all the way, right?”