H O M AE W A R ND ES W S & P H O T VO I SD E EO VS E N A T CS A D EF MO YU N D AA TR I CO HN I V E S M E M B E R S M A G A Z I N E IN THE April 07, 2017 MIX NaturayllN oal Dewanda Wise waited 30 years to play the part she was apparently born to play. Randee Dawn Rowan Daly Here’s what made DeWanda Wise decide to watch Spike Lee’s classic 1986 film, She’s Gotta Have It: A few years ago, a NEWS boyfriend gave her a DVD and said, “You remind me of Nola Darling.” Announcing the New Choreography Peer Turns out that her boyfriend was either a casting director in the making Group or prescient, because Wise is playing Nola, the free-spirited young Brooklynite in the Netflix 10-part series of the same name, adapted, executive-produced and directed by Lee himself. The Academy Remembers Florence Wise was “blown away” by the original film — “I remember thinking how Henderson bold and ahead of its time it was” — but she’s a little in the dark about how the TV version, which she says Lee approaches like a 10-part movie, will progress. “It’s a very large trust issue,” she says. Florence Henderson: A Though the Baltimore native has been racking up credits for more than Superior Mother a decade in films and on TV, she’s especially busy lately. In addition to the Netflix series, which is due out in October, Wise is a regular on Fox’s Shots Fired and has a recurring role on WGN’s Underground, both of which premiered in March. TRENDNIG Scoring jobs on all three shows made 2016 particularly exciting. “It was A R T I C L E Good Call the first time I worked throughout an entire year,” Wise notes. “It’s been a perfect storm of elements that came along after years of building to A R T I C L E it.” A Hero for the Ages In other words, a classic veteran–turned–overnight success. So how did A R T I C L E the graduate of NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts fill her days between gigs That Girl: The One Who Changed Everything in the past? As an acting coach, it turns out. Her best advice: “Don’t quit,” she says. “Everyone gives up too soon.” Not Wise, who is honored to be part of the ensemble that is bringing a new version of Lee’s 30-year-old film to television. “There are so many women in the show’s writers’ room,” she reports delightedly. “That’s part of what sold me. I’m super deliberate about what I sign on to, and I take great care about how I represent. You gotta represent.” This article originally appeared in emmy magazine, Issue No. 3, 2017 N E X T S T O R Y How and Why ADDYO UCRO MMENT MUSTE E MavDne dnri ir GUo nhCtde eohwvrte ri oPegrb srlsiVi SpNne eicwhs Elm my Speechsl Slowly but surely, progress is coming in depicting people with disabilities. Magnaezi Take a behind the scenes look at our emmy magazine cover shoot. Warmth and family stories win out in Speechless. Emmys Contact Press / Media Privacy / Terms Academy Sites Connect Home Contact Us Press Portal Privacy Policy Foundation Facebook Awards Forms & Downloads Media Contacts User Agreement Archive Twitter News & Magazine Frequently Asked Trademark Policy Site Submission Viewing Platform Instagram - In Memoriam Questions (FAQs) Rules Pinterest Photos YouTube Videos TVTag Events Tumblr Academy Foundation Members Careers © 1995-2017 Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. All Rights Reserved. Emmy and the Emmy Statuette are the Trademark Property Of ATAS/NATAS. Website design and development byD sire Design. Web hosting by Acquia..
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