Name Michaela Coel Nationality British | Role Poet Movies Monsters: Dark Continent | |
Similar Nicholas Pinnock, Parker Sawyers, Scoot McNairy, Gareth Edwards | ||
Exclusive michaela coel sings bent and broken
Michaela-Moses Ewuraba O Boakye-Collinson (born 1 October 1987), known professionally as Michaela Coel, is a British actress, screenwriter, singer, songwriter, poet, and playwright. In 2016, she won the BAFTA for Best Female Performance In A Comedy Programme and Breakthrough Talent for the television series Chewing Gum, which she created and writes while portraying the lead role.
Contents
- Exclusive michaela coel sings bent and broken
- Michaela coel attempt at being human
- Early life
- Career
- Personal life
- Discography
- Awards and nominations
- Works and publications
- References
Michaela coel attempt at being human
Early life
Michaela Coel was born Michaela-Moses Ewuraba O Boakye-Collinson on 1 October 1987 in Aldgate, London, the daughter of Ghanaian immigrants. She and her sister grew up in London, primarily Hackney and Tower Hamlets, with her mother, a mental health liaison officer. Coel's father lives in Ghana, and she has a half-brother. She has stated that while at her all-girls Catholic school in East London, she was the only black female pupil in her year, and dealt with her isolation by physically bullying others.
From 2007 to 2009, Coel attended Birmingham University to study English Literature and Theology. She took a Ché Walker masterclass at RADA after meeting Walker at open mics. In 2009, she transferred to the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, where she was the first black woman enrolled in five years. She won the Laurence Olivier Bursary award, which helped her fund her schooling. During her time at Guildhall, she attended the Mark Proulx workshop at Prima del Teatro and took the Kat Francois Poetry Course at the Theatre Royal Stratford East. She graduated from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in 2012.
Career
In 2006, Coel began performing in poetry open mics in Ealing. As she continued to do open mics, she was encouraged by the actor, playwright, and director Ché Walker, who saw her perform at Hackney Empire, to apply to Guildhall. As a poet she has performed on stages including Wembley Arena, Bush Theatre, Nuyorican, and Rotterdam De Doelen Concert Hall. She went by the name, Michaela The Poet.
In 2009, Coel joined the Talawa Theatre Company summer school program called TYPT. During her time at Talawa she was in the TYPT 2009 production of Krunch, directed by Amani Naphtali.
In 2009, Coel released an album entitled Fixing Barbie, which featured her work as a poet and musician. In 2011, Coel released the record "We're the Losers".
In 2012, Coel's play, Chewing Gum Dreams, was her senior / graduation project at Guildhall. It was first produced at The Yard Theatre in Hackney Wick in 2012. The play featured Coel in a one-woman show telling the dramatic story of a 14-year-old girl named Tracey. The play then went on to be produced by the Bush Theatre (2012), Royal Theatre Holland (2012), Royal Exchange Theatre (2013), and the National Theatre (2014). It received positive reviews.
Coel appeared in the Channel 4 drama Top Boy and had leading roles at the National Theatre, including the award-nominated Home and the critically acclaimed Medea at the Olivier Theatre.
In August 2014, Channel 4 announced that Coel was to star in and write a new sitcom called Chewing Gum, inspired by her play Chewing Gum Dreams. "C4 Comedy Blaps" were released as teasers in September 2014, and the series began on E4 in October 2015. Her performance earned her the British Academy Television Award for Best Female Comedy Performance in 2016; she also won a BAFTA for Breakthrough Talent for writing the show. Chewing Gum received overwhelmingly positive reviews.
In 2015, Coel also guest-starred in the BBC One drama London Spy.
In 2016, she starred in the E4 sci-fi comedy-drama The Aliens, which was shot in Bulgaria. She portrays the character, Lilyhot.
Chewing Gum returned for a second season in January 2017.
She also starred in the "Nosedive" episode of Charlie Brooker's series Black Mirror.
Personal life
For the 2016 BAFTA Awards, Coel wore a dress made out of Kente cloth which was made by her mother. She has said that, like her Chewing Gum character Tracey, between the ages of 17 and 22 she became very religious in the Pentecostal faith, and embraced celibacy. Although she still considers herself a Christian, Coel stopped practicing Pentecostalism after attending Guildhall.
Discography
EP
LPs