The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.
Making face-to-face connections in 2020 has never been more difficult. COVID-19 has not only brought heartbreaking loss of life and affected the livelihoods of millions, it has also kept us apart from close friends and family. The distance has also transformed the way we work. Those in the business of creating culture have had to come up with inventive ways to safely bring art and entertainment to audiences looking for meaning and diversion during the pandemic.
For Times reporters and photographers, covering these creators has brought new challenges. As you might expect, interviews and even some photo sessions were done on Zoom or Skype. Yet many in Hollywood and the arts world let our photographers into their homes and backyards or met us at parks or nature reserves for socially distanced portraits. These shoots required extra planning, creativity and lots of personal protective equipment. The results, true collaborations between subject and photographer, led to a collection of portraits that make our third annual Sunday Calendar photo issue our strongest yet.
When entertainment photo editor Ken Kwok presented his selections to art directors An Amlotte and Judith Pryor, the hard part was finding space for all of the work we wanted to showcase from Times photographers. What follows are the year’s most captivating portraits of creators who in a time of pandemic disruption made culture meaningful.
—Laurie Ochoa, Sunday Calendar editor
2020 decimated our cultural and entertainment institutions. Artists have readjusted their ways of working. Many wonder if they can continue their craft even after the pandemic. Yet we’ve also seen resilience and creativity.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
“There have been moments ... moments of ‘I don’t want to f—ing go here,’ ‘I don’t want to walk out onto the carpet,’ ‘I don’t want to be seen,’ ‘I don’t want to be looked at and everyone’s going to be talking about me and judging me’ ... that’s real.”
— Jennifer Aniston
JENNIFER ANISTON plays network morning anchor Alex Levy on “The Morning Show,” the highest-profile series in the opening lineup for Apple TV+, one of several streaming platforms that debuted over the last 18 months. Her performance earned her an Emmy nomination this year for lead actress in a drama series. She talked with Glenn Whipp about the role for the Aug. 20 edition of The Envelope.
In playing a famous woman whose every move is scrutinized and judged, the “Friends” actress finds catharsis
PHOTOGRAPHED BY CHRISTINA HOUSE
That term ‘Black Girl Magic’ ... it’s not magic. It’s actually work! It’s carrying the load. And that load is heavy.
— Regina King
REGINA KING won her fourth Emmy this year for what many consider the greatest role of her career — detective Angela Abar, a.k.a. Sister Night in HBO’s “Watchmen.” King also made her feature film directorial debut with the Christmas release of “One Night in Miami,” an imagining of the real-life meetup between Malcolm X, Sam Cooke, Jim Brown and Cassius Clay (soon to take the name Muhammed Ali) on the night the fighter won the heavyweight boxing title against Sonny Liston. King talked about both projects with entertainment columnist Glenn Whipp for the Aug. 13 issue of The Envelope.
Three-time Emmy winner Regina King is up for a fourth for her lead turn in HBO’s “Watchmen.” And she directed her first film.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY CHRISTINA HOUSE
I’ve learned to not swear on live … I’ve learned to control my inner swearer ... I used to just shout out whatever came to mind.
— “JoJo Rabbit” star Roman Griffin
TAIKA WAITITI and ROMAN GRIFFIN DAVIS gave readers a glimpse of what it was like to be on the awards circuit in a pre-pandemic year when they spoke with Michael Ordoña for the Feb. 9 issue of The Envelope. “Have you got taller?” writer-director Waititi asked his young “Jojo Rabbit” costar during the interview. “My hair’s gotten puffier. I don’t show my hairline so you don’t know where my head finishes. That’s the tip,” Davis deadpanned. Their road to the Oscars yielded 10 nominations — including best picture and a supporting actress nod for Scarlett Johansson — plus an adapted screenplay win for Waititi.
Taika Waititi’s irreverent but humanist look at a boy in the Hitler Youth has been a major presence this awards season — for good and bad.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
When they took me to Twin Towers, they had the homicide people come talk to me. ... Right then, I’m not thinking about the Grammys. I’m thinking, ‘You finished, you ain’t going home.’ They were trying to spook me, hoping to put me away for life.
— YG
YG was at his Chatsworth home in January, two days before he was supposed to perform a tribute at the Grammys for the late rapper Nipsey Hussell, when L.A. Sheriff’s deputies appeared on his doorstep, guns drawn, and served him with a search warrant in front of his young daughters. He made bail and performed at the Grammys. But the encounter showed up in his fall album “My Life 4Hunnid” through the single “Out on Bail,” which begins with his daughter Harmony’s eyewitness view of the incident. He spoke with August Brown about his year for the Sept. 27 issue of Sunday Calendar.
Shaken by the death of his friend Nipsey Hussle, run-ins with the police and the Black Lives Matter protests, YG returns with his darkest album yet.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
Having more awareness and consciousness, I no longer can just be a blissful, ignorant idealist who sings about love and relationships.
— Katy Perry
KATY PERRY gave birth to a daughter, Daisy Dove Bloom, and her sixth studio album — her fifth for Capitol Records — in 2020. Last week she released a video for the album’s single “Not the End of the World” in which she switches places with Zooey Deschanel. Amy Kaufman talked with the pop star about heartbreak, depression, COVID and this year’s cultural reckonings for the Aug. 16 issue of Sunday Calendar.
After fighting through what her friend Sia calls a “real breakdown,” a resilient Katy Perry is set to deliver her first child and a new album, “Smile.”
PHOTOGRAPHED BY MEL MELCON
I’m not dying from Parkinson’s. I’ve been working with it most of my life, I’ve cheated death so many times. If tomorrow you read ‘Ozzy Osbourne never woke up this morning,’ you wouldn’t go, ‘Oh, my God!’ You’d go, ‘Well, it finally caught up with him.’
— Ozzy Osbourne
OZZY OSBOURNE was about to embark on a delayed North American tour ahead of the release of his 12th studio album, “Ordinary Man,” when he talked with Steve Appleford for the Feb. 16 issue of Sunday Calendar. Just after publication, Osbourne, who has been living with Parkinson’s disease, was forced to cancel the tour for health reasons. But Osbourne kept making music during COVID shutdowns and is said to be halfway through his next solo album.
Thanks to a hit single with Post Malone, Ozzy Osbourne is in the midst of a career resurgence, all while he battles Parkinson’s disease, among myriad infirmities.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY CHRISTINA HOUSE
I knew I was never going to make everybody happy. I knew that because [Selena] had that star quality. We all feel a sense of ownership when it comes to Selena — that’s my homie, that’s my family, that’s my sister.
— Christian Serratos
CHRISTIAN SERRATOS was best known as “The Walking Dead’s” Rosita Espinosa until this fall, when she took on the starring role in Netflix’s “Selena: The Series.” We’ll be seeing a lot more of her next year in the second season of “Selena” as well as the 11th season of “The Walking Dead.” Serratos talked with Yvonne Villarreal about playing the beloved Tejano singer for the Nov. 29 issue of Sunday Calendar.
‘Please don’t think I think I’m her,’ Christian Serratos says of her headlining role in the Netflix series about Tejano icon Selena. ‘I know I’m not her.’
PHOTOGRAPHED BY WALLY SKALIJ
The one thing that never gets taken out of the equation is people. And one thing people have is greed. If certain people have the opportunity to take advantage, they’re going to do it until they get stopped. So yeah, for some it’s not a cautionary tale. For some it’s terrifyingly like a prescription.
— Don Cheadle
DON CHEADLE earned his 10th Emmy nomination for his role in Showtime’s “Black Monday,” about the exploits of “coked-out, amoral Wall Street pirates and ‘80s fashion victims,” as Michael Ordoña described the series in his interview with Cheadle for the Aug. 20 issue of The Envelope. Cheadle will also be suiting up again as Marvel hero War Machine/James Rhodes for the recently announced Disney+ series “Armor Wars,” and he’ll be in LeBron James’ “Space Jam: A New Legacy” in 2021.
The wild, 1980s Showtime comedy can be a blend of “Wall Street” and Sam Peckinpah, says producer-star Don Cheadle.
The summer of ’86, I didn’t know f__-all about Los Angeles, other than what I’d seen on ‘The Beverly Hillbillies’ and ‘Dragnet.’ I landed in Burbank at a house I could crash at for a month. ... Man, I was just so up for the adventure, and so excited when I’d drive by a studio. Then I moved, and it was one of those eight guys in a two-bedroom apartment in North Hollywood kind of things. You have your little corner where you keep your clothes folded up in a little bedroll. I became quite accustomed to McDonald’s and Shakey’s Pizza buffet.
— Brad Pitt
We moved to Silver Lake, and it was me bugging my parents on the commute to school to please, please, please drop me off at auditions. But I kept getting rejected by agents. I think because I was a break dancer at the time and had crazy haircuts. ... But that rejection, it was like, even though I lived in the mecca of this dreamland that was the movie industry, it felt like this intangible world where I needed a fairy godmother to come down and say, ‘You are anointed as an actor.’
— Leonardo DiCaprio
QUENTIN TARANTINO, LEONARDO DI CAPRIO and BRAD PITT met Times entertainment columnist Glenn Whipp at the almost inevitable Chateau Marmont to talk about their earliest days in Hollywood, before they teamed up to make “Once Upon a Time ... in Hollywood.” The film earned 10 Oscar nominations, including three for Tarantino (director, producer, writer), a lead actor spot for DiCaprio and a winning supporting actor nod for Pitt. Tarantino talked about living in his car while working at Video Archives in Manhattan Beach, DiCaprio opened up about his earliest audition rejections and Pitt shared what he remembers about his first TV roles (Tarantino was outraged that Pitt can’t recall if he had a scene with J.R. on “Dallas”). The interview appeared in the Jan. 23 issue of The Envelope.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
I grew up running track for the Oakland Police Athletic League, so my coaches were cops. Despite the sort of healthy Black fear of police I have, you know, just growing up in my body, I also have profound love and respect and am thankful to some specific police officers in my life.
— Daveed Diggs
DAVEED DIGGS was seen in many guises in 2020. In May came the launch of his TNT series “Snowpiercer,” based on
the French graphic novels “Le Transperceneige” and Bong Joon Ho’s 2013 film. In July, Disney+ released the film version of “Hamilton,” featuring Diggs as Thomas Jefferson and the Marquis de Lafayette. And in October his experimental rap trio Clipping released the horrorcore album, “Visions of Bodies Being Burned,” not to mention their Juneteenth release of “Chapter 319” in honor of George Floyd with a sample from Floyd who rapped in Houston’s chopped and screwed scene as Big Floyd. Diggs is also costar of the Apple TV+ animated musical series “Central Park.” Diggs talked with The Times’ Michael Ordoña about “Snowpiercer” and more for Calendar.
Tony and Grammy winner Daveed Diggs (“Hamilton”) tackles class divisions in the TNT series adaptation of “Snowpiercer.”
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
If you come from a so-called minority, let’s say me as an Asian American, you live in a condition of narrative scarcity: almost none of the stories are about you. So when a story about you or someone like you comes along, you put enormous weight on that story.
— Author Viet Thanh Nguyen
VIET THANH NGUYEN, Pulitzer Prize-winning author for “The Sympathizer,” and his 7-year-old son, Ellison, joined Caldecott Medal winner Thi Bui and her 13-year-old son, Hien Bui-Stafford, for a reading of their children’s book “Chicken of the Sea” at the virtual Los Angeles Times Festival of Books on Nov. 1. Ellison came up with the idea for the story when he was 5. Nguyen then wrote the book with his son and turned to Bui and her son to illustrate it. At their virtual Festival of Books appearance, as Dorany Pineda reports, the four talked about the book and Nguyen expanded on his goal for “narrative plentitude” for storytellers of color. Nguyen also hinted at what’s next for his “Sympathizer” protagonist in “The Committed,” the sequel due in March: “He continues making bad choices in his life.”
After a panel for the Festival of Books, Viet Thanh Nguyen discusses his forthcoming novel ‘The Committed,’ the sequel to ‘The Sympathizer.’
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
If you know you can take risks, and there is a network around you that if you crash land, they will catch you, it’s a wonderful feeling. That’s how I feel now. I feel safe.
— Patrick Stewart
PATRICK STEWART returned to his iconic role as Admiral Picard in 2020 for the CBS All Access series “Star Trek: Picard.” Randee Dawn talked with Stewart and lifelong “Trek” fan Michael Chabon, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author and co-creator of the show, about what it took to persuade Stewart to reprise his beloved character — not easy when the actor “felt that the curtain had come down on Jean-Luc Picard.” The story ran in the June 11 issue of The Envelope.
Patrick Stewart thought he’d said his final goodbyes to Capt. Jean-Luc Picard, until writer Michael Chabon showed him what a new series could be.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY MEL MELCON
He’s a hyper-realized version of me. He’s as close to me as Larry David is to his character on ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm.’ ... He’s a lot more of a jerk than I am because I wanted to say some things out loud that I would not normally say. ... This Kenya is the new-school George Jefferson. He’s happy that he’s made it, but he’s also trapped inside the bubble of that success.
— Kenya Barris
KENYA BARRIS, creator of the groundbreaking ABC comedy “black-ish,” took what he calls “the biggest risk I could have ever taken, creatively” by casting himself in his Netflix series “#blackAF.” Here is the extent of his previous acting experience: He played a tree in a school play. As he told Greg Braxton for the April 22 issue of Calendar, “I’m not a f—ing actor.” But since the concept of the series, as Braxton wrote, centers on a successful black comedy writer named Kenya Barris, who’s left behind the broadcast TV arena after scoring a high-priced development deal with Netflix, it’s hard to imagine anyone else in the role.
In Netflix sitcom “#blackAF,” ’black-ish’ creator Kenya Barris moves in front of the camera to star as a successful TV writer living the high life.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
I don’t want to die in my pajamas. I’ll be looping in eternity in a bad look. ... My dress obsessions come from the big Hollywood evangelists, like Aimee Semple McPherson. This parading around while healing or talking in tongues, performing in a big dress. It’s channeling something formal, biblical.
— Performance artist Ron Athey
RON ATHEY was one of several artists who spoke with arts and urban design columnist Carolina A. Miranda about how they were adjusting their lives and work to the pandemic. Spring 2020 saw the publication of “Queer Communion: Ron Athey,” a book about the performance artist’s body of work, which delves into politics, myth, queerness and the body. The story ran in the April 5 issue of Sunday Calendar.
Previous pandemics — smallpox in the Americas, the plague in Europe — reshaped the ways artists worked. How artists are adapting to coronavirus.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY DANIA MAXWELL
John Brown is not a topic most people really learn in school, but I was blessed to have a really good history teacher who didn’t believe in history books — never used them. ... So I had already had a lot of knowledge about John Brown. My mom and I took it as a sign from God.
— —Joshua Caleb Johnson on playing a freed teen slave who joins abolitionist John Brown in Showtime’s “Good Lord Bird”
JOSHUA CALEB JOHNSON was 14 when he filmed Showtime’s “The Good Lord Bird” opposite Ethan Hawke, who starred as abolitionist John Brown. As Henry Shackleford, a newly freed slave whose father is shot before his eyes, he takes up with Brown and must pass as a girl nicknamed “Onion” by Brown. The coming-of-age story has made Johnson, previously seen in “black-ish” and soon to be seen in the next season of FX’s “Snowfall,” an actor to watch. He talked with Greg Braxton for the Oct. 12 issue of Calendar.
Joshua Caleb Johnson co-stars with Ethan Hawke in Showtime’s miniseries “The Good Lord Bird,” about John Brown’s fight to abolish slavery in the 1850s.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY MEL MELCON
When I read the articles talking about national security issues, I’m like, ‘I don’t feel too safe on this.
— Noah Beck
NOAH BECK was one of the TikTok stars who famously joined (and invested in) rival platform Triller this summer when President Trump threatened to shut down TikTok in the U.S. As the influencer told Company Town reporter Wendy Lee in the Aug. 4 issue of Calendar, he was feeling insecure on the platform on which he’d amassed a huge following (currently 22.9 million followers). But as the Trump administration comes to an end, TikTok is still going strong and Beck is still regularly posting there. And in October, possibly to hedge his bets, he started his own YouTube channel.
L.A.’s TikTok creators earn thousands of dollars a month. Trump’s threat of a potential ban has them concerned.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY GENARO MOLINA
Who better to bring those two worlds together than somebody whose entire life is a juxtaposition? My dad is Black and Catholic; my mom is white and Jewish. And I’m from one of the richest cities in the world but grew up in one of San Francisco’s last ’hoods.
— 24kGoldn
24KGOLDN, whose real name is Golden Landis von Jones, had a full scholarship to study business at USC before his first single, “Valentino” broke through. But it was his July single, “Mood,” that became, as Times music critic Mikael Wood says, “the biggest song on the planet” this year. Wood talked with the 20-year-old for the Oct. 15 issue of Calendar,
Eighteen months ago, 24kGoldn was a business major finishing freshman year at USC. Today, he has a No. 1 hit with “Mood” and can afford to lease his own car.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
Being a brown-skinned woman, to me she’s somebody who’s incredibly ambitious and deserves to have a seat at the table but is constantly judged on elements outside of herself. ... To go as far as we sometimes go just to be considered beautiful. ... Watching it up close and being confronted by the symbolism [was] a deeper kind of pain.
— Actress Elle Lorraine
ELLE LORRAINE, known to viewers of Issa Rae’s “Insecure” as Trina, was the breakout star of Justin Simien’s film “Bad Hair.” The L.A.-set horror is “about a woman battling her own killer weave and other insidious forces,” as Times film writer Jen Yamato described it. Lorraine talked with Yamato during the Sundance Film Festival for the Jan. 24 issue of Calendar about an especially tough scene focused on her character’s childhood trauma over “a hair treatment chemical burn that left her scarred [and] so desperate to change her look that she submits to an excruciating weave procedure, which Simien films with a visceral, skin-crawling flourish.”
‘Dear White People’ creator Justin Simien returns to Sundance with a New Jack Swing in the retro-horror satire ‘Bad Hair.’
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
This opera is an opportunity to look at the founding of the United States from different perspectives.
— Tanya Orellana, project codesigner for the opera “Sweet Land”
KELCI HAHN appeared as Makwa in the outdoor opera “Sweet Land” just before COVID-19 shut down all live performances in Los Angeles. Staged by the Industry, Yuval Sharon’s experimental arts company, the site-specific opera took place at Los Angeles State Historic Park near Chinatown. Times classical music critic Mark Swed called the “tenaciously uncategorizable” “Sweet Land,” directed by Sharon and Cannupa Hanska Luger, “opera as astonishment.” Arts writer Jessica Gelt talked with the two directors about their goal behind the opera: “the excavation, deconstruction and reassembly of the myths surrounding the founding of America.” Arts and urban design columnist Carolina A. Miranda talked with the creative team about the sets and “Indigenous futurism” costumes behind the “opera about land whose main set is, quite literally, the land that makes up Los Angeles” for the March 15 issue of Sunday Calendar. Miranda returned to the park for the opera’s final show recorded for video, done without an audience on the weekend pandemic closures were beginning. “This is the last day we could do something like this,” co-conductor and cast member Jenny Wong, told her. Said Sharon: “I think of it a little bit like if a house was burning, and you had the opportunity to run in and save a piece of humanity.”
‘Sweet Land’ by Yuval Sharon’s the Industry, was being performed at Los Angeles State Historic Park until it was cut short due to the coronavirus.
Opera phenom Yuval Sharon, Native artists Cannupa Hanska Luger and Raven Chacon, and Chinese-born composer Du Yun deliver a gloriously ambitious show.
With a creative team of Native, Chinese and African American artists, ‘Sweet Land’ revisits the founding of America through a different lens.
The opera ‘Sweet Land’ was a success. Then came the coronavirus. How Yuval Sharon’s company banded together for one last show where cameras replaced the audience.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
I can’t get in front of people and perform. Everything went virtual. ‘Expensive’ and ‘Ego Death,’ two of the songs that dropped off the album, are very, I would say, club songs. Not being able to go to a club or to a concert — go anywhere — and perform them is definitely a big burden.
— Ty Dolla $ign
TY DOLLA SIGN, born Tyrone Griffin Jr., spoke with music writer Randall Roberts from the patio of his L.A. home about the difficulty of releasing his third studio album, “Featuring Ty Dolla Sign” (formerly “Dream House”) during a pandemic. The story appeared in the Sept. 27 issue of Sunday Calendar. In November, the album reached No. 1 on Billboard’s Top R&B Albums chart.
While making his new album, in-demand R&B and hip-hop singer-songwriter Ty Dolla Sign listened to a lot of Prince and J Dilla and enjoyed a lot of Mary Jane.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY FRANCINE ORR
It’s kind of like the beginning of a return to normalcy.
— Vivica A. Fox
VIVICA A. FOX talked with TV writer Greg Braxton for the Sept. 20 issue of Sunday Calendar not long before she was set to cohost E’s “Live From the Red Carpet” with Giuliana Rancic ahead of the 72nd annual Primetime Emmy Awards. Fox saw it as a hopeful sign that the Emmys show was returning with remote appearances planned and distancing measures for producing the show. But just before the ceremony and days after the photo shoot, both Fox and Rancic tested positive for COVID-19 and had to pull out of their hosting duties. Rancic has since recovered and last month was back on the red carpet for the People’s Choice Awards. Fox later found out that her test initially might have been a false positive when another test came back negative. She’s busier than ever with several projects due in 2021.
ABC, E! and KTLA aren’t abandoning the red carpet preshow for the 2020 Emmys — even if COVID-19 has made them abandon the red carpet. Here’s what to expect.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L.CLENDENIN
There’s a Baltimore in every state. .... I found in this story a way to tell my struggle, my personal experiences ... with a script ... that does justice to disenfranchised youth and marginalized communities in a way that doesn’t exploit them but celebrates their humanity.
— Angel Manuel Soto
ANGEL MANUEL SOTO, director of “Charm City Kings,” set in the dirt-bike scene of West Baltimore, Md., appeared with the film’s cast for an L.A. Times Live panel at the Chase Sapphire Lounge on Main during the Sundance Film Festival in January. Film writer Jen Yamato moderated the discussion a day after the movie’s Sundance premiere. Based on a real-life community, the film had been set for a limited theatrical release in April but, after pandemic delays, debuted on HBO Max in October. In his review, Times film critic Justin Chang described “Charm City Kings” as “a slick, appealing blend of summertime coming-of-ager and cautionary crime thriller.”
The cast and filmmakers behind Sundance drama “Charm City Kings” on starting conversations with their Baltimore-set coming-of-age drama.
Angel Manuel Soto’s slick, energetic drama is a fictional adaptation of the documentary “12 O’Clock Boys.”
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
I’m obsessed with aesthetics. I’m obsessed with beauty. I think that obsession comes from an extreme point of pain and sadness and isolation.
— Maurice Harris
MAURICE HARRIS hardly needed “Centerpiece,” the talk show he hosted on the short-lived streaming platform Quibi. His Bloom & Plume floral design studio and Blume & Plume Coffee expansion next door in L.A.’s Historic Filipinotown had already allowed him to establish “a personal and professional brand focused on luxury, Black excellence and ... social issues with ‘beauty, grace and fun’” as arts writer Makeda Easter wrote in her interview with Harris for the Aug. 11 issue of Calendar. His “surrealist, sculpture-like arrangements and his exuberant personality” has attracted celebrity and luxury-brand commissions (Louis Vuitton, Goop and Valentino), including a spot as floral designer on Beyonce’s visual album “Black Is King.” And he’s currently a co-host and judge on HBO Max’s floral competition series “Full Bloom.” But after George Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapolis police, Easter says Harris found himself with a pickaxe outside his Echo Park apartment “digging furiously” and eventually turning the upturned dirt into a garden with herbs, berries, black watermelon, flowers and vegetables — “converting ugliness into beauty.” As Harris told Easter, “When you see someone that looks like you, a Black male body just treated like it doesn’t matter, it just shatters all the work that you feel like you’ve done.”
This California-native helped bring “Black Is King” to life. He also runs a floral design studio, a coffee shop and has a new Quibi show.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY MARIAH TAUGER
I love music that is about joy and positivity and being present, and beats that are hypnotic. When someone is drumming and they stop, I instantly miss it. Things feel silent.
— Madame Gandhi
MADAME GANDHI, the musician and activist, whose given name is Kiran Gandhi, pulled off a Harvard MBA while, unbeknownst to her parents, flying off to Poland, Japan and other destinations on weekends to play drums onstage with rapper M.I.A. Gandhi was also coming to terms with being attracted to multiple genders. Now 31, she’s at work on her third album, “Vibrations,” under a new record deal with Sony Masterworks, and she collaborated with Indian Canadian fashion brand Nor Black Nor White on custom-dyed silk dresses, shirts and jumpsuits. She spoke with Kavita Daswani for the Nov. 8 Image section.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Madame Gandhi has been working on a new album. She also shot a new TED Talk and a Tiny Desk concert for NPR.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY JAY L. CLENDENIN
I’ve had several careers. There was one career where I was happy to be working. Then there was one where I was so happy to be able to be working again. And now there’s one where I’m working — and it’s working.
— Robert Downey Jr.
ROBERT DOWNEY JR. and SUSAN DOWNEY are not only life partners but producing partners. At the start of 2020, they came out with Downey Jr.’s first post-”Avengers” movie, “Dolittle,” a big-budget passion project that was negatively reviewed but still made more than $250 million thanks to strong international box office numbers. Up next for the couple in late 2021 is the third installment of their popular “Sherlock Holmes” franchise. The two of them talked with Josh Rottenberg about their married and professional lives for the Jan. 16 issue of Calendar.
With the family film “Dolittle,” Robert Downey Jr. and his producing partner and wife, Susan, enter a new post-Marvel chapter.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY DANIA MAXWELL
I wouldn’t have thought Filipina burlesque would ever have been a thing. Filipino culture is very colonized, it’s very Catholic. We don’t talk about sex, so that’s maybe a lot of the programming that I’ve had to deconstruct over the years.
— Mizon Garde
MIZON GARDE, an accountant by day, was one of the all-Filipina cast of dancers that arts writer Jessica Gelt talked with for a Feb. 23 Sunday Calendar story on the bawdy revue “Burlesque Las FilipinX.” Sponsored by the Assn. for the Advancement of Filipino American Arts and Culture, or FilAm Arts, the show at Genever Bar in the L.A. Historic Filipinotown neighborhood was created in part “to ramp up recognition and excitement,” Gelt wrote, “for nontraditional art forms in the community.”
“A lot of us are still trying to break free from ... the colonial mentality of what a Filipina should be,” says an organizer of “Burlesque Las FilipinX.”
PHOTOGRAPHED BY GABRIELLA ANGOTTI-JONES
When you’re training, it seems more like a dream. But once you start working, it’s about … being an empty vessel for whoever’s in front of the room. And depending on the politics of the company, you might not get to really dance.
— Chris Emile
CHRIS EMILE was just about to debut “Amend,” a solo series on Black masculinity at the MAK Center for Art and Architecture at the Schindler House when the choreographer and dancer spoke with Makeda Easter for a March 8 Calendar story about “setting his work in nontraditional dance spaces and ... tackling race and other social issues.” The performances, cut short by COVID restrictions, were revived for limited audiences of 10 in September.
Choreographer Chris Emile has cultivated the kind of hip, young following that dance companies crave. How? Think Solange and Anderson .Paak.
Chris Emile’s show about Black masculinity premiered in March at the MAK Center in West Hollywood. How he’s resurrected it, with pandemic precautions.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY GINA FERAZZI
I measure everything from that moment. ... There was no way we could stand by. You must do something. You must step in.
— Judithe Hernandez, artist
JUDITHE HERNANDEZ spoke with arts and urban design columnist Carolina A. Miranda for the Aug. 23 special issue of Sunday Calendar, part of a paper-wide project on the Chicano Moratorium. The artist’s experience as a young woman at the 1970 antiwar protest that turned violent shaped her as an artist.
PHOTOGRAPHED BY CHRISTINA HOUSE
“Racism ain’t a good look, honey.” ... “Racists, sashay away!” ... “Less Karens, more caring.”
— Signs seen at All Black Lives Matter March, June 14
JASON DE PUY was just one of thousands of masked protesters who took to the streets of Hollywood and West Hollywood for the June 14 All Black Lives Matter demonstration, where many marched in solidarity against racism and in support of LGBTQ rights. Hailey Branson-Potts and Matt Stiles covered the protest for the June 15 California section.
Thousands of people filled the streets of Hollywood and West Hollywood on Sunday, denouncing racial injustice and supporting LGBTQ rights in a march called All Black Lives Matter.
Movie theaters closed. Broadway went dark. Concert venues fell silent.
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.