Danielle Deadwyler (born May 3, 1982) is an American actress. She began her career appearing on Atlanta stage, notably the 2009 production of For Colored Girls, and made her screen debut in the 2012 drama film A Cross to Bear. She appeared in the primetime series The Haves and the Have Nots (2015–2017), the series P-Valley (2020), the miniseries Station Eleven (2021–2022), and the miniseries From Scratch (2022). Deadwyler garnered critical acclaim for starring in the western film The Harder They Fall (2021) and the biopic Till (2022). Her portrayal of Mamie Till in the latter earned her many accolades, garnering the Gotham Independent Film Award for Outstanding Lead Performance and earning BAFTA Award, Critics' Choice Movie Award and Screen Actors Guild Award nominations. Description above from the Wikipedia article Danielle Deadwyler, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
The Piano Lesson
(Berniece Charles)
Parallel
(Vanessa)
Carry-On
(Elena Cole)
I Saw the TV Glow
(Brenda)
The Woman in the Yard
The Leisure Seeker
(Hotel Waitress)
40 Acres
(Hailey Freeman)
A Cross to Bear
(Erica)
Gifted
(Animal Shelter Worker)
Jane and Emma
(Jane Manning)
The Devil to Pay
(Lemon Cassidy)
The Harder They Fall
(Cuffee)
Till
(Mamie Till-Mobley)
Otis & Zelma
(Zelma Redding)
The Piano Lesson: Legacy and Vision
P-Valley
(Yoli)
Station Eleven
(Miranda Carroll)
MacGyver
(Brunette Agent)
Jimmy Kimmel Live!
(Self)
Greenleaf
(Stacy)
Tamron Hall
(Self - Guest)
The View
(Self - Guest)
From Scratch
(Zora Wheeler)
Watchmen
(June)
Paradise Lost
(Nicque Green)
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon
(Self)