03/31/2026
Celebrating Women’s History Month with Danielle Deadwyler 📺🎥🎭🔥Growing up in Atlanta, where Deadwyler still lives today, Black creativity was the city’s “source blood,” says the 43-year-old performance artist, actor, and filmmaker. She studied at local institutions like the Marlene Rounds School of Dance, graduated with a history degree from Spelman College, earned an M.A. from Columbia University and an M.F.A. from Ohio’s Ashland University.
Deadwyler planned to pursue a career in academia and perform only part-time. But, after taking a job as an elementary school teacher in her hometown, she quickly realized that she needed to give all of herself over to art. After a successful start in local theater, Deadwyler made a name for herself on TV shows like Atlanta, Watchmen, and Station Eleven. A memorable supporting turn in the 2021 neo-Western The Harder They Fall led to her breakout film role the following year in Till.
Deadwyler is developing a film adaptation of Ann Petry’s 1946 debut novel, The Street, the first book by a Black woman to sell more than a million copies. It’s just one of the many works by Black female authors that she hopes to bring to the stage or screen in the future. “I want to be a tree, extending a branch in all directions,” Deadwyler says. “Enabling others in my community to grow in the ways they need to.”