Keenen Ivory Wayans

Actor

Birthday June 8, 1958

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace New York City, U.S.

Age 65 years old

Nationality United States

Height 1.91 m

#3456 Most Popular

1958

Keenen Ivory Desuma Wayans (born June 8, 1958) is an American actor, comedian, and filmmaker.

He is a member of the Wayans family of entertainers.

1980

Townsend and Wayans drove to Los Angeles together when Wayans moved to Los Angeles in 1980.

Wayans worked there as an actor.

He had a regular role as a soldier on the television series For Love and Honor and appeared on Hill Street Blues as an NFL linebacker.

Townsend wrote, directed, and starred in the movie Hollywood Shuffle; Wayans was costar and cowriter.

The movie's success allowed him to raise the money to make I'm Gonna Git You Sucka.

Fox Broadcasting Company approached Wayans to offer him his own show.

Wayans wanted to produce a variety show similar to Saturday Night Live, with a cast of people of color that took chances with its content.

Fox gave Wayans a lot of freedom with the show, although Fox executives were a bit concerned about the show's content before its debut.

1987

He has produced, directed or written several films, starting with Hollywood Shuffle, which he cowrote, in 1987.

Most of his films have included him and one or more of his siblings in the cast.

1990

Wayans first came to prominence as the host and creator of the 1990–1994 Fox sketch comedy series In Living Color.

Wayans created, wrote, and starred in the show, In Living Color, a sketch comedy television series that originally ran on Fox from 1990 to 1994.

1997

From 1997 to 1998, he hosted the talk show The Keenen Ivory Wayans Show.

Most recently, he was a judge for the eighth season of Last Comic Standing.

Wayans was born in Harlem, New York City, son of Howell Stouten Wayans, a supermarket manager, and his wife Elvira Alethia (Green), a homemaker and social worker.

He was the second of ten children.

Genealogical TV show Finding Your Roots revealed that his paternal line traced back to Madagascar.

His father was a devout Jehovah's Witness.

The family later moved to Manhattan's Fulton housing projects, where he primarily grew up.

He attended Seward Park High School during his teenage years, and attended Tuskegee University on an engineering scholarship.

He entertained his friends at college with made-up stories about life in New York.

One semester before graduation, he dropped out of school to focus on comedy.

During his first set performing at The Improv in New York, Wayans met Robert Townsend, who helped him learn about the comedy business.

2000

One of these films, Scary Movie (2000), which Wayans directed, was the highest-grossing movie directed by an African American until it was surpassed by Tim Story's Fantastic Four in 2005.