All posts tagged: DuVernay

‘Not Suitable For Work’ Star Nicholas Duvernay on ‘White Lotus’ Bump

‘Not Suitable For Work’ Star Nicholas Duvernay on ‘White Lotus’ Bump

“This is my first real, true press run,” Not Suitable For Work star Nicholas Duvernay says on a Zoom call from New York. The 27-year-old actor, who broke out as a supporting cast member on season three of The White Lotus, is experiencing several firsts as he promotes his first series regular role in the new Mindy Kaling comedy Not Suitable For Work. The Hulu series that premiered last week centers around a gaggle of overworked 20-somethings who live across the hall from one another. Duvernay plays Kel Washington, a medical student and aspiring actor. Duvernay stars alongside Avantika Vandanapu, Ella Hunt, Will Angus and Jack Martin, with Jay Ellis rounding out the main cast. “We actually all love each other,” Duvernay says. “It’s such a tight-knit group.” Below, the actor digs into booking Not Suitable For Work, reflects on how The White Lotus changed his path and teases his next project: the adaptation of Ali Hazelwood’s romance novel, The Love Hypothesis. *** What stood out to you about Not Suitable For Work? I read …

Chelsea Clinton, Ava DuVernay, Jodie Foster, and Female Art Industry Leaders Champion One Another at Inaugural Making Their Mark Forum

Chelsea Clinton, Ava DuVernay, Jodie Foster, and Female Art Industry Leaders Champion One Another at Inaugural Making Their Mark Forum

The art market has its share of globe-trotting fairs but few glamorous female-centric industry events—until now. This month, Komal Shah, the California-based collector, decided to simply invent the event that didn’t exist. Her Making Their Mark Forum gathered more than 350 curators, artists, and industry leaders (the vast majority of them women) in Washington, DC, from March 5 to 7, primarily at the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library. The main theater where talks were held was extraordinary, befitting of the art appreciators in the room. Steeply raked in the classical sense, it was a theatron, literally, with guests arrayed above and speakers emerging below from what the Greeks called the skene, a closed structure behind the stage. “I spent a lot of time in these libraries as a kid,” said Chelsea Clinton, one of the morning’s speakers, of the D.C. library system. The setting gave the panel discussions a faint charge of drama, and indeed dangerous ideas were being shared. Dr. Sarah Lewis, Founder, Vision & Justice and Dr. Chelsea Clinton, Vice Chair, Clinton …