Danièle Watts

About Danièle Watts

Who is it?: Actress, Producer, Production Designer
Birth Place:  Riverside County, California, United States
Birth Sign: Sagittarius
Occupation: Actress

Danièle Watts Net Worth

Danièle Watts was born in  Riverside County, California, United States, is Actress, Producer, Production Designer. Danièle Watts is best known for her role in the critically acclaimed Academy Award winning blockbuster hit Django Unchained (2012), acting alongside Oscar nominated Christoph Waltz, Jamie Foxx, and Leonardo DiCaprio as "Coco." On TV, she is known as "Angela Mullen" - love interest to "Shane Botwin" on the 8th season of Showtime's hit show Weeds (2012), and as Martin Lawrence's daughter on the FX show, Partners (2014), also starring Kelsey Grammer (Frasier).A child of a Jamaican mother, and an American father, she studied the performing arts in high school at North Springs Magnet Performing Arts program in Atlanta, GA, and after 4 years of touring as an actress with educational, student-driven works throughout the greater Atlanta area, she was the first student board member to participate on the board of Artists Raising the Consciousness of Humanity (ARCH Productions). During that time she was featured on several episodes of the educational program "Couch Kids,' which presented real teenagers addressing relevant teen issues, which was distributed as part of health education curriculum to hundreds of high school students. She went on to receive a Norman Topping community service based scholarship, and a B.A. in Dramatic Arts from the University of Southern California (Los Angeles), and also studied abroad at the British American Drama Academy in London.An award-winning theatre artist, and advocate for arts education, Danièle has taught performance through the Young Storytellers Foundation, Ices After School Program, and was a founding creator of the performing arts collaboration between Imaginese Productions and the nationally recognized Spark Program for middle school students. In 2013, she was invited by Los Angeles Mayor, Antonio Villaraigosa, to host the arts education programming for The City of Los Angeles African-American Heritage Month events at The Los Angeles City Hall, and The Los Angeles Zoo.On the internet, Danièle can be seen in a leading role in the romantic comedy Wingman Inc. (2015), distributed through Lionsgate (DVD), and on Amazon Instant video. Her starring role opposite Max Burkholder (Parenthood), in the independent film, Babysitter (2015), can be viewed on iTunes, & Amazon Instant Video. On YouTube, she plays Brian Jordan Alvarez (Jane the Virgin)'s adopted sister in The Gay and Wondrous Life of Caleb Gallo (2016), a YouTube breakout hit, created by Alvarez, that was optioned by Lionsgate. Danièle also played a role Alvarez wrote for her, and served as an associate producer for Everything Is Free, Alvarez's feature film debut to be released in 2018.Watts, and her husband Brian James Lucas, also known as celebrity Chef BeLive, have consulted as creative producers for Television project, "Juice Bar," which is in development through arts education non-profit, Arts Alliance For Humanity, and received initial support from prolific Television director, James Burrows (Taxi, Cheers, Friends, Will & Grace). Since making news headlines in 2014 for an incident involving Los Angeles police officers, civil liberties, and public display of affection, Watts and her husband have been advocates of greater dialogue and tolerance of sexual expression, and have participated with the Dr. Susan Block Institute for the Erotic Arts and Sciences to provide sex therapy to the public.
Danièle Watts is a member of Actress

💰 Net worth: Under Review

Some Danièle Watts images

Biography/Timeline

2014

In September 2014, Watts and boyfriend Brian Lucas were accused of having sex in a car on a public street. The police were called for a "citizen complaint of indecent exposure" and loud noises. During and after her arrest, Watts falsely claimed she was the subject of racial profiling, being called a prostitute, and handcuffs leaving her wrist bloodied. After recordings of the encounter were released, a judge ruled the statements Watts made were inaccurate and the police officer was only responding to the 911 call. She was ordered to write letters of apology to all three police officers responding to the scene, as well as neighbors who had witnessed her public altercation. She later had to rewrite the letters due to her use of "passive aggressive" language.