ABOUT JACKÉE HARRY Vivacious, witty, and completely unforgettable, Jackée Harry was born to entertain.
Born Jacqueline Yvonne Harry on August 14, 1956 in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and reared from the age of nine in Harlem, New York, by her mother, Flossie, Jackée landed the lead role of the King in her school's production of
The King and I at the tender age of fourteen. Upon graduation from New York City's High School of Music and Art with a distinction in Opera, Jackée attended the University of Long Island, where she earned her B.A. in education.
Jackée began her career as a history teacher at Brooklyn Technical High School but left after two years to pursue acting. She studied at the Henry Street Settlement on the Lower East Side and made her professional acting debut in 1973 in Richard Wesley's
Goin' Through Changes; not long afterward, she made her Broadway debut in
A Broadway Musical as Melinda Bernard. Other Broadway performances include
The Wiz, Eubie!, and
One Mo' Time. In 1983, Jackée made her first television appearance opposite Morgan Freeman in the daytime soap opera
Another World. A year later, she landed her iconic role of Sandra Clark on the NBC sitcom
227. As the breakout star of the series, Jackée became the first African American to win an Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series and was also nominated for a Golden Globe. Her performance on
227 inspired NBC producers to create a television pilot for her entitled
Jackée. After departing from
227 in 1989, she starred opposite Oprah Winfrey in the critically acclaimed adaptation of Gloria Naylor's novel
The Women of Brewster Place. In 1991, Jackée joined an all-star cast led by Della Reese when she played the role of Ruth 'CoCo' Royal in
The Royal Family. From 1994-1999, she starred as the adoptive mother of Tia and Tamara Mowry's characters on the ABC/WB sitcom
Sister, Sister, winning the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for two consecutive years in 1999 and 2000. Jackée also made guest appearances on
Amen, Designing Women, Dave's World, Hollywood Squares, 7th Heaven, and
That's So Raven, before joining the cast of
Everybody Hates Chris in 2006.
Hollywood success did not lead Jackée to turn her back on theater; in 1994 she returned to the stage as Billie Holiday in
Lady Day at Emerson's Bar and Grill followed by stints in
For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide and
The Vagina Monologues. In 2003 she played the role of the Madam in
The Boys From Syracuse on Broadway. Jackée also performed before sold-out audiences across the nation in the stage play
The Cleanup Woman, which is called "one of the highest grossing gospel stage plays of all time" and fronted an Off-Broadway limited-run of
NEWSical: The Musical.Beyond acting, Jackée is a vocal champion of healthy living, education, and philanthropy. She is proud to be a spokesperson for the Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Fund, and a Global Ambassador to the Women's International Center. The National Congress of Black Women presented her with the "Woman of Substance" Award in 2010.
In addition to recurring roles on
Let's Stay Together, Baby Daddy, Girl Meets World, and
The Cool Kids, Jackée starred on the CW's
The First Family and OWN's
The Paynes. She was nominated for a Nollywood and African Film Critics Award for her role in the motion picture
The Man in 3B. In 2019, Jackée participated in a groundbreaking reimagining of Norman Lear's
The Jeffersons, which garnered more than 22 million viewers. In 2021, she rejoined the world of daytime television as real estate mogul Paulina Price on
Days of our Lives. Larger than life and twice as funny, Jackée continues to entertain and inspire in a way that permanently cements her place in the American cultural landscape.
ABOUT DAYS OF OUR LIVES ON PEACOCK For the past 58 years,
Days of our Lives has remained a staple daytime drama. It has weathered political and societal shifts since the mid-1960s and proudly introduced its first Black family, the Grants, in the mid-1970s. Its female heroine, Valerie Grant, shared daytime's first interracial kiss in 1977. Today, Black stories continue to be front and center, addressing societal issues including healthcare, family and career.
Today's cast includes James Reynolds, with Jackée Harry, Raven Bowens, Elia Cantu, and features Lamon Archey and Sal Stowers as "Eli" and "Lani" respectively, who were the couple in the show's first Black wedding.
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