Rashida Jones

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Rashida Jones
Jones at the 2017 Peabody Awards
Born
Rashida Leah Jones

(1976-02-25) February 25, 1976 (age 48)
Alma materHarvard University
Occupations
  • Actress
  • filmmaker
Years active1997–present
PartnerEzra Koenig (2015–present)
Children1
Parents
Relatives

Rashida Leah Jones (

TBS comedy series Angie Tribeca
(2016–2019).

Jones also appeared in the films I Love You, Man (2009), The Social Network (2010), Our Idiot Brother (2011), The Muppets (2011), Celeste and Jesse Forever (2012), which she co-wrote, and Tag (2018). Jones also co-wrote the story of Toy Story 4 (2019).

She worked as a producer on the film Hot Girls Wanted (2015) and the series Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On (2017), directing the first episode of the latter. Both works explore the sex industry. In 2018, her documentary Quincy, about her father, Quincy Jones, debuted on Netflix; it won the Grammy Award for Best Music Film in 2019.

Early life and education

Jones was born in Los Angeles, California, to actress

dial-up modem before it was cool".[21] Jones displayed musical ability from an early age and can play classical piano.[23] Her mother told Entertainment Tonight in 1990 that Jones was "also a fabulous singer and songwriter".[24]

Jones attended

Brentwood. In 1994, Jones garnered attention with an open letter[25] responding to scathing remarks made by rapper Tupac Shakur about her parents' interracial marriage in The Source
. Shakur, who later apologized for these remarks, went on to be friends with Rashida and her family. Rashida's sister, Kidada, was dating Tupac at the time of his death.

Rashida attended

O. J. Simpson murder trial.[22][27] She became involved in the performing arts and served as musical director for the Opportunes, an a cappella group,[28] co-composed the score for the 149th annual Hasty Pudding Theatricals performance, and acted in several plays.[29] In her second year at college, Jones performed in For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide / When the Rainbow Is Enuf, which she said was "healing" because she had been seen by many black students as not being "black enough".[30] She studied religion and philosophy[31] and graduated in 1997.[32]

Career

Acting

Jones appeared in the 1997 miniseries adaptation of

NAACP Image Award nomination in her final year.[33] Although she had a minor supporting role in the series, film opportunities quickly surfaced. She had a small role in Full Frontal, directed by Steven Soderbergh, and starred in Now You Know, written and directed by Kevin Smith regular Jeff Anderson. She also starred in the short film Roadside Assistance with Adam Brody
.

After Jones left Boston Public, she appeared in

TNT police drama Wanted
.

Jones was considering leaving the acting profession and pursuing a graduate degree in

Karen Filippelli. She appeared regularly during the third season, returning as a guest star for three episodes in seasons four, five, and six.[34]

Jones also played Karen in the February 2007

Blu-ray release.[36] She co-starred in Unhitched, the short-lived 2008 comedy series produced by the Farrelly brothers. She also appeared as the love interest in the Foo Fighters
' music video "Long Road to Ruin".

Jason Segel, Jones, and Paul Rudd at the Austin, Texas premiere of I Love You, Man

In January 2009, Jones voiced several characters in an episode of the Adult Swim show Robot Chicken.[37] She played Hannah in Brief Interviews with Hideous Men, an independent film by John Krasinski that screened during the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. She co-starred as Zooey Rice in I Love You, Man, a DreamWorks comedy with Paul Rudd and Jason Segel.

Jones accepted a role in Parks and Recreation, a mockumentary-style sitcom on NBC. The show was created by Greg Daniels and Michael Schur, with whom she previously worked on The Office. She played nurse Ann Perkins from the show's debut until midway through the sixth season, and reprised the role for the final episode of the series.[38]

Jones had a small role in the 2010 Kevin Smith film Cop Out. She also appeared in The Social Network (2010), alongside Jesse Eisenberg and Andrew Garfield, which is set at Harvard. She played Marylin Delpy, a second-year legal associate assisting with the defense of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.

Jones starred opposite

Tribeca Film Festival in April 2010 and was released theatrically in March 2011.[39][40]

Jones's other 2011 films were

Wilfred as Lisa, a hospice volunteer. The episode aired on July 21, 2011, on FX
.

In 2012, she starred opposite Andy Samberg in the film Celeste and Jesse Forever, which she co-wrote.

Along with

season 24
, episode 11).

In 2014, Jones was cast in the lead role of Angie Tribeca on the

TBS comedy series Angie Tribeca, which premiered in 2016.[44] The show was created by Steve and Nancy Carell and was cancelled in 2019.[45]

In 2015, Jones produced the documentary film Hot Girls Wanted, which examines the role of teenage girls in pornographic films.[46] Netflix acquired the film after the film's premiere at Sundance Film Festival; it premiered on May 29, 2015.[47] A spin-off series, Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On, debuted in 2017; Jones was a producer and directed the first episode. Jones is due to be involved in an adaptation of Sell/Buy/Date, a play about the sex industry. Through her involvement in Hot Girls Wanted, Jones gathered a negative reputation among sex workers, as they see the film and series as unfairly depicting the industry and as violating performers' consent.[48] Turned On was criticized after some people who appeared in it said that they did not give permission or withdrew permission, and that the series included their images or personal details without consent.[49][50]

Jones voiced the role of Marcy Kappel, a security forces agent of internal affairs, in Blue Sky Studios animation film Spies in Disguise (2019). In 2020, she starred and served as an executive producer on the Netflix sitcom #blackAF opposite Kenya Barris, who created the series.[51][52] Jones also voices recurring role of Mia on Fox's Duncanville.[53] She stars in the 2020 comedy-drama On the Rocks opposite Bill Murray directed by Sofia Coppola.[54]

Writing

Jones created Frenemy of the State, a comic book series about a socialite who is recruited by the

CIA. The comics are published by Oni Press and co-written with husband-and-wife writing team Nunzio DeFilippis and Christina Weir.[55] In October 2009, before the first issue had been released, Jones sold the screen rights to Universal Pictures and Imagine Entertainment. Brian Grazer and Eric Gitter produced the film, and Jones co-wrote the screenplay with writing partner Will McCormack.[56]

Jones sold her first screenplay, a comedy titled Celeste and Jesse Forever, in March 2009. She co-wrote the script with McCormack and was attached to star in the film.[57] It was released in 2012.

In 2016, Jones co-wrote the teleplay of "Nosedive", an episode of the television anthology series Black Mirror with Michael Schur from a story by Charlie Brooker.[58]

Jones and McCormack worked on the script of Toy Story 4 for Pixar Animation Studios. Jones left the writing assignment early due to feeling that Pixar is "a culture where women and people of color do not have an equal creative voice".[59] The film was released in June 2019, with the pair being among those receiving a "story by" credit.[60][61][62]

Jones has been published in Teen Vogue magazine, where she worked as a contributing editor.[63] She wrote chapter 36 of her father's biography, Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones (2001).

Jones contributed a "thank-you note" to Michelle Obama in The New York Times in 2016[64] which was excerpted in the 2017 book Courage Is Contagious.[65]

Jones co-wrote the pilot episode of the Hulu mystery thriller series The Other Black Girl, a television adaptation of the 2021 novel by Zakiya Dalila Harris. She is also an executive producer on the series.[66] The series premiered on September 13, 2023.[67]

Music and related videos

As a singer, Jones has provided backing vocals for the band

QD3's production. Jones also contributed vocals on the song "Dick Starbuck: Porno Detective" on The High & Mighty's 1999 debut Home Field Advantage.[68][69][70]

Jones contributed vocals to songs on The Baxter, The Ten and Reno 911!: Miami soundtracks. She sang in some episodes of Boston Public and for charitable events such as the What A Pair Benefit in 2002 to raise money for breast cancer research.[71] In May 2015, Jones released a song titled Wanted to Be Loved alongside Daniel Ahearn, the song was used in the documentary Hot Girls Wanted, which Jones produced.[72]

In 2002, Jones appeared in the video to "More Than a Woman" by Aaliyah alongside her sister Kidada Jones and then-boyfriend Mark Ronson.[73] Jones has also appeared in music videos for The Boy Least Likely To song "Be Gentle With Me", and the Foo Fighters' single "Long Road to Ruin". In the latter she was credited as Racinda Jules and played the role of Susan Belfontaine.[74] In 2013, Jones directed the music video for Sara Bareilles' song "Brave". It marked her debut as a director.

In 2016, she featured in the music video "Flip and Rewind" by Boss Selection, with the video directed by Jones and McCormack.[75]

Online comedy series

Jones has appeared in several online comedy series projects. She starred in

anti-gay marriage initiative, written by Marc Shaiman. From 2013 to 2015, she provided the voice of Hotwire on the Hulu comedy series The Awesomes
.

Modeling and advertising

In 2011,

Verizon FiOS.[77] In 2017, Jones became a spokeswoman for the Almay brand of cosmetics.[78] In 2018, Jones became the first female ambassador for Maison Kitsune.[79] In 2019, she modeled for and endorsed the glasses brand, Zenni Optical.[80] She has also served as the narrating voice for Southwest Airlines and Expedia
as well as appearing in Expedia television commercials.

During the February 2022

Citi TV spot, "Massage Chair".[82]

Podcasting

In November 2020 Jones started the Bill Gates and Rashida Jones Ask Big Questions podcast with co-host Bill Gates.

Other ventures

In September 2018, Jones's production company, Le Train Train, signed a first-look television deal with MRC.[83]

Personal life

Jones in 2017

Although raised Jewish, Jones began practicing Hinduism in her early teens with her mother, after the two visited an ashram in India.[22] As an adult, she practices Judaism.[84] She told a reporter:

In this day and age, you can choose how you practice and what is your relationship with God. I feel pretty strongly about my connection, definitely through the Jewish traditions and the things that I learned dating the guy that I dated. My boyfriends tend to be

Jewish and also be practicing ... I don't see it as a necessity, but there's something about it that I connect with for whatever reason.[17]

On her multi-racial identity, she has remarked, "I have gone through periods where I only feel black or Jewish. Now I have a good balance."[21] and "The thing is, I do identify with being black, and if people don't identify me that way, that's their issue. I'm happy to challenge people's understanding of what it looks like to be biracial..."[85]

Jones became engaged to music producer Mark Ronson in February 2003. He proposed on her 27th birthday, using a custom-made crossword puzzle spelling out "Will you marry me?" They ended their relationship approximately one year later.[86][87]

In early 2017 it was reported that Jones was in a relationship with musician Ezra Koenig, and in August 2018 they had a son.[88] In a 2024 interview published in The Guardian, Koenig referred to Jones as his wife.[89]

Public image

Philanthropic efforts

Jones has worked to promote Peace First (formerly Peace Games), a nonprofit that teaches children to resolve conflict without violence. She has been a board member since 2004 and holds several annual benefits to raise money for the organization.

ONE: The Campaign to Make Poverty History, and The Art of Elysium's volunteer program, which runs artistic workshops for hospitalized children.[91][92][93][94] In 2007, she was honorary chair of the annual Housing Works benefit, which fights AIDS and homelessness in New York City.[95] She has helped fundraise for St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, the EB Medical Research Foundation, and New York's Lower Eastside Girls Club.[96][97][98][99]

Syria refugee camp visit

In 2016, Jones visited a Syrian refugee camp in Lebanon. She wrote about the confronting experience for Vanity Fair.[100] She also made a virtual reality movie to document her experiences, which appeared on rescue.org.[101]

Political work

Jones has campaigned for

2004 election, speaking at student rallies and a public gallery in Ohio.[102][103]

She supported

2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns. In 2008, along with Kristen Bell, she visited college campuses in Missouri to discuss the candidates and to encourage voter registration for the Democratic Party.[104][105] In 2012, she campaigned in Iowa along with Parks and Recreation co-star Adam Scott.[106]

Accolades

References

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External links