Every actor has a moment when they realize, This is it. This is what I am meant to do. For Violett Beane, 23, that moment came during her sophomore year of high school in Austin, Texas, performing onstage in a rendition of the musical Parade. “I wasn’t a lead,” she laughs, but still, “It was scary and very, very exciting. And I thought, ‘I want to feel that again.’ And that was the moment I realized I should pursue this.”
It would be years before that ambition paid off with her star-making role opposite Brandon Micheal Hall in God Friended Me, now in its second season. Beane plays Cara Bloom, a writer in New York City searching for her mother, who left when she was a child. When God “friends” Hall’s character on Facebook, the two mortals are tasked with performing good deeds, giving them renewed faith in the world.
But back in high school, Beane was getting the opposite of high-fives from a divinity, beginning with a new theater coach her junior year who was anything but a fan. “I was calling him out, and he didn’t appreciate that. And I didn’t get cast in anything,” she says. Yes, Beane chalks this interaction up to adolescence, but also to her astrological leanings: She’s a Taurus, and she’s stubborn. But that’s also exactly the reason one grumpy theater teacher didn’t stop her. “I was missing this part of myself that I loved to express,” she says.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Yasmine Al-Bustami's Dallas
Welcome to the Lone Star State and bring your appetite. The NCIS: Hawai’i actress shows us around her hometown.
What Happens In Vegas
Mandeep Dhillon, Jorja Fox, and Paula Newsome are solving crimes, changing the game, and kicking ass in CSI: Vegas.
Survivor – Carrying The Torch
After a 16-month COVID-induced hiatus, the groundbreaking reality series Survivor is finally ready to don its buffs again. For its 41st season, 18 brand-new contestants will be marooned on the island of Fiji and will attempt to outwit, outlast, and outplay each other forthe $1 million prize and, if they strategize correctly, the chance to etch their names in Survivor lore. But first: Let’s hear from host Jeff Probst, meet the new cast, and get up to speed with a highlight reel of memorable players, twists, romances, and more. In the words of Probst, come on in, guys!
Full Speed Ahead
When he’s not catching bad guys on Magnum P.I., actor Tim Kang enjoys his life in the fast lane.
The Boo Crew
This Ghosts story tells how the new CBS comedy came together brilliantly in spite of the ghastly pandemic.
24 Hours With... Debra Martin Chase
The first Black woman to produce a $100 million blockbuster (1996’s Courage Under Fire) and land an overall deal at a major studio (she currently has a deal with Universal Television), executive producer Debra Martin Chase is the powerhouse behind the Queen Latifah drama The Equalizer. Here’s a look inside the world of a Hollywood trailblazer.
Day Dreamer
Emmy-winning The Young and the Restless costume designer David Zyla spills his wardrobe secrets.
That's Entertainment
Happy 40th anniversary, Entertainment Tonight! The history-making news magazine didn’t just talk about the stars … they were right there with them.
Nate Expectations
As a former football star, an analyst on The NFL Today, and a new co-host of CBS’s morning show, Emmy Award–winning Nate Burleson shows his versatility every time he’s on camera. And he’s just getting started.
Street Smarts
Weights, a skateboard, and protein-packed meals keep S.W.A.T.’s Alex Russell feeling fine.