As Lupita Nyongâo accepted an award from the Harlem School of Arts â and entered the stage to Beyoncéâs anthemic hit âBrown Skin Girlâ â the actress mainly had two people to thank for fueling her passion for the arts as a child: her parents.
âI was thinking about (the Harlem School of Arts) and what it does for children and its students (and) I didnât have an institution where Iâm in from in Nairobi, Kenya. And so the only way my interest in the arts thrived was because I had parents who valued those interests,â she said Monday night at the schoolâs annual Mask Ball in New York City. âAnd my mother in particular, she really nurtured my artistic spirit.â
So it was only appropriate that the Oscar winnerâs mother, Dorothy Nyongâo, also received the Visionary Lineage Award alongside her daughter at The Plaza Hotel.
âI really didnât do much,â Dorothy Nyongâo said to laughs from the audience, which included staff and students from the Harlem School of Arts, board members, donors and more.
Dorothy Nyongâo said she noticed her daughterâs interest in the arts as a child and so she looked âfor opportunities to nurture that.â
âMy job was really to facilitate it and Iâd like to encourage parents to do it. Sometimes we make the mistake of trying to make our children what we think we want,â she said.
Dorothy Nyongâo won over the audience with more sweet words for her 36-year-old daughter, who has appeared in films such as âBlack Panther,â â³Star Wars,â â³Usâ and â12 Years a Slave,â for which she won an Academy Award.
âIâm proud of her. She makes me shine.â
Lupita Nyongâo, who earned a Tony nomination for her lead role in Broadwayâs âEclipsed,â thanked her mom for all of her support, explaining that when she was a teenager her mother âdrove to rehearsals after a long day at workâ and sat âin the car for five or so hours … and she never complained.â
âThe Daily Showâ host Trevor Noah introduced the Nyongâos to the stage, and they left the stage as âBrown Skin Girlâ â a song celebrating dark-skinned women where Beyoncé namedrops Lupitaâs name â blasted in the background.
Other honorees at Mondayâs benefit â which raised more than $100,000 in text message donations and featured performances from students, alumni and staff â included Essence Communications CEO Michelle Ebanks and JP Morgan Chase executive Racquel Oden.
Copyright 2019 KQED