
Age: 36
female
Danielle Brooks is an American actress whose work spans television, film, and Broadway. She first gained widespread recognition as Tasha “Taystee” Jefferson on Orange Is the New Black (2013–2019), a role that became one of the series’ emotional centers and established her as a major presence on television. She later reached a broader mainstream audience starring as Leota Adebayo in James Gunn’s HBO series Peacemaker, where her performance played a central role in the show’s balance of action, satire, and character-driven storytelling. The series marked a high-profile expansion of her work into genre television tied to DC Comics. Brooks made her Broadway debut in 2015 as Sofia in the revival of The Color Purple, earning a Tony Award nomination and winning a Grammy Award with the cast. She reprised the role in the 2023 film adaptation, a performance that brought her nominations from the Academy Awards, BAFTA, and Golden Globes, solidifying her transition into major film roles. Alongside acting, Brooks has taken on producing and hosting work. She portrayed Mahalia Jackson in the television biopic Robin Roberts Presents: Mahalia (2021), serving as an executive producer and earning a Primetime Emmy nomination. She later hosted Netflix’s Instant Dream Home, receiving a Daytime Emmy nomination for her work as a program host. Brooks has continued to balance screen and stage appearances, returning to Broadway in August Wilson’s The Piano Lesson and starring in the fantasy adventure comedy A Minecraft Movie, further expanding her range across genres.

In 1960s Louisiana, Caroline, a Black maid working for a Jewish family, discovers a twenty-dollar bill in the pocket of young Noah's pants. Caught between her desperate need for money and her moral compass, she decides to keep it—a choice that spirals into unexpected consequences. As the family grapples with the theft and Caroline wrestles with guilt and defiance, their worlds collide in a transformative exploration of race, class, and redemption. Set against the backdrop of the Civil Rights era, this intimate yet sweeping musical examines how one small act of transgression can unearth deeper truths about dignity, forgiveness, and change. Through soaring melodies and raw emotional honesty, the story reveals how people from different worlds can challenge each other to grow.
