
Age: 31
female
Gabby Soleil had a lucky break when she was noticed by a talent manager on a street in Beverly Hills, California. In no time, she was appearing in television commercials, starting with a spot for the insurance company Met Life. The young actress received her Screen Actors Guild card at only four years old. At six, in 2001, she acted in her first role in the pilot of the short-lived sitcom "Danny," about a separated father raising two teenagers. She quickly followed up that appearance the same year with a recurring part in the final season of another sitcom, "The Hughleys," a vehicle for comedian D.L. Hughley. She played Adriana, daughter of Milsap, the best friend of the title characters, through three episodes of the program. Her longest running on-screen character came in 2002, when she landed the role of the young version of Essence Atkins's character, Deirdre Chantal "Dee Dee" Thorne, Esq., on "Half & Half," a sitcom about two half-sisters, estranged in their youth, who meet again as adults. She went on to play Young Dee Dee in eight episodes until 2006. In 2005, she began voice acting when she took on the role of Jazmine Dubois, a girl who lives across the street from the main characters in the successful animated social satire "The Boondocks," based on the comic strip by Aaron McGruder.

Gabby Soleil

Jazmine Dubois
for Jazmine Dubois in The Boondocks Season 4 (2011 - 2012)
Suggested by thejacobtremblayfan

As America enters the social media age, the Freeman family faces a new wave of chaos in Woodcrest. With Granddad engaged to Jennifer Winfrey and her genius son Elias moving in, Huey finds himself clashing with a new ideological rival. Meanwhile, Riley forms a mischievous trio with new friends Louis and Cedric, chasing internet clout through YouTube and Instagram. Jazmine DuBois begins finding her voice with the help of her bold new best friend Estelle. Together, they navigate identity and girlhood in a world of digital trends, race politics, and performative activism. Uncle Ruckus becomes a viral Tea Party pundit, and the Wuncler family tightens their grip on Woodcrest through tech surveillance and gentrification. The season builds to a two-part finale where Huey is framed as a domestic threat. With help from Elias, Riley, Estelle, and Cedric, he must stop a bomb plot, clear his name, and — for the first time — show up for graduation.