UP NEXT
Interview with a Vampire Series on AMC
Coming up in 2022, Kalyne is excited to portray the character Grace in a recurring role on the new Interview with a Vampire series premiering on AMC. For more info, Check out the Variety article Here.
NEWS
What To Send Up When It Goes Down @ BAM
Kalyne had the honor of embodying the character “FOUR” in What To Send Up When It Goes Down written by Aleshea Harris and directed by Whitney White. What To Send Up When It Goes Down is a play, a ritual, and a home-going celebration that bears witness to the physical and spiritual deaths of Black people as a result of racist violence. Setting out to disrupt the pervasiveness of anti-Blackness and acknowledge the resilience of Black people throughout history, Aleshea Harris’s acclaimed, groundbreaking play blurs the boundaries between actors and audiences, offering a space for catharsis, discussion, reflection, and healing. Check out this New York Times review by Maya Phillips.
ABC Discovers: New York Talent Showcase
Kalyne was selected for the first virtual ABC showcase in 2020! For more info and the promo video, click Here.
Lessons in Survival @ Vineyard Theater
Lessons in Survival was featured in the New York Times! Check out the The Sound in Their Ears? Black Thinkers Sharing ‘Lessons in Survival’ by Jennifer Schuessler and more info about the show below. A digital theater experience fueled by the urgency of our present moment, The Commissary, a multigenerational collective of more than 40 theatre artists, have come together to reinvestigate the words of trailblazing artists and activists who survived and created in times of revolution in our country. Baldwin. Giovanni. Davis. Lorde. Hansberry. Rustin. Hamer. In LESSONS IN SURVIVAL, a cohort of actors channel historic conversations, interviews and speeches, listening to original broadcasts on an in-ear feed and speaking exactly what they hear. In bringing these words to new life in the present, they ask what these voices can teach us about our country now and the opportunity for true change that stands before us. How might they propel us to look courageously at the effects of systemic racism, to imagine ourselves outside of its prescriptions, and to create, together, a shared future of collective liberation?