Intro – Saw him First on Movies on Dream Girls ! He was simply Brilliant he didnt even sing a lot lol !
Known to be private his Ex wife is not even mentioned on Wikipedia NOT even once đ
He Dated Tom Cruise Ex Wife Katie Holmes After The MI Star Divorced his Couch Jumping Oprah Love of His Life Wife
Ex Wife
Who is Connie Kline? She is white you know . and Wait for it ! SHE IS AN ACCOUNTANT !
Connie Kline was born on 29 March 1972 under the sign of Aries in California USA. She is a 47-year-old retired US Air Force veteran and an accountant, but is probably best recognized for being the ex-wife of famous Hollywood actor Jamie Foxx and the mother of their daughter Corinne Foxx.
Eric Marlon Bishop (born December 13, 1967),[1] known professionally as Jamie Foxx, is an American actor, comedian, singer-songwriter, and record producer. He became widely known for his portrayal of Ray Charles in the 2004 biographical film Ray, for which he won the Academy Award, BAFTA, Screen Actors Guild Award, Critics’ Choice Movie Award and Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, becoming the second actor to win all five major lead actor awards for the same performance. That same year, Foxx was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in the crime film Collateral. Since spring 2017, Foxx has served as the host and executive producer of the Fox game show Beat Shazam.
Original Title
Jamie Foxx is the supreme entertainer of our era, and itâs time to recognize him as such
Daughter Corinne


By David Dennis Jr.
A staple of NBCâs The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon is a segment called Musical Genre Challenge. Guests perform pop songs, but in the form of unexpected genres. Jamie Foxx appeared on the May 25 episode, and his first act was to perform Baja Menâs 2000 âWho Let The Dogs Outâ in the style of a Broadway musical. He followed that up by singing Rihannaâs 2015 âBâ- Better Have My Moneyâ â operatically. Foxx absolutely nails both
EX WIFE performances, hitting long notes with genius precision while also adding comedic timing. His performance is equal parts entrancing and hilarious.
Foxx â the former Terrell, Texas, high school star quarterback who stars in this weekâs already heralded Baby Driver and hosts Foxâs new hit game show Beat Shazam â is 49 years old and has been entertaining for nearly 30 years. He has an unimpeachable catalog of accomplishments. A classic, unendingly quotable 2002 stand-up special, I Might Need Security (HBO). The Jamie Foxx Show (The WB, 1996-2001), which showcased Foxxâs supernatural knack for impersonations, and his brilliant timing. Heâs created five studio albums, with millions of copies sold. His 2005 Billboard-topping Unpredictable culminated in a Grammy for the infinitely catchy âBlame it,â featuring T-Pain (and sadly one of the last bastions of auto-tuned R&B radio supremacy).
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Jamie Foxx says Dak Prescott is the true Willie Beamen
Finally and most notably, in 2005, Foxx won the Academy Award for best actor for his title role in Ray, bringing Ray Charles to life in one of the most transcendent, pitch-perfect biographical performances in movie history. Along with Sidney Poitier, Denzel Washington and Forest Whitaker, he is one of only four black male actors to win in the lead category. To be great at one of these things â comedy, drama, singing/songwriting â would make Foxx an entertainment powerhouse. To have mastered them all makes him a once-in-a-generation talent. Foxx â not Will Smith, not Dave Chappelle, not even BeyoncĂ© â is the supreme entertainer of our era, and itâs time to recognize him as such.
And it all started with a character called âWanda.â
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When Jamie Foxx made his television debut, on the third season of Keenan Ivory Wayansâ sketch comedy show In Living Color in 1991, it was after years of working his way through the stand-up comedy circuit, most famously at Hollywoodâs The Comedy Store, a mecca for comedians such as Cedric The Entertainer and Jim Carrey, who would perform at open mics.
On Color, Foxx appeared alongside future superstars Carrey, Jennifer Lopez, Chris Rock, Kim Coles, Damon Wayans and Larry Wilmore, not to mention Anne-Marie Johnson, David Alan Grier and Tommy Davidson.
He stood out from the pack, especially in black households across the country, for playing Wanda, a homely woman with a large fake butt, humongous lips and a wonky eye. Foxx-as-Wanda would try to pick up men (most frequently played by Davidson as a well-put-together businessman) and made the faux seductive âHeyyyyyâ a catchphrase. It was combined with a patented cross-eyed gaze. Foxxâs commitment to the character made Wanda a tentpole for In Living Color.
You would be forgiven for thinking the show showed off the breadth of Foxxâs talent. That is, if you hadnât seen him on Roc.
Foxx stepped in to portray the iconic Willie Beamen, a confident, young black quarterback who replaces a worn veteran QB.
Roc (Fox, 1991-94) was a family sitcom from the people who created Cheers and Taxi; it starred Charles Dutton, Ella Joyce and Rocky Carroll as a middle-class black family in Baltimore. The show has earned cult status for Duttonâs resonant performances and Joyceâs endearing character work, and it was where it became clear that Foxx was more than Wanda. Foxx appeared for nine episodes in the second and third seasons as a neighbor with special needs: âCrazy George.â This was a three-dimensional Foxx. He still used his over-the-top comedy, but Crazy George was so lovable and full of compassion, it became clear there was more to Foxx than impressions.
Foxx continued his growth in 1993 with the HBO stand-up special Straight From The Foxxhole. The special was full of memorable lines and his mirror-image impressions. But that was to be expected. What caught audiences off guard was when, toward the end, he took to his piano (with his grandmotherâs encouragement, he studied classical piano from the age of 5) and blended his stand-up act with musical compositions â and even went into straight-up, no-laughs R&B. There was a smattering of uncomfortable laughter as Foxx sang his serious music. The segment became an entry into his musical career.
âMy whole plan was do the comedy however you do the comedy,â he said in 1994 on KPIXâs Bay Sunday. âGet your name out there. Get the HBO special and you control whatâs going on. So I did 50 minutes of comedy, and then I take it into the music real smooth.â
The Bay Area interview, however, demonstrates the challenges Foxx faced with regard to being taken seriously as a musical artist. The Q&A segment is painfully awkward. Host Barbara Rodgers spends the first minutes pressing him to perform as Wanda, and Foxx, frustrated, refuses to resurrect his character.
The interview was to promote Foxxâs 1994 debut album Peep This (Fox Records), which was mostly written by Foxx in the vein of Jodeci and R. Kelly. It showed Foxx could hang with the greats vocally; however, the music itself was subpar, with lackluster production and clichĂ©d lyrics. As a result, the album performed poorly on the charts. He didnât release another album for 11 years.
Foxx couldnât quite shake the idea that he was âjustâ Wanda, even as he entered his first prime of the mid-â90s. He had to face a derailment that redefined his career. Foxx had auditioned for the role of Jerry Maguireâs Rod Tidwell, the dynamic football star who played opposite Tom Cruise. But Foxx struggled in the audition.
Foxx couldnât quite shake the idea that he was âjustâ Wanda, even as he entered his first prime of the mid-â90s.
âI blew it, man,â he told Playboy in 2005. âMaybe I wasnât ready. Tom was just too famous, and I was too young. I was a stand-up comedian, and I just fâ-d it up. I was reading all loud and stuff, and Tom was very quiet. So I read my lines, and then he paused for a long time. ⊠So I said: âTom, itâs your line.â And he looked at me and said: âI know. I got it.â â
The role, of course, went to Cuba Gooding Jr., who won an Oscar for best supporting actor, launching him into the world of A-list Hollywood. Meanwhile, Foxx was making 1997âs Booty Call.
âBooty Call wasnât exactly Oscar-worthy,â Foxx said on CBSâs Sunday Morning in 2013. âI was trying to get a check.â The movie, a raucous sex comedy about mishaps that occur as two men try to seal the deal with their dates, featured Foxx doing Martin Luther King impressions while having bubble-wrapped sex with Vivica Fox, a dog licking Tommy Davidsonâs rear, and a fight over a condom. While the movie is heralded as a cult classic by some, it was lambasted as crass and vapid (âItâs not that the movie is never funny. Itâs just that you donât feel very good when it is,â is how the Los Angeles Times expertly put it). The filmâs biggest critic was Bill Cosby, who at the time still commanded respect as a voice in the black community. He told Newsweek in 1997: âThere is no need for a Booty Call, for the stuff that shows our young people only interested in the flesh and no other depth.â Foxx spent the next two years making movies such as 1999âs Held Up (co-starring Nia Long) that mostly failed at the box office but were better than they had any right being â off the strength of Foxxâs charisma and talent.
Itâs here that we have to acknowledge The Jamie Foxx Show. If you thought calling Foxx the most talented entertainer of our generation was a âhot take,â then hereâs another: if Jamie Foxx had aired on the Fox Network, along with Martin, instead of on the less popular WB, it would be just as revered and beloved. At its funniest, The Jamie Foxx Show is just as hilarious as Martin. Thereâs the above reimagining of DâAngeloâs âUntitledâ video, the O.J. Simpson impersonation, Tupac Shakur, the dance battle. The sitcom, which also starred Garrett Morris, Ella English, Christopher B. Duncan and Garcelle Beauvais as his love interest, Fancy, and aired from 1996 to 2001, is Foxx at his comedic peak.
And he could have simply stuck to being funny. His musical career had yet to take off, and heâd failed to land that life-changing role. But that changed in 1999 when Sean Combs was excused from the set of Any Given Sunday. âPuff Daddy threw like a girl, so they put him on a plane,â said co-star Andrew Bryniarski in 2015. Foxx stepped in to portray the iconic Willie Beamen, a confident, young black quarterback who replaces a worn veteran QB â think the cinematic version of Dak Prescott replacing Tony Romo with a little extra Hollywood flair and an instantly repeatable theme song that Foxx recorded himself.
Foxx had done it: a leading role in a film opposite Al Pacino, with superstar director Oliver Stone at the helm. The movie is sort of a mess, overproduced and melodramatic, but Foxxâs star turn was widely praised. âIn a broken-field role,â said movie critic Roger Ebert, âthat requires him to be unsure and vulnerable, then cocky and insufferable, then political, then repentant, Foxx doesnât step wrong.â
Foxx followed Beamen up by portraying trainer Drew Bundini Brown in 2001âs Ali. The role was pivotal. Foxx displayed his ability to transform into an entirely unrecognizable character. And he was beginning to truly combine his talents. In Any Given Sunday, heâd mixed in his musical talents with serious acting, and in Ali he used his uncanny ability as an impersonator to make his roles pop. What allowed him to play Brown is from the skill set that allowed him to âbeâ Mike Tyson on stage in so many of his stand-up performances. All of this, of course, culminated in Ray.
Foxxâs portrayal of Charles is a three-hour acting masterpiece. Foxx was a one-man Golden State Warriors team putting his multiple talents together for one legendary performance. He used his ability for imitation, which he perfected on the comedy circuit, to bring Charles to life on the screen. He used his dramatic acting to translate that imitation into a serious and emotionally resonant performance. And finally, Foxx performed the music himself, truly channeling Charlesâ soul. âIt demeans Foxx to say he was born to play this role,â said Ken Tucker in The New Yorker. âRather, he invented a Ray Charles that anyone, from a nostalgic baby boomer to a skeptical Jay Z fan, can understand and respect.â
In winning his best actor Oscar, becoming just the third African-American to do so, he beat out Don Cheadleâs electric Hotel Rwanda performance, Leonardo DiCaprio in The Aviator and Clint Eastwood in Million Dollar Baby. Foxx had arrived. But he wouldnât dwell on his successes. He had a musical career to revitalize.
A chance meeting with Kanye West at one of Foxxâs infamous house parties led to Foxx being featured on a 20o4 Twista single featuring Kanye entitled âSlow Jamz.â It became a No. 1 pop single, with Foxx singing the hook. âYoung people who hadnât seen me on In Living Color or the The Jamie Foxx Show thought I had just come on with Kanye West, so that gave me new life,â he said in a 2015 radio interview. He followed that collaboration by singing the hook on Westâs 2004 âGold Digger,â and on Dec. 27, 2005, 10 months after winning his Oscar, Foxx released his own Unpredictable album (J Records). It debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard album charts and went to No. 1 the very next week. Itâs double platinum.
Yet all of the success was affecting his personal life, and not in good ways. An intervention by black celebrity royalty set him on a different path.
â âYouâre blowing it, Jamie Foxx,â â Oprah Winfrey told Foxx in 2004, as he explained in an interview with Howard Stern earlier this year. â âAll of this gallivanting and all this kind of sâ, thatâs not what you want to do. ⊠I want to take you somewhere. Make you understand the significance of what youâre doing.â Foxx recounts going into a house filled with black actors from the â60s and â70s. â[They] look like they just want to say ⊠Donât blow it.â Foxx was introduced to Sidney Poitier, the first African-American to win an Oscar, who told him, â âI want to give you responsibility. ⊠When I saw your performance, it made me grow 2 inches.â To this day, itâs the most significant time in my life where it was, like, a chance to grow up.â
Today, Foxx seems as comfortable in his own skin as ever. When he wants to be serious, heâs the titular character in 2012âs Django Unchained, stone-faced, stoic and out for vengeance. Or he is a villain in The Amazing Spider-Man 2. Heâs released three albums since Unpredictable, with a Grammy to boot for 2010âs âBlame It.â And when he wants to make people laugh, Foxx still pops up at places such as The Comedy Store.
Two years ago, this time on Fallonâs âThe Wheel Of Musical Impressions,â he did Mick Jagger singing âHakuna Matata,â Jennifer Hudson singing âOn Top Of Spaghettiâ and John Legend singing the Toys R Us theme song, complete with a full-on re-enactment of Legendâs on-stage posture. And he somehow managed to mix in a Doc Rivers impersonation. The video for this fantastical and amazing series of performances has amassed 40 million views on YouTube. Itâs classic Foxx, mixing his flair for the dramatic with his unparalleled voice and mastery of comedy. His is an unpredictable blend of musicianship, comedy and acting. Heâs a powerhouse. A master of all trades. And we may never see anything like him again.
David Dennis, Jr. is a senior writer at The Undefeated and an American Mosaic Journalism Prize recipient. His book, The Movement Made Us, will be released in 2022. David is a graduate of Davidson College.

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