Photo Credit: Dror/Forshèe | Dress & Jewelry: Grace Chen | Makeup: Juan Alberto Bazan | Hair: Irina Charkova
N’Kenge is a singular force in the entertainment industry—a singer, songwriter, producer, actress, philanthropist, and creative director—whose talent is matched only by the scope of her artistic vision. An internationally acclaimed singer, her career has taken her from Broadway and the West End to solo performances at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, and Madison Square Garden. Yet her impact extends far beyond the stage. Through projects such as That’s Love! The Dorothy Dandridge Musical, her live jazz album Centerstage: Live from the Ella Fitzgerald Festival, and her ongoing work with the N’Kenge Foundation, she is turning her name into an institution and creating a legacy rooted in artistry, cultural preservation, and community empowerment.
In photographs, N’Kenge is often captured mid-laugh with a beaming smile, carrying a glamour and star quality reminiscent of the old Hollywood icons whose legacies she works to preserve. Talking with the songstress, her warmth and confidence are immediate, and she speaks with a measured eloquence that draws you in.
The Bronx native recalls falling in love with performing at a young age, after her parents enrolled her in arts classes at the Harlem School of the Arts as an outlet for her boundless energy. A defining moment came at age ten, while attending public K–8 school PS 95, when she received a standing ovation for her role as Peppermint Patty in You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown. The experience crystallized her connection to the stage. “If I had something inside me that could make all these people this happy,” she says with a laugh, “then I wanted to spend the rest of my life doing it.” N’Kenge went on to do exactly that, training at Juilliard and the Manhattan School of Music before becoming an acclaimed singer, headlining pop, opera, and symphony concerts across the United States and internationally, and making her Broadway debut in Sondheim on Sondheim.
She credits her public school education in the Bronx—and the early encouragement she received there—as a defining influence on her path toward music. Those formative experiences would later inspire the founding of the N’Kenge Foundation. “Teachers really do make a huge difference in kids’ lives,” she says. “That’s why I’m always trying to give back to schools—because I got so much from them, and they helped make me who I am.”
“We do this to educate, to enlighten, and to empower young people who may not have had these opportunities before we came into their schools.”
-N’Kenge on the N’Kenge Foundation
The N’Kenge Foundation is a nonprofit that uses the arts to connect with youth, partnering with schools and community programs to amplify BIPOC artist stories while fostering creativity, mentorship, and healing. Music, she explains, often serves as the gateway. “If we can use it as a platform to teach people about the legacies we’re honoring—Dorothy Dandridge, Harry Belafonte, the Nicholas Brothers, Lena Horne, and her contemporaries—it opens the door to conversations that might not otherwise happen,” including discussions around mental health, well-being, mindfulness, and even financial literacy. The foundation aims to create a space for self-expression amongst kids while also introducing practical life tools. N’Kenge says that their goal is “to educate, to enlighten, and to empower young people who may not have had these opportunities before we came into their schools.”
That same commitment to honoring legacy and expanding representation lies at the heart of one of N’Kenge’s most ambitious creative projects to date: That’s Love! The Dorothy Dandridge Musical. Conceived, co-directed, and starring N’Kenge, the production is the first musical dedicated to Dorothy Dandridge, the Hollywood icon and singer who became the first Black woman nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress. A true trailblazer for Black women in entertainment, Dandridge paved the way for generations of performers. As N’Kenge explains, “If it wasn’t for Dorothy, we wouldn’t have Halle Berry, Viola Davis, or Kerry Washington — she was the first.”

The idea for the musical first took shape nearly seven years ago while N’Kenge was working on Motown: The Musical on Broadway alongside its founder, Berry Gordy, Jr. Immersed in a production that celebrated the enduring love for Black music and cultural icons of the late 50s and 60s, she also became acutely aware of the lack of Black female representation on the stage. As a longtime admirer of Dorothy Dandridge, N’Kenge recognized both the need and the opportunity to bring Dandridge’s story to life, saying impassionately, “So we’re now bringing her story, her beauty, her wits, and her talent to the forefront.”
This project marked the first time N’Kenge stepped into the role of creative director and producer. “I’ve always been told that I needed to find other people to bring the vision in my head to life,” she says. “Ultimately, I decided to do it on my own.”
Years later, that vision has come to fruition. That’s Love! The Dorothy Dandridge Musical made its world debut with two sold-out shows at Carnegie Hall in 2022 and earned the most nominations and awards of the season at the New York Theater Festival in 2023, winning Best Director, Best Choreographer, and Best Singer (N’Kenge).
“I’ve always been told that I needed to find other people to bring the vision in my head to life. Ultimately, I decided to do it on my own.”
-N’Kenge
N’Kenge co-directs the production alongside Christina Sajous and stars in the musical as Dorothy Dandridge. The show features a book and lyrics by Trey Ellis, with original music and lyrics by Shelton L. Becton. Willette Klausner and Richard Bell serve as executive directors, with Alan Steinberg of Park Row Equity Partners and Derow Enterprises producing, alongside associate producer Michael T. Clarkston. The musical officially opens on February 19th at the Axelrod Performing Arts Center in New Jersey, a milestone N’Kenge sees as an opportunity to reintroduce Dorothy Dandridge to a new generation. “We’re really excited about her star being reborn through this mechanism we call musicals,” she says.
Alongside the success of That’s Love!, N’Kenge has remained active in recorded music. In August of 2025, she released her album Centerstage: Live from the Ella Fitzgerald Festival, a project rooted in her lifelong love of jazz. Headlining the festival, she chose to capture the night in real time on her album, preserving the raw energy of the performance. “I wanted people to hear the artistry of our band live and know that it was as authentic as you could possibly get from an album.”
The album pays homage to vocal legends, including Ella Fitzgerald, Lena Horne, Cab Calloway, and even Dorothy Dandridge, while also offering a few unexpected highlights. These include a standout rendition of the jazz standard “Bewitched,” a jazz reimagining of N’Kenge’s pop track “Goosebump Moment,” as well as a heartwarming bonus track that blends Alanis Morissette’s “Uninvited” with The Sound of Music classic “My Favorite Things,” featuring her daughter, Jahzara Martina.
Her commitment to live performance continues this month, as N’Kenge and her All-Star Band bring their signature sound to several of New York City’s most celebrated venues.
- Saturday, January 17
The Jazz Club at the Aman Hotel | 9–11 PM - Tuesday, January 27
Red Rooster Harlem | 7–10 PM - Saturday, January 31
The Club Room at the SoHo Grand Hotel | 7:30 PM & 9 PM sets
A true visionary with an infectious sense of possibility, N’Kenge’s mission is to create work that reflects who she is, honors her legacy, and inspires the next generation. With projects across music, television, theater, and education continuing to evolve, she shows no signs of slowing down. “I am a creator,” she says. “And I’ll never stop creating.”
“My purpose is creating content that represents me, my legacy, my mom’s legacy, and inspires the next generation. I am a creator—and I’ll never stop creating.”
-N’Kenge
