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Screenwriting

Short Screenplay - DRAMA

Short Screenplay - DRAMA

INTERMITTENT

LOGLINE: A recovering alcoholic falls for another woman during her intermittent jail sentence and tries to save her new girlfriend from her abusive ex.

STATUS: Available for sale

 
Short Screenplay - HORROR

Short Screenplay - HORROR

WILD

LOGLINE: A young woman home alone in an isolated cabin in the woods is visited by an injured man and must decide whether she can trust him or not.

STATUS: Sold

 
TV Pilot - DRAMA

TV Pilot - DRAMA

MOTHER HOOD

LOGLINE: A widow in debt to the Detroit mob has to pay them back or they’ll keep her kidnapped daughter. Using her dad’s old number running connections she fights the mob and the gentrification encroaching on her old neighborhood.

STATUS: Draft

 
 

articles | ESSAYS | Interviews

 
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Charmed BSF

REVIEW: THE DEVIL TO PAY

By Kenesha Williams

They say not to judge a book by its cover, but when I saw the hand-painted movie poster for The Devil to Pay, I was all in. The Devil to Pay was written and directed by Lane Skye and Ruckus Skye. It stars Danielle Deadwyler as the main character Lemon, an actress who has recurring roles on The Haves and the Have Nots, Paradise Lost, and P-Valley, and who has a presence on-screen that makes me want to watch everything she’s in. 

The movie is set in the Appalachian mountains, and we are treated to a stunning panoramic view. When some people think of the Appalachia’s they think of backwoods white folk, but Appalachia has quite a history with Black folks. That history is alluded to during the opening scene where we’re told, “In the 18th century, those escaping duty, justice, and oppression sought refuge on a mist-covered peak in the Appalachians. Only the hardiest survived, their lives becoming fuel for local legends and folklore.”

Vampire Q&A: Kenesha Williams (Blood Debt)

Monster Complex

“There’s a cost with each transaction, and I like stories that explore those costs.”

Author Kenesha Williams reveals her unique spin on vampires in BLOOD DEBT, names her favorite vampire movies and TV series, and explains what’s wrong with vampires that aren’t scary.

WOMEN IN HORROR INTERVIEW: KENESHA WILLIAMS

By SAM KOLESNIK

MORBIDLY BEAUTIFUL

YOUR HORROR PORTFOLIO INCLUDES FICTION WRITING, PANEL PARTICIPATION, SCREENWRITING, EDITING, LITERARY MAGAZINE MANAGEMENT AND NOW PRODUCING. DO YOU PREFER ANY ONE CREATIVE OUTLET OVER THE OTHERS? 

I would say that my favorite creative outlet is screenwriting. I really love the form of screenwriting. Writing description reminds me of poetry and I enjoy the challenge of revealing character through dialogue and limited action. Without having the luxury of being inside the characters’ heads, you have to show their character solely through the choices they make.



 

NYCC 2019- Something Wicked This Way Comes: I Am Black Sci-Fi Backstage with the Cast of Charmed

By Kenesha Williams

Black Sci-Fi

We caught up with the cast and showrunners of Charmed at New York Comic Con 2019 for a behind the scenes look at the premiere episode of season two and had a sit down with them for an interview. Talking with the new showrunners for season two, Liz Kruger and Craig Shapiro, we found that this season is a whole new ballgame. The new showrunners are giving us a second season with an expanded world, a darker tone, and a season-long mystery arc. Where they felt that last season was more episodic with a “monster of the week” type feel, season two will explore each of the sisters’ past, present, and future as well as introduce us to some new characters.

 
 
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Step into the Bad Side: Black Girl Magic Villains

By Kenesha Williams

Edited by Julia Rios

Fireside Quarterly

Black womanhood is often fraught with a myriad of stereotypes. Not just the archetypical Madonna or Whore, but with an added layer of misogynoir that gives us such labels as Mammy, Sapphire, or Jezebel. These labels have led to many writers writing safe and respectable Black female characters in an attempt to erase the stereotypical portrayals of Black womanhood.


Misty Copeland

The Misty Copeland Barbie Is a Mirror for Brown Girls

Motto, Time, Inc.

Growing up, I had two big interests—and they both started with the letter B: Barbie and ballet. My mom enrolled me in a local ballet company as a little girl, and I loved the music and the movement of ballet. But I couldn’t help but notice at practices and recitals that little girls that looked like me were few and far between. While I felt resplendent in my pink leotards, ballet slippers and “flesh-toned” tights, those tights were never quite the color of my own little legs, nor did they reflect the variety of hues that were found in the skin tones of the women in my family. But that didn’t deter me from dancing my heart out at each and every recital….

 
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An Interview With The Gentleman #1: Darkness of the Void Writer Greg Anderson Elysee

Black Sci-Fi

The Gentleman #1 is the 3rd SFC Comic comics solo series, published by Evoluzione Publishing. This will be a 32-page comic written by Greg Anderson Elysée of the graphic novel  Is’Nana: The Werespider series, drawn by Massimialiano Veltri of Marvel Comics and Titan Comics, with colors by Marco Pagnotta of SFC and Kasai.  A Lovecraftian inspired horror noir story about the haunting ghosts from the past along with the ghosts from the forth coming future.

In this 4 Part miniseries, The Gentleman finds himself drawn to Espere St. Lanmé, mysterious and alluring, seeking help and protection from a being of possibly supernatural origins. Unfortunately to protect her, Oliver must succumb to his special abilities, a hereditary curse that uses his body as a key and vessel to the Void, an ancient evil with the means to destroy all life as we know.

Can Oliver protect Espere without losing his humanity? And if he can, can she be trusted? What is her connection to Oliver and the Void itself?

I spoke with the author of The Gentleman, Greg Anderson Elysée. Elysée is a Brooklyn, NY born Haitian-American writer, film-maker, model, and teacher.

 
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Black horror out of the margins

Black Sci-Fi

We are currently at peak Black Horror, a genre that was once marginalized itself and that has also been fraught with poor representation of Black characters is now seeing its heyday. With the 2017 critical and financial success of the social horror movie Get Out and now the domestic and international success of the recently released The First Purge a film in a popular franchise that focused solely on its Black characters, Hollywood is finally seeing that Black horror is both popular and profitable.

The irony is that horror as a genre in film has always skewed higher with minority and female viewers than other film genres, but only now have decision makers made the connection that films focusing on Black characters can be successful. 

KENESHA WILLIAMS | BIO

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I just knew there were stories I wanted to tell.
— Octavia Butler

Kenesha Williams is an independent author, screenwriter, speaker, and Founder/Editor-in-Chief of Black Girl Magic Lit Mag.

She took to heart the advice, "If you don't see a clear path for what you want, sometimes you have to make it yourself," and created a Speculative Fiction Literary Magazine featuring characters that were representative of herself and other women she identified with. She has happily parlayed her love for the weird and the macabre into Black Girl Magic Literary Magazine, finding the best in undiscovered talent in Speculative Fiction. 

Kenesha has been a panelist and speaker at StokerCon, the Horror Writers of America convention; Boskone, the longest-running science fiction & fantasy convention in New England; ECBACC, the East Coast Black Age of Comics Convention; the 2017 African Americans Expo, and BSAM, the Black Speculative Arts Movement convention.

She has been interviewed by Black Nerd Problems, and several podcasts: Katara’s Café, Cinema After Dark, Talking with Authors, SORMAG’s Writers Café, Minister Faust’s Galaxy, and RCR Reviews. As an, essayist she has written for, Time Magazine’s millennial imprint, Motto. Kenesha is also a screenwriter who is in pre-production on a horror based web series and a short horror film.

An Army Brat who’s travelled the world, she currently lives in the DC Metro Area.

Kenesha is currently represented by Stacey Graham .

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