Idrissa Akuna Elba, known as Idris Elba, was born in the London Borough of Hackney to Winston Elba, a Sierra Leonean working at the Ford Dagenham plant, and Eve, a Ghanaian. His parents, after marrying in Sierra Leone, moved to London. Elba grew up in Hackney and East Ham and began going by “Idris” while attending school in Canning Town, where he first became involved in acting.
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Elba has had a multifaceted career as a British actor, musician, and DJ. His working-class parents were immigrants from Sierra Leone and Ghana. He was raised in East London before gaining significant recognition in the United States. He is best known for his roles as the heroin dealer Stringer Bell on HBO’s series The Wire and DCI John Luther on BBC One’s series Luther.
Elba’s portrayal of Nelson Mandela in the 2013 historical film Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom is one of his most iconic roles. The accomplished television and movie star has been nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award five times and has received four Golden Globe nominations for Best Actor in a Miniseries or Television Film, winning once. Moviegoers have even rallied behind him as a potential successor to Daniel Craig as James Bond.
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Elba performed a rap for the second album by Noel Fielding and Sergio Pizzorno‘s band, the Loose Tapestries. Elba also rapped in a remix of Skepta‘s “Shutdown” which was uploaded on 1 June 2015 to SoundCloud. On 17 August, a song was released on which Elba appeared on Nigerian singer D’banj‘s single “Confidential”, featuring Sierra Leonean rapper Shadow Boxer with the video uploaded to YouTube on 20 August. In November 2015, Elba opened for Madonna during her Rebel Heart Tour in Berlin, Germany. Elba is also featured on the Macklemore & Ryan Lewis album This Unruly Mess I’ve Made (2016). He had the idea to develop the music from his album Idris Elba Presents Mi Mandela into a show, which eventually resulted in a play called Tree that premiered at the Manchester International Festival in 2019. However, authorship of the piece was disputed. On 2 July 2019, The Guardian published a story describing how writers Tori Allen-Martin and Sarah Henley said they had been removed from the production under what they described as questionable circumstances. The two writers had worked on the project for four years, following an approach from Elba asking them to develop his idea for a musical based on the album, on which Allen-Martin had also collaborated. Kwame Kwei-Armah joined the project in May 2018, and rewrote part of their material. At the time of its premiere, Tree was billed as “created by Idris Elba and Kwame Kwei-Armah”. Allen-Martin and Henley described their creative input as having included research and script-writing, as well as coming up with the play’s title, and that after being removed, they were threatened with legal action if they went public with the story. Elba and Kwei-Armah both published rebuttals of what happened on Twitter.