MEET THE FOUNDERS
Founded in 2000
Meet
Salim Akil
Salim is a native of Oakland, California. He wrote and co-produced the film Drylongso (1999) which was featured at the Sundance Film Festival and Berlin Film Festival. Salim started as a staff writer for Showtime’s award-winning “Soulfood” and quickly worked his way up to series Executive Producer, on top of directing and writing several episodes. He has worked as a Director on several other episodic TV series, including UPN’s “Girlfriends” CW’s/BET’s “The Game” and BET’s “Being Mary Jane.” Additionally, Salim directed the feature film Sparkle (2012) a Sony Pictures remake of the 1974 musical of the same name.
Salim Akil is an award-winning director, screenwriter, and executive producer. Born in Oakland, California he co-wrote and produced 1999’s Drylongso which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and Berlin Film Festival. A year later he worked as a staff writer and executive producer on Showtime’s hit drama Soul Food.
One half of Akil Productions, an entertainment company founded alongside visionary-partner-and-wife Mara Brock Akil, he’s produced a steady stream of global sensations.
From the seismic success of 2000’s Girlfriends and its 2006 spin-off The Game, Akil has helped redefine broadcast programming and refute its limitations. Developing and directing over 100 episodes across networks, the deft storyteller has long championed diverse, inclusive, and holistic representations.
“My aim has always been to illuminate images of black folk that they recognize. To create portraiture that doesn’t mock or maim their humanity. One of the things I’m most proud of is leaving the doors open for other people. Mara and I like to say, ‘we do black on purpose’ because too often you hear, ‘oh this character just happens to be black. We’ve always been intentional.”
Inspired by classicists like Toni Morrison, James Baldwin, and Octavia Butler, Akil’s work manages to merge pedagogy and profitability seamlessly. In 2011, he directed Jumping the Broom, a box-office smash showcasing the communal conflicts amongst modern black families. The following year he reimagined the 1976 period classic Sparkle. In 2014, after signing a multi-year agreement with BET, Akil helmed Being Mary Jane. Centered around a successful broadcast journalist navigating love, work, and family, the series became the No. 1 scripted show across cable. In 2016, Akil Productions signed a three-year overall deal with Warner Bros. TV. Creating Black Lightning for The CW and directing Love Is for OWN, both series became flagships for their respective networks.
“Initially, when we made our early deals, there were hardly any black shows across major networks. Now it’s become standard, which makes me proud. It’s duty. It’s what you’re supposed to do. And you get a sense of joy and peace when the things you create have the ability to start conversations, to take pressure off of others, to create opportunities and feed families.”
His latest works exemplify his commitment to ennobling black life. For Black Lightning he aimed to showcase a different type of superhero, one outside of the stunted stasis defining many blockbusters. “Up until now, there were very few heroic black men on television. The man that I wanted to introduce on-screen was one who was focused on saving black youth, black people, and saving his black self.”
These medicinal lifeworlds reflect a fierce devotion to spiritual service. For Akil, film and television is more than just idle entertainment. It’s a portal towards higher consciousness and new belief systems. “When I think about the future in terms of my art, I think of how I can continue to be in spaces where doors need to be opened. I’d like to be at a place where I continue to chop down trees and pave the road. Sometimes you have to do things that may not be easy but ultimately you have to push the boundaries so that others can benefit. And when you’re aligned in faith, in purpose, you’re able to remain buoyant and joyful.”
A global force, with fierce devotion, Akil is the prototype for today’s creators.
Meet
Mara Brock Akil
Mara Brock Akil is a native of Los Angeles, but was raised primarily in Kansas City. She is a graduate of Northwestern University, where she earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism.
Akil began her writing career on Fox’s critically acclaimed “South Central.” She later moved on to writing for the UPN series “Moesha,” where she earned her Producer title after four seasons.
For the 2000-01 television season, Akil created her first show, Girlfriends (2000), which she and Kelsey Grammer executive produce.
Akil draws inspiration for the storylines from her own group of good friends, including Felicia D. Henderson (creator of Showtime’s “Soul Food”) and Gina Prince-Bythewood (writer/director of New Line Cinema’s “Love & Basketball”).
She is married to Executive Producer/Director Salim Akil. VIBE listed Akil on its “Top 100 Hottest People List” and Honey magazine named her as one of the “Top 25 Hottest Women in Urban Entertainment.” She is a member of Delta Sigma Theta sorority and a board member of Center Theatre Group (Mark Taper Forum and Ahmanson Theatre). She also enjoys mentoring young people, especially aspiring writers.