Actresses Jackee Harry & Kym Whitley are celebrity twin look alikes



Celebrity actresses who are related

On the left is actress Jackee Harry while on the right is actress Kym Whitley.

Jackee Harry was born Jacqueline Yvonne Harry on August 14, 1956 in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and raised in Harlem, New York, to a Trinidadian mother and African-American father. She is better known mononymously as Jackée. Jackee Harry is an American actress and television personality. She is known for her roles as Sandra Clark, the sexy neighbor on the TV series 227 (1985-1990), and as Lisa Landry on the sitcom Sister, Sister (1994-1999). She is noted for being the first African American to win an Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series. She is currently starring as Pauletta Birdsong in Byron Allen’s syndicated sitcom The First Family. She also starred as Evelyn Rand in the Disney sitcom Girl Meets World. Jackee Harry began studying acting at the High School of the Performing Arts on the Lower East Side in New York City. She was an American History teacher at Brooklyn Technical High School before beginning a career on the New York stage. In 1983, she made her acting debut in Another World as Lily Mason, a role she continued until 1986. In 2003, she was a surprise guest on the Another World Reunion that SOAPnet coordinated and aired. In 1985, Jackee Harry began a co-starring role opposite Marla Gibbs as the apartment building vamp, “Sandra Clark”, on the NBC sitcom 227. Her mother, Flossie, celebrated her getting the part but died before the show aired. During the series run, Jackée and Gibbs began feuding privately over who was the series lead. They have since reconciled and collaborated on a number of projects together. Her performance on 227 inspired NBC producers to create a television pilot for her entitled Jackée. Although the pilot episode was a success with audiences, the series did not last and the episode is now shown as an episode of 227. After leaving 227 in 1989, Jackee Harry starred opposite Oprah Winfrey in the adaptation of Gloria Naylor’s novel, The Women of Brewster Place. In 1991, she joined the cast of The Royal Family after the star, Redd Foxx, unexpectedly died. She starred opposite two-time 227 guest-star Della Reese. In 1992, she starred as the assistant coach in Ladybugs. Harry served as a guest panelist on the 2000 revival of To Tell the Truth and appeared on the second season of VH1’s Celebrity Fit Club 2 in 2005. From 1994 until 1999, Harry played Lisa Landry, the adoptive mother of Tia Mowry’s character, on the sitcom Sister, Sister. Jackee Harry had a recurring role as Vanessa on The CW series Everybody Hates Chris and currently has a recurring role on the BET Series Let’s Stay Together. She is starring in Byron Allen’s Syndicated Sitcom The First Family which also features Marla Gibbs in a recurring role. On April 12, 2013 it was announced that she was cast in the episodes “Girl Meets Crazy Hat” and the pilot of Disney sitcom Girl Meets World. That same year, she also joined Gibbs in the movie Forbidden Woman. In 2014 she made a guest appearance on Instant Mom as her character Lisa Landry. Jackee Harry trade marks are: her voluptuous bombshell figure; seductive squeeky voice; and her speedy and biting delivery. Jackee Harry is the National spokesperson for the Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Fund and supports the United Negro College Fund.

Kym Whitley or Kim Whitley was born Kym Elizabeth Whitley on June 7, 1961 in Shaker Heights, Ohio, USA. She is an actress and producer, known for I Love You, Man (2009), We Bought a Zoo (2011) and Along Came Polly (2004). Kym Whitley attended Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee. She is a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Incorporated. She has an adopted a son named Joshua Kaleb. Kym Whitley is best known for her roles on television sitcoms such as; Animal Practice, The Boondocks, Young & Hungry and The Parkers. Kym Whitley was nominated for a 2004 BET Comedy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Box Office Movie for her role as Ormandy in the 2003 comedy film Deliver Us From Eva. It was in 1989 when Kym Whitley got her first big break starring in Shelly Garrett’s popular play Beauty Shop which started in Los Angeles then later traveled across the U.S. Whitley’s major acting roles include My Brother and Me and Sparks. She made guest appearances in several television sitcoms, including The Parent ‘Hood, Married… with Children, Moesha, That’s So Raven, The Parkers and Curb Your Enthusiasm. She also hosted the short-lived BET show, Oh Drama (2000). She was one of “The Adults” in the earlier seasons of All That. “The Adults”, as they were called, were grown-up featuring cast members that appeared in sketches with the regular cast. In the early spring of 2010, Kym Whitley was a co-host with R&B musician, Brian McKnight on the short-lived talk show, The Brian McKnight Show. From 2012 to 2013, Whitley had a recurring role on the BET comedy Let’s Stay Together as Charmaine Wax. Kym’s docu-series entitled Raising Whitley on the Oprah Winfrey network (OWN) premiered on April 20, 2013 with a total of 1.2 million viewers making it the fifth biggest premiere in the history of the network. Due to the success of the first season, OWN ordered a second season, which premiered on January 4, 2014. Kym created the “Don’t Feed Me” T-shirt with her friend, Rodney Van Johnson. The T-shirts alert caregivers to the allergies of the children wearing them. Kim Whitley is also known for movies such as Taking Liberties (?) (2011), The Woman in the Red Dress (2010) and The Boondocks (2005) and Next Friday (2000) as Craig (Ice Cube) uncle`s girlfriend Suga. Kym Whitley is known for her trademark of always smiling,talking flirtatious, and being sexual seductive and aggressive with a seductive voice and mannerisms.

Kym Whitley or Kim Whitley and Jackee Harry are celebrity look alikes. Kim Whitley and Jackee Harry are Famous People That Look Alike. They like to smile, laugh and have happy and seductive demeanor. Kym Whitley and Jackee Harry are also suppose to be cousins.