Jay Ellis
Wendell Ramone "Jay" Ellis Jr. (born December 27, 1981) is an American actor recognized for his breakthrough performance as Lawrence Walker, a software engineer navigating personal and professional challenges, in the HBO comedy series Insecure from 2016 to 2021.[1][2] Born in Sumter, South Carolina, to a military family that prompted frequent relocations during his childhood, Ellis initially pursued modeling before transitioning to acting in Los Angeles.[1] His portrayal of Walker earned him an NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series in 2018, highlighting his ability to depict relatable male vulnerability amid relationship dynamics and career ambitions.[3] Ellis's film career advanced notably with the role of Lieutenant Reuben "Payback" Fitch, a naval aviator, in the 2022 blockbuster Top Gun: Maverick, which grossed over $1.4 billion worldwide and showcased his physicality in high-stakes action sequences.[4] Earlier television appearances include a recurring role as Bryce Westbrook on BET's The Game starting in 2013, marking his first significant on-screen break.[2] More recently, he has expanded into producing and starring in projects like the Netflix series Running Point (2025) and the anthology film Freaky Tales (2024), demonstrating versatility across comedy, drama, and action genres while maintaining a focus on grounded character development.[5][4]Early life and education
Military family background and childhood travels
Ellis was born on December 27, 1981, in Sumter, South Carolina, to a family shaped by his father's career in the United States Air Force.[1] His father served over 15 years in the Air Force, primarily as a jet mechanic, which necessitated frequent relocations across various U.S. military bases.[6] [7] These moves exposed Ellis to diverse environments from an early age, including time spent in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and on bases in Austin, Texas, among others.[6] [8] As the only child in a military household, Ellis attended 12 different schools over 13 years, adapting repeatedly to new cities and social settings.[9] This nomadic lifestyle, driven by his father's assignments, fostered resilience and interpersonal adaptability, as he frequently navigated the challenges of being the "new kid" in unfamiliar communities.[10] [11] The constant transitions instilled a sense of discipline reflective of military culture, while broadening his worldview through exposure to varied regional cultures and base life dynamics.[9] In later reflections, Ellis has attributed these experiences to developing a versatile persona, honed by the need to reinvent himself in each new location.[12]Academic and early professional pursuits
Ellis attended Concordia University in Portland, Oregon, where he graduated summa cum laude while serving as student body president and playing on the basketball team.[13][14] During his time at the university, he participated in community theater productions, fostering an early interest in performance.[15] Following graduation, Ellis initially worked in retail positions, including at Old Navy, Athletes' Foot, and Smoothie King, while beginning a modeling career with Mode Models International in New York City.[16][17] He appeared in print campaigns for brands such as Abercrombie & Fitch, gaining experience in the entertainment industry through international modeling assignments.[17][18] This period marked his transition toward acting, prompting a move to Los Angeles to seek on-camera opportunities before securing television roles in the early 2010s.[1][19]Professional career
Early acting roles and television breakthrough
Ellis began his acting career with minor television appearances, including guest spots that highlighted his persistence in the industry despite initial rejections after relocating to Los Angeles to pursue opportunities.[1] His first major television role came in 2013 on the BET comedy-drama series The Game, where he portrayed a recurring character across 45 episodes through 2015, marking his entry into consistent on-screen work.[20] [21] This role paved the way for his casting in HBO's Insecure in 2016, where Ellis played Lawrence Walker, Issa Dee's on-again, off-again partner, across all five seasons until 2021.[22] The series, created by Issa Rae, achieved critical acclaim with an 8.1/10 rating from over 24,000 user reviews, reflecting its broad appeal.[22] Lawrence's character resonated particularly with male viewers, who identified with his portrayal of ambition struggles, relationship dynamics, and personal growth, spawning the fan-driven #LawrenceHive hashtag community that engaged in online discussions about his decisions.[23] [24] [25] The role sparked cultural debates on black male experiences, including infidelity, friendship, and masculinity pressures, with Ellis's performance humanizing these themes and drawing praise for its nuance amid viewer divisions over Lawrence's "good guy" arc.[26] [27] Rae herself acknowledged the character's unexpected resonance with men, contributing to Insecure's impact on representations of complex interracial and intra-community relationships in television.[24]Film roles and mainstream recognition
Ellis gained significant mainstream exposure through his role as Lieutenant Reuben "Payback" Fitch, a skilled naval aviator and wingman to Maverick, in Top Gun: Maverick (2022), directed by Joseph Kosinski and starring Tom Cruise.[28] The blockbuster sequel grossed $1,495,696,292 worldwide, becoming the second-highest-grossing film of 2022 and marking a pivotal shift for Ellis from television supporting roles to high-profile action cinema.[29] His portrayal emphasized Payback's confidence and teamwork in high-stakes aerial missions, contributing to the film's critical acclaim for its practical effects and ensemble dynamics.[5] Earlier, Ellis appeared in the horror-thriller Escape Room (2019), playing a supporting role amid a group trapped in deadly puzzles, which earned $155 million globally despite mixed reviews focused on its formulaic plot.[30] This credit preceded his Top Gun breakthrough but highlighted his versatility in genre films with modest commercial outcomes compared to later successes. Critics have noted Ellis's pivot to action-hero archetypes as a strength, allowing him to leverage physicality and charisma, though opportunities for lead billing remained limited post-Insecure.[31] In 2025, Ellis starred as a fictionalized version of NBA player Sleepy Floyd in Freaky Tales, a genre-blending anthology set in 1980s Oakland, directed by Anna Boden and Ryan Fleck, featuring Pedro Pascal and Normani.[5] His role involved intense fight choreography, portraying Floyd as a sword-wielding vigilante seeking revenge, which showcased his stunt work and drew praise for elevating the film's punk-infused narratives.[31] The movie received a 75% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 153 reviews, with Ellis's performance cited as a standout for its physical demands and departure from biographical accuracy.[32] As of October 2025, Ellis expressed optimism about reprising Payback in a potential Top Gun 3, noting the team's focus on script refinement to match the predecessor's quality, though no release date has been confirmed.[33] This anticipation underscores his growing film profile, balancing ensemble action with emerging lead potential amid critiques of typecasting in supporting aviator or athlete roles.[34]Producing, podcasting, and media ventures
In 2020, Jay Ellis launched and hosted The Untold Story: Policing, a four-part limited podcast series co-produced by Lemonada Media and Campaign Zero, an organization analyzing police data to advocate policy reforms such as ending no-knock warrants and pretrial detention.[35][36] The episodes examine policing complexities through interviews with survivors, experts, and officials, including a mistaken-identity no-knock raid that a family survived—contrasting with fatal outcomes like Breonna Taylor's—and critiques of forensic science reliability, drawing on the 2016 President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) report, which found many forensic methods lack empirical validation for unique source attribution in convictions.[37][38] The series highlights tensions between officer protections, such as qualified immunity, and accountability mechanisms, incorporating data on use-of-force incidents and conviction error rates to argue for evidence-based adjustments rather than blanket defunding.[39] The podcast earned a 2021 People's Voice Webby Award in the diversity and inclusion category for limited series and specials.[40] In 2022, Ellis co-hosted the follow-up season, The Untold Story: Criminal Injustice, alongside Travon Free and produced by The Just Trust, shifting focus to courts and prisons with discussions of wrongful incarcerations—affecting thousands annually per reform analyses—and systemic flaws like plea bargaining pressures yielding 94-97% conviction rates, often without trials.[35][41] Episodes feature affected individuals, academics, and policymakers to probe causal factors in disparities, emphasizing data-driven reforms over generalized narratives of inherent bias, while noting evidence that targeted interventions, like body cameras, correlate with reduced complaints without impairing efficacy.[35] Beyond podcasting, Ellis hosted the inaugural Anthem Awards on February 28, 2022, a virtual ceremony by The Webby Awards organization recognizing social impact across 40 categories in media, activism, and technology, with appearances by figures like Jane Goodall and Megan Rapinoe.[42][43] He has also taken on producing roles, including executive producing a thriller for Blumhouse and Amazon Studios in 2019 and an untitled Amazon Prime Video series starring Phylicia Rashad announced in 2020, expanding into narrative content development.[45] These ventures reflect Ellis's shift toward creator-driven media, prioritizing firsthand accounts and quantitative insights into institutional challenges over ideological framing.Philanthropy and advocacy
Involvement in social impact initiatives
Ellis has served on the board of directors of amfAR, the Foundation for AIDS Research, since September 2016, where he holds the position of board secretary and supports initiatives addressing HIV/AIDS as well as expanding opportunities for young men of color and other marginalized communities.[13] His involvement includes participation in fundraising events, such as amfAR's exclusive auctions, contributing to the organization's efforts that have raised billions for AIDS research since its founding in 1985.[47] In February 2025, Ellis partnered with Rabbit Hole Distillery to launch the Creative Spirit Challenge, a competition inviting aspiring filmmakers to submit short videos outlining their stories and career aspirations, with selected participants receiving mentorship opportunities to advance their skills in the industry.[48] This initiative builds on his broader advocacy for creative education, including discussions on mentoring emerging talent to bridge gaps in access to professional development.[49] Ellis emceed the Jack and Jill of America, Inc. gala on August 30, 2024, an event that facilitated a $25,000 presentation to the National Council of Negro Women for community programs, highlighting his role in amplifying youth-focused nonprofit efforts.[50] He also hosted the inaugural Anthem Awards, recognizing global social impact projects across categories like health and education, with the event drawing attention to grassroots organizations through media coverage and attendee networks.[51] Since April 2023, Ellis has been a member of the campaign cabinet for the OKPOP Foundation, a nonprofit advancing the construction of the Oklahoma Popular Culture Museum in Tulsa, aimed at preserving and exhibiting state cultural artifacts to foster public engagement with history and creativity; the foundation reported over $10 million raised toward its $40 million goal by mid-2025.[52] Additionally, he has supported voter empowerment through When We All Vote, participating in 2022 events with figures like Megan Rapinoe to promote civic participation ahead of midterm elections, aligning with the initiative's nonpartisan outreach that registered over 1 million voters since 2018.[53]Perspectives on criminal justice and policing
In a 2017 interview, Jay Ellis described personal experiences of racial profiling during traffic stops, stating, "Every time I’ve been pulled over, I thought I was going to get killed," due to expectations of frisking and humiliation over minor infractions like an illegal turn.[54] He attributed such encounters to driving "in the wrong car on the wrong side of town" in predominantly white areas, reflecting a broader fear among Black men of escalatory police interactions rooted in perceived bias.[54] Ellis has advocated for police accountability through his 2020 podcast series The Untold Story: Policing, which examines union contracts that delay interrogations (e.g., 48-hour waiting periods in 21% of surveyed U.S. cities), destroy disciplinary records after short periods, and grant officers pre-interrogation access to evidence in about 30% of cases.[55] Guests including DeRay Mckesson of Campaign Zero highlighted how such provisions, as in Louisville's contract post-Breonna Taylor's 2020 killing, impede firing problematic officers and resist public safety reallocation.[56] The series cites data from Mapping Police Violence showing roughly 1,100 annual police killings (stable over years, with 3-4 daily) amid 30 million police-initiated contacts yearly, mostly traffic stops, to argue for contract reforms reducing violence without empirical backing for protections like the 48-hour rule, which a study found worsens memory recall rather than aiding it.[56][55] A follow-up season, The Untold Story: Criminal Injustice (2022), extends scrutiny to systemic incarceration issues, featuring experts on wrongful convictions and emphasizing accountability over unchecked protections, though without direct endorsement of abolishing doctrines like qualified immunity.[35] Ellis's reform focus aligns with left-leaning calls for demystifying union barriers to discipline, yet overlooks countervailing causal evidence: meta-analyses indicate proactive policing, including hot spots strategies, yields significant crime reductions (e.g., 20-30% in targeted areas) via deterrence, with broken windows approaches curbing disorder-to-serious crime progression.[57][58] Right-leaning analyses stress law-and-order causality, noting post-2020 reform pressures correlated with officer shortages (e.g., 10-20% vacancies in major departments) and homicide spikes (up 30% in 2020), where qualified immunity supports retention by shielding good-faith actions amid high-risk duties, though critics like the Cato Institute argue it enables retaining abusive officers without proven recruitment benefits.[59][60] Sources like Campaign Zero, while data-driven on killings, exhibit reform advocacy bias, underemphasizing policing's net crime-suppression effects documented in National Academies reviews.[61]Personal life
Marriage and family
Jay Ellis married Serbian-Italian actress and model Nina Seničar on July 9, 2022, at Villa Mangiacane in Tuscany, Italy, following multiple postponements due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[62] [63] The couple had dated for five years prior, with Ellis proposing to Seničar at sunset on Dreamland Beach in Bali in January 2019 after four attempts, the successful one aided by logistical support from his Top Gun: Maverick co-stars.[63] [64] Ellis and Seničar welcomed their first child, daughter Nora Grace Ellis, on November 11, 2019.[65] Their second child, son Noa Gray Ellis, was born in July 2024.[66] Since their marriage, shortly after the conclusion of Ellis's starring role in Insecure, the couple has prioritized family stability, with Ellis publicly noting the demands of raising young children alongside professional commitments, including managing sibling interactions such as separating Nora from her infant brother during play.[67]Lifestyle and public persona
Jay Ellis adheres to a disciplined fitness regimen shaped by the physical demands of his acting roles, including superset-based workouts he employed to prepare for Top Gun: Maverick in 2022.[68] His daily routine emphasizes structured nutrition, featuring a morning smoothie he has described as unpalatably concocted yet essential for maintaining energy levels amid a demanding schedule.[69] These habits reflect a pragmatic approach prioritizing performance readiness over ostentation, as evidenced by his adaptation of pre-performance eating protocols following a 2025 Bali food poisoning episode that prompted stricter risk aversion during travel and rehearsals.[70] Ellis's lifestyle incorporates periodic travel for rejuvenation, such as a 2022 visit to Thailand's Phi Phi Islands, where he sought serenity at Maya Bay post-lockdown reopenings, balancing career intensity with personal escapes.[71] His evolving interest in literature underscores a shift from childhood reluctance—stemming from obligatory book reports that delayed playtime—to avid readership, now encompassing nonfiction by authors like Ta-Nehisi Coates and Kobe Bryant for insights into discipline and mindset.[72][73] In managing his public image, Ellis enforces firm boundaries on personal disclosures, particularly regarding family matters, viewing them as "the only thing I have that's mine" amid fan expectations tied to on-screen personas.[74] This selectivity aligns with his portrayal of grounded realism, drawing from military upbringing influences to frame professional sets as collaborative teams rather than glamorous enterprises, fostering authenticity over performative allure.[75]Controversies
Backlash over interracial marriage
In July 2022, Jay Ellis announced his marriage to Serbian actress and model Nina Seničar via Instagram photos from the wedding ceremony held in Italy, prompting immediate online criticism from segments of his fanbase focused on the interracial aspect of the relationship.[76] Ellis disabled comments on the post shortly after sharing it, a decision noted by social media observers as likely in response to anticipated or incoming negative feedback regarding Seničar's non-black heritage.[77] The backlash echoed prior fan discontent that had surfaced intermittently since Ellis's relationship with Seničar became public around 2021, with detractors in online black community forums and social media accusing him of concealing the partnership to maintain appeal among black audiences, particularly given his role as the black male protagonist Lawrence Walker on the HBO series Insecure.[78][79] Critics expressed views that Ellis's choice undermined black cultural solidarity, framing it within broader grievances about black male celebrities partnering outside the race rather than with black women, though specific economic or demographic arguments were not prominently detailed in contemporaneous reports.[80] Some media outlets amplified perceptions of a "firestorm," but forum discussions among black users questioned the scale, noting the absence of visible comments due to the disabled feature and suggesting the outrage may have been overstated by secondary reporting.[81] This reaction occurred against a backdrop of rising but still limited interracial marriage rates among black Americans; according to Pew Research Center analysis of 2015 data, 18% of newlywed blacks had a spouse of a different race or ethnicity, up from 5% in 1980, with black men intermarrying at higher rates (24%) than black women (12%).[82] Overall black marriage prevalence remains lower than the national average, at approximately 30% for black adults versus 48% for all Americans, contributing to discussions of community-specific tensions around partner selection and family formation.[83] Supporters, including Insecure creator Issa Rae, defended Ellis, emphasizing solidarity against what they viewed as unwarranted intrusion into personal choices.[84] Ellis did not issue public statements directly addressing the criticisms, focusing instead on the private nature of the event, which drew an unexpectedly large attendance of 400 guests.[85]Fan reactions to character portrayals and personal boundaries
Fans of the HBO series Insecure developed a strong attachment to Jay Ellis's portrayal of Lawrence Walker, a character depicted as a loyal but flawed partner whose storyline elicited feelings of betrayal among male viewers when Issa Rae's character cheated on him. Creator Issa Rae noted in a 2022 interview that she appreciated how "so many men found themselves in him, and they felt so betrayed," highlighting the emotional investment that led some to decry the narrative choice as unfair to a "good man."[24] This resonance manifested in the #LawrenceHive, a fan community akin to stan groups, where supporters rallied online against plot developments perceived as undermining the character.[23] However, this identification sometimes crossed into boundary violations, with fans conflating Ellis's real-life persona with Lawrence's actions. In one documented incident, a woman slapped Ellis at John F. Kennedy International Airport in 2021, explaining that his appearance triggered anger over Lawrence's season 3 decisions, demonstrating how viewers projected scripted grievances onto the actor personally.[86] Ellis later revealed a second physical assault in Salt Lake City approximately a year after the series concluded in 2021, underscoring persistent fan overreach even post-production.[87] Additional encounters included verbal confrontations, such as a fan cursing Ellis out in 2017 for embodying Lawrence, reflecting uninvited expectations that the actor justify or relive fictional events.[88] These reactions illustrate a duality in fandom: the character's relatability as a cultural milestone for male representation in nuanced Black-led narratives, as Rae emphasized, contrasted with toxic behaviors that erode personal boundaries.[24] While such immersion signals effective storytelling, the physical and emotional intrusions highlight risks for actors in role-heavy series, paralleling broader patterns where immersive portrayals invite real-world accountability absent from performers' control. Ellis has publicly addressed these as stemming from fans' unresolved attachments, advocating for separation between fiction and reality without diminishing the role's impact.[89]Other works
Memoir publication
In July 2024, Jay Ellis released his debut memoir, Did Everyone Have an Imaginary Friend (or Just Me)?: Adventures in Boyhood, published by Crown, an imprint of Penguin Random House.[90] The 288-page hardcover explores Ellis's upbringing as an only child in a military family, marked by frequent relocations across the United States and abroad, where he relied on an imaginary companion named Mikey—a composite figure blending influences like The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and basketball star Dwyane Wade—to navigate isolation, racial profiling, and social adaptation.[91][92] The narrative emphasizes self-reflection through specific anecdotes, such as inventing personas for each new town, engaging in imaginary basketball games, and processing family dynamics, contrasting performative acting with raw introspection on resilience and imagination's role in personal development.[93] Ellis frames these stories not merely as childhood whimsy but as foundational mechanisms for confronting real-world adversities, deriving lessons on emotional coping without external validation.[94][95] Promotional efforts included interviews highlighting the memoir's blend of humor and vulnerability; for instance, in an October 2025 appearance on Open Book with Jenna Bush Hager, Ellis discussed how Mikey's "presence" facilitated growth amid instability, while a September 2024 Late Night with Seth Meyers segment elaborated on the book's shift from scripted roles to unfiltered life lessons.[96][97] A Kirkus review praised it as "funny, honest, and moving," noting its honest depiction of boyhood challenges through an award-winning actor's lens.[93] Early reader feedback, aggregated on Goodreads with an average rating of 3.8 out of 5 from 282 reviews as of late 2024, commended the memoir's relatable anecdotes over abstract philosophy, though some critiqued its lighter tone on deeper traumas; no widespread controversies emerged, aligning with its focus on individual agency rather than systemic narratives.[92] By 2025, a paperback edition sustained interest, with Ellis tying promotions to themes of imagination's practical utility in adulthood.[94]Entrepreneurship and collaborations
In 2021, Ellis partnered with the personal styling service Stitch Fix to curate menswear collections, leveraging his public profile to promote tailored fashion options for subscribers.[98] Ellis expanded into the spirits industry through a collaboration with Rabbit Hole Distillery, announced on February 4, 2025, launching "The Creative Spirit Challenge"—a contest inviting aspiring filmmakers to submit short videos outlining their creative visions, with the winner receiving mentorship from Ellis and production support for a project.[48][99] This initiative tied whiskey production to artistic development, featuring a limited-edition bourbon release selected in partnership with Ellis to fund and promote independent filmmaking talent.[100] The partnership culminated in a July 29, 2025, barrel pick event, where Ellis collaborated on a custom whiskey blend adorned with original artwork created by emerging artists, directing proceeds toward grants for young filmmakers and emphasizing experiential branding that merges celebrity endorsement with creative industry support.[101] This venture highlighted Ellis's focus on nurturing underrepresented creators, with the distillery positioning the release as a platform for bold, independent voices in film akin to innovative whiskey crafting.[49]Filmography
Film
Jay Ellis's early film roles included supporting parts in independent features such as November Rule (2015), where he played James Avedon, and My Favorite Five (2015), portraying Jonathan Colburn.[20] He continued with appearances in Breaking Through (2015) as Quinn, Like Cotton Twines (2016) as Micha Brown, and Shortwave (2016) as Robert.[20] In 2018, Ellis starred as Dexter in the romantic comedy In a Relationship and had a role in the drama A Boy. A Girl. A Dream.[20] His breakthrough in mainstream cinema came with the role of Jason Walker, a tech-savvy contestant, in the horror-thriller Escape Room (2019).[20] [102] Ellis gained wider recognition for portraying Lieutenant Reuben "Payback" Fitch, a naval aviator, in the blockbuster action film Top Gun: Maverick (2022).[20] [103] Subsequent roles include Sean in the comedy Somebody I Used to Know (2023) and Sleepy Floyd in the anthology Freaky Tales (2024).[20] He also appeared in The Gutter (2024).[20]| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 2015 | November Rule | James Avedon |
| 2015 | My Favorite Five | Jonathan Colburn |
| 2015 | Breaking Through | Quinn |
| 2016 | Like Cotton Twines | Micha Brown |
| 2016 | Shortwave | Robert |
| 2018 | In a Relationship | Dexter |
| 2018 | A Boy. A Girl. A Dream | (unspecified) |
| 2019 | Escape Room | Jason Walker |
| 2022 | Top Gun: Maverick | Lt. Reuben "Payback" Fitch |
| 2023 | Somebody I Used to Know | Sean |
| 2024 | Freaky Tales | Sleepy Floyd |
| 2024 | The Gutter | (unspecified) |
Television
Ellis made early guest appearances on network television series, including episodes of Grey's Anatomy (2011–2012), NCIS (2012), and How I Met Your Mother (2012).[104] He also featured as Dr. Cyril Franklin in an episode of Showtime's Masters of Sex in 2013.[104] Additional guest roles followed on Netflix's Grace and Frankie (2016).[104] In 2013, Ellis secured his first significant recurring television role as Jason Pitts, son of the team's wide receiver, on BET's sports comedy-drama The Game, appearing across multiple episodes during the series' later seasons.[105][104] Ellis achieved prominence with his lead role as Lawrence Walker, a software engineer navigating personal and romantic challenges, in HBO's Insecure from 2016 to 2021, spanning five seasons and contributing to the series' exploration of Black millennial life in Los Angeles.[20][104] He portrayed Franklin Thomas in the 2020 FX on Hulu miniseries Mrs. America, a role depicting a political aide amid the equal rights amendment debates.[104] In 2023, Ellis appeared as Jesus across four episodes of Hulu's anthology comedy History of the World: Part II, reenacting historical and biblical sketches, and as the Wise Man in one episode of HBO's A Black Lady Sketch Show.[105][104]Producer credits
Ellis has worked as an executive producer on the 2024 documentary Sue Bird: In the Clutch, which chronicles the career and personal challenges of WNBA star Sue Bird, premiering at the Sundance Film Festival on January 21, 2024.[106][107] In this role, he collaborated with producers including Sarah Dowland and Lindsay Kagawa Colas to support the film's focus on Bird's resilience amid injuries and professional pressures.[108] He also serves as executive producer for StreamScene Productions, overseeing development and distribution of multiple television and feature film projects, such as Sleepless On Sunset, Chaplain, Married Men, and The Third Child, though specific release dates for these remain undisclosed.[109] These efforts represent his expansion into behind-the-camera production beyond acting roles.[110]Awards and nominations
Ellis received the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series in 2018 for his portrayal of Lawrence Walker in Insecure.[13] He has been nominated multiple times for NAACP Image Awards in similar categories for the same role: in 2019, 2021, and 2022 for Outstanding Supporting Actor or Actor in a Comedy Series.[3] In 2017, Ellis was nominated for a Black Reel Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor, Comedy Series, also for Insecure.[111]| Year | Award | Category | Result | Work |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | Black Reel Awards for Television | Outstanding Supporting Actor, Comedy Series | Nominated | Insecure |
| 2018 | NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series | Won | Insecure |
| 2019 | NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series | Nominated | Insecure |
| 2021 | NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series | Nominated | Insecure |
| 2022 | NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Actor in a Comedy Series | Nominated | Insecure |