Jamie Foxx was born Eric Marlon Bishop on December 13, 1967, in Terrell, Texas. He was given up for adoption at birth by his teenage mother and raised by his maternal grandparents, Esther and Mark Talley, in Terrell. His grandmother in particular was a formative influence: a woman of deep Baptist faith who insisted on his piano lessons and his participation in the church choir, and who provided the stability and the cultural grounding that would underpin a career that spans acting, music, and comedy in ways that few entertainers have managed with equal success across all three. He was a talented multi-sport athlete in high school, which gave him the physical ease and competitive orientation that would translate directly into his performance work, and received a scholarship to United States International University for piano.
Foxx dropped out of college to pursue a career in comedy, a decision driven by the discovery that his quick wit and physical expressiveness could generate audience laughter in ways that felt more immediately rewarding than classical performance. He changed his name from Eric Bishop to Jamie Foxx — choosing an androgynous name after noticing that female comedians were called to the stage more often — and built a reputation on the Los Angeles comedy circuit that led to his casting in Keenen Ivory Wayans's In Living Color in 1991. The sketch comedy show was a training ground for performers who went on to significant careers, and Foxx's ability to create vivid, physically committed characters in short-form comedic contexts demonstrated the range that would define his subsequent work. His stand-up comedy specials of the 1990s showed a performer of considerable verbal intelligence and physical commitment.
The transition to serious dramatic work was completed definitively with his performance as Ray Charles in Ray (2004), for which he won the Academy Award for Best Actor. The performance required him to depict Charles across several decades and to portray both the musical genius and the personal difficulties — including addiction and infidelity — with psychological complexity and emotional authenticity. That he was also nominated in the same year for Best Supporting Actor for his work in Collateral, playing a very different character with very different demands, demonstrated that the Charles performance was not a one-time achievement but evidence of a developed dramatic range. His musical career has run alongside his acting career throughout, producing genuine hit singles and demonstrating a singing voice of real quality — a relatively rare case of someone who is equally accomplished in both fields.
Foxx's career since his peak 2004 year has included the continued oscillation between comedic and dramatic work, blockbuster franchise contributions (Django Unchained, The Amazing Spider-Man 2, Project Power), and continued musical activity. He has been open about his family commitments, particularly his relationship with his daughters from different relationships, and has been a significant presence in celebrity philanthropy and charitable work. In April 2023, Foxx suffered a medical emergency that his family initially described as simply 'a medical complication.' He later revealed it had been a stroke, and his recovery — which took him out of public view for several months — was followed by a return to work that demonstrated the resilience that has characterized his entire career. His openness about the experience and his gratitude for survival has added another dimension to a public persona already defined by warmth, humor, and professional excellence.