Sneak Peek: Ryan Destiny Shakes Things Up As ‘Jillian’ on ‘Grown-ish’ Season 3 [Video]

BY: Denver Sean

Published 5 years ago

Ryan Destiny, best known for her work on Fox’s Star, is joining the third season of ‘Grown-ish’, playing Jillian — a student who transferred from an HBCU and is already getting down with Zoey’s ex, Luca.

Check out a brief interview with EW about what we can expect followed by a clip from this Thursday’s episode featuring Ryan below.

via EW:

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ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: How did this role come about?
RYAN DESTINY: It’s kind of a long but short story I guess. I basically auditioned for a whole different show that [series creator] Kenya Barris is doing, and I didn’t really fit the character, but they loved my audition so much that they wanted me somewhere in their world. So it basically was like, “I want you on grown-ish as another character,” so it was like yeah, of course, because I was an actual fan of the show, so it was cool. 

You’re someone who gets fan-cast on social media a lot. Did you ever see anything like a call for you to be on the show before you were actually on it?
Yes, actually I was seeing a lot of that happening, and I’ve come across people in person who have said, “I would love to see you on grown-ish,” and at the time, I was on my own show Star, so I literally just didn’t see it happening, but life’s just crazy weird sometimes, so it ended up working out.

Did you know any of the cast already?
Yeah, I did. I knew Yara [Shahidi] a little bit. I was friends with Chloe x Halle before, so it was just really cool to kind of go in not feeling completely like the new kid. I knew Trevor [Jackson] too. And yeah, I think I got everybody, but everyone else was new to me, so it was really cool. The entire cast was super, super welcoming, and they were just trying to make sure that I felt like family even though I was new, so I really appreciate them for that.

A lot of you in the grown-ish are triple threats. Does that environment inspire everyone creatively, even off the set?
Yeah, it’s really cool. I feel like a lot of us are into music, of course, so I think us being actors on set is super interesting because I feel like as soon we’re done, and they call cut, we’re [all] going to our music. And I mean it was like, I was going to the studio. I literally filmed a music video while filming the show, so I think a lot of us are just like really busy, and just trying to get everything done in as much time as we have.

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Does being on the show feel like a performing arts school, where one class is acting, one class is music, etc.?
[Laughs] It kind of can feel like that sometimes. Especially when you’re around so many creative people, it does feel like you’re in a theater arts class or something like that, which obviously I love, I just love this world. It’s just cool to be around other people that kind of have the same dreams and ambitions as you.

Without giving too much away, who is Jillian, and how does she factor into this season?
She’s a HBCU transfer from Spelman [College], and she is a filmmaker, and that’s what she’s basically going to Cal U for. And not because the HBCU didn’t provide her that, it’s just more of a different challenge, so she says. So it’s basically her interacting with the different characters and seeing where she fits into all of that, which you will soon see how she incorporates her filmmaking and her dreams doing that into.

Does that feel a little meta? Because that’s always a conversation within the black community, the HBCU experience versus going to a predominantly white institution.
It’s so interesting because I feel like I can never speak on this because I never went to college. But at the same time, I do understand, and I have friends that go to college and family members that have gone to college, and I see too when my character was announced, how people felt about it. It was a lot of people excited about it coming, that her character was coming from an HBCU. There’s so much pride in that, so being able to tell a story of a person that’s doing that, but trying to make sure you do it justice in a way that’s still respectful, because you never want it to seem like you know somebody just ditched an HBCU to go somewhere else because I don’t even think that’s very common. I think a lot of people that go to HBCUs love it, so yeah it was just really important to kind of tell it in a respectful way, but in a way that was realistic.

Has the reaction to your casting been special to you? Because you are really showing up for HBCU people, and black women with darker skin. It’s not every day you see casting news for a Freeform show in its third season take over the conversation on Twitter.
[Laughs] I know right? Yeah, it shocked me, trust me. When it happened, it felt really nice. I felt supported, so that made me happy. But, it just shows how important it is to be equal, and to see a person of my color be represented too, I think it means a lot for people, so I’m just always here for that, and always trying to make sure I make people proud. Hopefully I’m doing that. I’m just proud a lot of people were excited about it.

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