Born in Southfield and raised between two radically different cultures, Keegan-Michael Key entered the world as a contradiction: biracial, adopted, and embodying blackness and whiteness in a city divided by an eight-mile stretch of history’s unfinished business.
He attended the University of Detroit Mercy, then earned an MFA from Penn State, which gave him the theater kid edge that would become his weapon.
That said, Key really came alive in Second City Detroit, the city’s legendary improv haven – landing jokes like jabs in a prizefight.
His national breakthrough was on MADtv, but the real shift came when he formed Key and Peele with fellow biracial genius Jordan Peele.
Together, they turned sketch comedy into a scalpel.
It wasn’t just parody – it was prophecy and sociology hidden behind the cloak of humor.
Key dissected race, masculinity, politics, and culture through the lens of characters like Luther the “Anger Translator,” the “valet nerd,” and his infamous “Continental Breakfast” sketch.
Post-Key & Peele, Key’s star power didn’t fade – it expanded even further, with him signing on with major motion pictures like The Lion King, Toy Story 4, Wonka, and the Super Mario Bros as well as smaller productions like Schmigadoon, Friends from College, The Prom, and a few Broadway stints.