Juliet Ibrahim is a Ghanaian actress, film producer and singer of
Lebanese, Ghanaian and Liberian descent. She won the Best Actress in a
Leading Role award at the 2010 Ghana Movie Awards for her role in 4
Play. She has been referred to as the "Most Beautiful West African
Woman" according to A-listers Magazine.Juliet Ibrahim was born to a
Lebanese father and a Ghanaian-Liberian mother. She is the first child
and has two sisters including the actress Sonia Ibrahim, and a
brother. Juliet and with her siblings spent the longest part of their
childhood in Lebanon and Ivory Coast due to civil wars. She had her
primary education in Lebanon, then proceeded to Ivory Coast for her
secondary education where she lived with her parents. She studied at
the Ghana Institute of Languages, where she studied English, French
and Spanish. She also studied Marketing, Advertising and Public
Relations at the Ghana Institute of Journalism.Ibrahim has commented
that in Africa she is not regarded as a black woman because of her
skin tone, but outside Africa she is recognised as being black. She
objected to the term 'half-caste' and said that she was 'Black and
proud of it'.
Lebanese, Ghanaian and Liberian descent. She won the Best Actress in a
Leading Role award at the 2010 Ghana Movie Awards for her role in 4
Play. She has been referred to as the "Most Beautiful West African
Woman" according to A-listers Magazine.Juliet Ibrahim was born to a
Lebanese father and a Ghanaian-Liberian mother. She is the first child
and has two sisters including the actress Sonia Ibrahim, and a
brother. Juliet and with her siblings spent the longest part of their
childhood in Lebanon and Ivory Coast due to civil wars. She had her
primary education in Lebanon, then proceeded to Ivory Coast for her
secondary education where she lived with her parents. She studied at
the Ghana Institute of Languages, where she studied English, French
and Spanish. She also studied Marketing, Advertising and Public
Relations at the Ghana Institute of Journalism.Ibrahim has commented
that in Africa she is not regarded as a black woman because of her
skin tone, but outside Africa she is recognised as being black. She
objected to the term 'half-caste' and said that she was 'Black and
proud of it'.
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