What Is Jordan Peele’s Reported Net Worth In 2024? Jordan Peele’s Rise To Fame Is Inspiring

Matt Graves | November 12, 2024 8:00 pm

Jordan Peele surprised many people by making his debut feature a horror film. Everyone remembers his success on MadTV and Key & Peele, but then he brought Hollywood to its knees with his directorial debut, Get Out.

That one movie would pave the way for the writer-director to earn himself a new wave of projects coming down the pipeline. The Oscar winner will be at the helm for two remakes and voicing a role in a popular Pixar movie. But how exactly did the comedian make the jump to filmmaking?

He Asked President Clinton A Question As A Teenager

GettyImages-174848567
Adam Bettcher/Getty Images for Starkey Hearing Foundation
Adam Bettcher/Getty Images for Starkey Hearing Foundation

In 1993, a young Peele had his first brief moment in the public eye. Not long after Bill Clinton became the president, he hosted a nationally televised Q&A session in which children from all over the country asked him questions.

When it was Peele's turn, the 14-year-old inquired about how Clinton could help kids whose parents weren't paying child support. With only 30 seconds to respond, the Democrat explained, "If he's not able, and the mother is working and taking care of the kids, I think the tax system should actually give the mother money back if necessary."

ADVERTISEMENT

Peele's College Major Was Rather Unusual

ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-1077384932
Oscar Gonzalez/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Oscar Gonzalez/NurPhoto via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Peele wanted more than anything to go to NYU film school and become a director. Instead, he applied early to a New York liberal arts school named Sarah Lawrence and got in with a scholarship.

ADVERTISEMENT

In an interview with Chris Hadwick, he revealed that he majored in the lucrative field of puppetry. Instead of pursuing his major, he shifted gears, getting deep into improv on campus and dropping out after his sophomore year to move to Chicago. His goal was to be on the Second City comedy scene.

ADVERTISEMENT

He Was Quickly Recruited For An Improv Troupe

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
jordan-peele.nocrop.w670.h439
Second City
Second City
ADVERTISEMENT

After walking away from college, the aspiring comedian was recruited for Boom Chicago, an improv troupe based in Amsterdam. An extensive list of well-known alumni includes late night talk show host Seth Meyers, and comedians Ike Barinholtz, Jason Sudeikis, and Amber Ruffin.

ADVERTISEMENT

Peele would remain in Europe for the next three years. It took him a while to figure out how to interact with Europeans and how to approach Dutch women, but he eventually made his way back to the Windy City to kick off his career in 2003.

ADVERTISEMENT

He Met Another Comedian At Second City Chicago

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Second-City-Swap-2003-Onstage
Greg Shapiro
Greg Shapiro
ADVERTISEMENT

The polished improv comedian came back to North America to Second City Chicago. During his time at Second City, Peele met Keegan-Michael Key and the two immediately bonded over a hilarious misunderstanding during a comedy routine. On the first night, Key told Peele a hilarious-yet-disturbing story that was related to the comedian's firefighter friend.

ADVERTISEMENT

It was about a man who had popped into the fire station with blood squirting from his head. The next night, Peele was doing a vapid Danish supermodel routine, and he incorporated elements from Key's story into his standup.

ADVERTISEMENT

Their Partnership Transitioned Into A Sketch Comedy Series

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-174115423
Michael Kovac/WireImage/Getty Images
Michael Kovac/WireImage/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

While the pair had fallen in comedy love at Second City, they were looking to branch out. Eventually, they would both land roles on Fox's longest-running sketch comedy series MadTV. Peele could perform a variety of celebrity impressions such as Ja Rule, Montel Williams, and Forest Whitaker.

ADVERTISEMENT

As for Key, he impersonated rapper Ludacris, filmmaker Tyler Perry, and comedian Eddie Murphy. However, he became known for his famous character, Coach Hines. Peele would remain on the show until 2008 while Key would exit in 2009.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Duo Credits Barack Obama For One Reason

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-143543839
Kevin Mazur/WireImage/Getty Images
Kevin Mazur/WireImage/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

After achieving fame on MadTV, their next show, Key & Peele, made both comedians famous for good. During the show, Peele's perfect impression of the 44th president of the United States was spot on. Key played his angry translator, Luther, and both roles won the favor of the former president himself.

ADVERTISEMENT

Key told NPR in 2013, "We actually felt like Obama was kind of responsible for us even getting a show in the first place, because there's this biracial person who might have to ride the divide between two different races."

ADVERTISEMENT

After Their Show, They Bundled Up For An FX Series

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
fargo_147e3d
FX/MovieStillsDb.com
FX/MovieStillsDb.com
ADVERTISEMENT

The comedy partners did not plan to work together outside of their show. But, they immediately changed their minds when they got the call for Fargo. "The fact that this is a dramatic piece for the most part—or the half part—was absolutely appealing to us," Peele tells The Hollywood Reporter.

ADVERTISEMENT

In addition, Fargo was one of their favorite movies as they're both fans of the Coen Brothers. They didn't want it to look like they were interested in being a comedy team for the rest of their careers.

ADVERTISEMENT

One Particular Movie Drove Him To Early Acting Retirement

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-1039408692
Dan Istitene/Getty Images
Dan Istitene/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Speaking at the Director's Guild of America Awards, Peele revealed that The Emoji Movie actually helped him quit acting. "I was offered the role of Poop. This is true, I would not make this up."

ADVERTISEMENT

It seems as though the comedian initially rejected the offer before mulling it over for a day or two. But, after giving into curiosity, he called his manager to see if the gig would pay. However, he was told that the role had been offered to Sir Patrick Stewart, which became the last straw.

ADVERTISEMENT

Peele's Next Idea Had Been Turning Over In His Head For Years

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-908135530
CHRIS DELMAS/AFP/Getty Images
CHRIS DELMAS/AFP/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Earlier this decade, when he emerged as a sketch-comedy TV star, he contemplated a bold and unlikely career shift. He'd sit down and tap away at draft after draft of a screenplay he initially called Get Out The House.

ADVERTISEMENT

This came from the old Eddie Murphy routine about how a black family would react to the events of The Amityville Horror. The idea of making a movie started well before Key & Peele, but his writing career quickly took off.

ADVERTISEMENT

His Biggest Fear As A Kid May Have Triggered It All

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-462176658
Kevin Winter/WireImage/Getty Images
Kevin Winter/WireImage/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Being afraid of the dark and other things may have helped drive his success as a writer. Eventually, he broke free of it, by telling a story of his own invention. It involved a stalled car, a severed head, and some creepy chanting around a fire on a class trip.

ADVERTISEMENT

"If all of a sudden if someone like Jason came out of the woods and started stabbing me, at least he wouldn't scare me. I felt like I was a kid before that story, and a man afterward, in a really profound sort of cathartic moment."

ADVERTISEMENT

He's Been Sensitive About Issues In His Past

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-489196592
Tommaso Boddi/Getty Images for Vanity Fair
Tommaso Boddi/Getty Images for Vanity Fair
ADVERTISEMENT

Peele comes from a mixed-race heritage. His father was black, but he was raised solely by his mother, Lucinda Williams, who is white. The effects of a fatherless childhood were hard to pin down.

ADVERTISEMENT

In an interview with Rolling Stone magazine, he touched on it more. "You don't really notice it until you're watching some movie where there's a father-and-son thing that you just start crying for no reason, or a moment of hanging out with my son and sort of imagining if I wasn't in his life."

ADVERTISEMENT

The Comedian Has Always Had A Love For Another Genre

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
rosemarys-baby_7w3vD8
Paramount Pictures/MovieStillsDb
Paramount Pictures/MovieStillsDb
ADVERTISEMENT

Before the release of Get Out, some filmgoers were a bit skeptical that a comedian was directing a social thriller. It's been his dream since his childhood to become a director, and his heart has always been with the horror genre.

ADVERTISEMENT

But, as the former MadTV star revealed in a promotional interview with Forbes, he was quick to cite some of his favorite horror films growing up. Roman Polanski's Rosemary's Baby and the bizarre 1975 sci-fi/horror mashup of The Stepford Wives was an important influence on the tone of his film.

ADVERTISEMENT

Outside Of The Horror Genre, The 2008 Election Inspired His Movie

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-534289700
Ralf-Finn Hestoft/Corbis via Getty Images
Ralf-Finn Hestoft/Corbis via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Obama's 2008 election victory was taken as a sign that America had finally entered a post-racial phase. Peele not only found this notion to be simple, but dangerous at the same time.

ADVERTISEMENT

During a seminar at Sundance Film Festival, he said that he felt the United States was "living a post-racial lie," making him think about how white and black people think about racism differently. He felt as if a monster of racism could illuminate through telling a story of his beloved genre.

ADVERTISEMENT

His Movie Was A Social Thriller That Tackled Race

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
get-out_1maJvs
Universal Pictures/MovieStillsDb.com
Universal Pictures/MovieStillsDb.com
ADVERTISEMENT

Get Out would be the official title of Peele's directorial debut, and was a social thriller in which every single white character turns out to be evil. The weekend turns into a dramatic escalation where they attempt to remove of part of the main character's brain.

ADVERTISEMENT

It pushed audiences of all types to embrace a young black man's perspective, launching conversations about racism, and the Sunken Place entered the culture as a metaphor, meme, and nightmare. While Peele made the film for less than $5 million, it grossed more than $250 million worldwide.

ADVERTISEMENT

Peele Is Aware Of The One Get Out Character Who Was Hardly Mentioned

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
get-out_dO0Ysx
Universal Pictures/MovieStillsDb.com
Universal Pictures/MovieStillsDb.com
ADVERTISEMENT

The absent of Chris' father, played by Daniel Kaluuya, was hardly mentioned in the movie.

ADVERTISEMENT

"You take the moment when his mother died when she didn't come home, and he didn't know whether to call the cops. This was a moment where he was left to do what presumably another parent figure would have figured out. It haunts Chris, even though he doesn’t quite come to full terms with that." Peele's own life was shaped, in part, by that same absence.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Original Ending Was Pretty Bleak

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
get-out_bKx10c
Universal Pictures/MovieStillsDb.com
Universal Pictures/MovieStillsDb.com
ADVERTISEMENT

The director has been forthcoming about the original ending for Get Out. It's significantly different from what the final cut turned out to be. While the end finishes on a somewhat hopeful note, the original ending was much darker and more realistic.

ADVERTISEMENT

The ending shows the cops actually arriving, but Chris gets taken away and is locked up for slaughtering an entire family of white people. Given America's track record of police brutality, Peele opted to not use the original ending.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Sunken Place Is A Metaphor For A Specific Reason

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
get-out_MqrRoT
Universal Pictures/MovieStillsDb.com
Universal Pictures/MovieStillsDb.com
ADVERTISEMENT

The symbolism that has garnered the most attention was the Sunken Place, which was a brainwashing technique used in the movie to steal the bodies of people of color. The director has stated that it represents that paralysis experienced by black Americans who have tried to make their voices heard.

ADVERTISEMENT

It's also a metaphor for the marginalization of the black horror movie audiences. While most horror films are almost always revolving around white characters, Peele wanted to change that altogether.

ADVERTISEMENT

He Made History At The 90th Academy Awards

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-1049131518
Kurt Krieger/Corbis via Getty Images
Kurt Krieger/Corbis via Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

It only took one film for the comedian-turned-filmmaker to become an Oscar winner. The first-time filmmaker became the first black person to win an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay.

ADVERTISEMENT

The social thriller was up against The Big Sick, Lady Bird, The Shape of Water, and Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri. Thanks to its pop culture appeal and astounding social relevance, it was nominated for Best Picture, Best Director, and actor Daniel Kaluuya was nominated for Best Actor.

ADVERTISEMENT

Peele Has Felt An Unusual Amount Of Freedom To Determine His Life's Path

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-1127047627
Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images for DGA
Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images for DGA
ADVERTISEMENT

One of the bonuses of not having a father around was Peele not answering to a father. It was clear from early on that he had a variety of ways to showcase his talents. He was a gifted draftsman, attending life-drawing classes, and did amateur theater as a kid, taking an early stab at pursuing acting professionally.

ADVERTISEMENT

While he had an agent and got sent to auditions, nothing really got off the ground and he had a hard time dealing with rejection. In other words, he was a failed child star.

ADVERTISEMENT

He Continued To Make Oscar History

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-926908090
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images
Kevin Mazur/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

When Peele was nominated for Best Picture, Best Director and Best Original Screenplay, he made history. The comedian-turned-director became the first black filmmaker ever to be nominated in those categories in a single year.

ADVERTISEMENT

Now, he's back in the running once again as one of the producers of Spike Lee's BlackKKKlansman. While that brings the total of black nominees for Best Picture to eleven, the former MadTV star is the only repeat contender. Hopefully, this won't be the last time he's nominated for those categories.

ADVERTISEMENT

Peele Was An Executive Producer For A Reboot

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
the-twilight-zone_xVmw5T
CBS/MovieStillsDb.com
CBS/MovieStillsDb.com
ADVERTISEMENT

CBS Access is bringing back The Twilight Zone. The streaming program will reimagine the classic series, which aired from 1959 to 1964. Peele will executive produce the series alongside Simon Kinberg, and the Oscar winner will narrate as well as host the series.

ADVERTISEMENT

Beyond that, so far, all people have seen are unsettling teasers and casting announcements along the way. With that in mind, here's what else is available for the reboot.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ginnifer Goodwin Is The Latest Actress To Journey Into The Twilight Zone

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-1003657486
Mike Coppola/Getty Images for Entertainment Weekly
Mike Coppola/Getty Images for Entertainment Weekly
ADVERTISEMENT

Goodwin has been added to the show and will star in an episode called "Point Of Origin." Her co-stars will include James Frain and Zabryna Guevara. The other additions to the show are Jessica Williams and DeWanda Wise.

ADVERTISEMENT

Adam Scott will star in the classic episode that reimagines the "Nightmare at 30,000 Feet." American Horror Story staple Taissa Farmiga and The Oath writer/director Ike Barinholtz will also travel to The Twilight Zone. While the plot of their episode has yet to be revealed, they'll be joined by Better Call Saul star Rhea Seehorn.

ADVERTISEMENT

He Produced A New Candyman Movie

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
candyman_d403329e
Tristar Pictures/MovieStillsDb.com
Tristar Pictures/MovieStillsDb.com
ADVERTISEMENT

Now that the Oscar winner has made a name for himself, he's attached to more projects. He's been attached to a reboot of the cult horror classic Candyman. Based on the book The Forbidden by Clive Barker, the original film follows a graduate student who is doing a thesis on urban legends and discovers the Candyman, an artist and the son of a slave who had his hand severed before he was murdered.

ADVERTISEMENT

Peele's version of the movie was released in 2021 with a Rotten Tomatoes score of 84%.

ADVERTISEMENT

Key & Peele Are Reunited Once Again

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
toy-story-4_8251FU
Pixar/MovieStillsDb.com
Pixar/MovieStillsDb.com
ADVERTISEMENT

Toy Story continued to add A-listers to its playroom. Two of those celebrities included the comedy duo who got their start at Second City Chicago. Key and Peele starred together in Toy Story 4 as a stuffed bunny and duck.

ADVERTISEMENT

Peele is now an established presence in Hollywood with a net worth of $50 million.

ADVERTISEMENT

He Married A Comedian After More Than Two Years Of Dating

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-926824432
Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images
Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Thanks to the encouragement of Andy Samberg, Peele and comedian Chelsea Peretti began dating in 2013. This came after Andy learned that Jordan expressed interest in Chelsea, and he decided to play matchmaker. After more than two years of being in a relationship, they got engaged in November 2015.

ADVERTISEMENT

The hilarious thing about the engagement was that the former MadTV star proposed to the Brooklyn Nine-Nine actress during a family talent show. On July 1, 2016, they welcomed their son Beaumont Gino into the world.

ADVERTISEMENT

As A Ninth Grader, He Attended An Art School

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-1015365732
Han Myung-Gu/WireImage/Getty Images
Han Myung-Gu/WireImage/Getty Images
ADVERTISEMENT

Peele got a scholarship to the private Calhoun School, finding an artsy group of friends. During this time, the teenager had a goth phase, listening to bands such as Tool and Nine Inch Nails, and he always wore black.

ADVERTISEMENT

Win Rosenfield, one of Peele's high school friends, explained what they did in school when they made a Jurassic Park-inspired video. "We're literally smashing a tyrannosaurus rex against a Luke Skywalker, and Jordan could elevate it into something funny and scary and weird and original."

ADVERTISEMENT

Us Was Terrifying

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
50522547_390907838362388_2048583026387473147_n
@jordanpeele/Instagram
@jordanpeele/Instagram
ADVERTISEMENT

Us tells the story of a family facing off with unsettling doppelgangers of themselves. Peele calls them the Tethered, and means for them to be a "monster mythology."

ADVERTISEMENT

He's rightfully doing that since the movie was produced by Universal. Peele kept with the film studio's past with the Frankenstein-Dracula-Wolfman tradition.

ADVERTISEMENT

Winston Duke And Lupita Nyong'o

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
GettyImages-908555540
Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Turner
Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for Turner
ADVERTISEMENT

The actor and actress played the father and mother, as well as their corresponding doppelgangers. Duke is best known to moviegoers as M'Baku, the leader of the Jabari Tribe in Black Panther.

ADVERTISEMENT

He reprised this role in Avengers: Infinity War and will reprise it again in the upcoming Avengers: Endgame. Us was Duke's first non-Marvel movie role. Meanwhile, Nyong'o famously won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her role as Patsey in 12 Years a Slave.

ADVERTISEMENT

It Explored Deeper Themes

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
MV5BMTgyZmYwMjYtN2RiZi00OWUwLTkzYzMtMTk0NjkyYzgyYTgzXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyNjE4NjI1ODU@._V1_SX1777_CR0,0,1777,999_AL_
imdb.com
imdb.com
ADVERTISEMENT

A lot of the horror films on Peele's homework list have a deeper meaning and purpose beyond scaring the audience. The Babadook is about dealing with grief; It Follows is a parable about STDs and their stigma.

ADVERTISEMENT

Us followed in the footsteps of these films. Peele revealed in an interview with Entertainment Weekly, "I think the main idea that went into writing this film is that we're our own worst enemy, and that idea created this monster, The Tethered. I wanted to forge this new mythology that explored our duality and the duality of the characters."

ADVERTISEMENT

There Were Ton Of Conspiracy Theories About The Plot

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
MV5BODkwNjRiYTktZWYzMy00Y2RkLWE4YjItZjBkYjhiNDkwYjEzXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyNjUwNzk3NDc@._V1_
imdb.com
imdb.com
ADVERTISEMENT

Some were actually legitimate, including the doppelganger family are clones, suggesting they're a physical manifestation of a family trauma or tragedy, which must be confronted for the Tethered to go away. One of the other theories behind the movie is that the family is economically well off.

ADVERTISEMENT

The father owns a boat and they blend into an upper-class society. But to do so, they had to hide anything that the establishment would deem to be "other." Thus, the Tethered represent what the family has had to repress or change to socially advance.