Before Community, before Inside Out 2, before any of the roles that made her a recognizable face in Hollywood, Yvette Nicole Brown was a 19-year-old in Cleveland with a plan and the nerve to see it through. The plan involved tracking down Michael Bivins of New Edition after a concert, finding out where he was staying and asking him to listen to her sing. By most measures, it should not have worked. It did.
Brown shared the story on a recent episode of the Teen Beat podcast, reflecting on the moment that, though she did not know it at the time, set the entire course of her professional life in motion. She had been a devoted fan of New Edition since the group’s early days in 1983, developing the kind of deep, loyal connection to a musical act that only forms in adolescence. By the time she was a teenager, Bivins had begun building a reputation as a talent developer, having helped launch Boyz II Men among other acts. Brown took notice and decided he was the person who needed to hear her sing.
How the plan unfolded
What followed was, by Brown’s own telling, a pursuit that she describes with a mix of affection and disbelief at her younger self. After a New Edition concert in Cleveland, she enlisted the help of a security guard to locate where the group was staying and then made her approach. She asked Bivins repeatedly, with a formality that she now finds both endearing and slightly absurd given the small age gap between them, for the opportunity to perform.
Bivins was only a few years older than she was at the time, a detail that makes her insistence on addressing him with such deference even more charming in retrospect. Eventually he agreed to hear her out. She sang. And the following day, he called to tell her he wanted to manage her.
A record deal and an unexpected journey
Yvette Nicole Brown was signed to Bivins’ Biv 10 Records and became part of the East Coast Family, a collective of artists Bivins had discovered and developed. The music career that followed did not become her defining path, but the experience gave her something more durable than a record deal. It gave her confidence, industry knowledge and a connection to someone who would continue to play a role in her life in ways neither of them could have anticipated at the time.
When she eventually moved to Los Angeles, Brown worked as Bivins’ assistant before transitioning into the acting career that would ultimately define her public identity. The professional relationship that began with a teenager chasing down her favorite artist became a genuine and lasting one.
A full circle that took decades to complete
The most remarkable chapter of the story came years later when Brown was cast as Bivins’ mother in the 2017 biographical miniseries The New Edition Story. The arc from devoted fan to signed artist to assistant to the woman who portrayed his mother on screen is the kind of trajectory that resists easy categorization. It is partly a story about persistence, partly about luck and partly about what becomes possible when someone refuses to let a moment pass without trying.
Brown has since built a career that spans comedy, drama and animation. Her credits include the long-running NBC series Community, the Pixar sequel Inside Out 2, the CBS comedy Mom and The Black Lady Sketch Show, among dozens of other projects. She was married in 2025 at the age of 53, a milestone she has spoken about with characteristic warmth and humor.
The story she told on the podcast is one she has clearly held close for a long time, not because it is glamorous but because it is true in all the ways that matter. She wanted something, she went after it in the most direct way she could imagine, and it opened a door that never fully closed.

