
‘Always Work On Your Next Move'—Kandi Burruss Talks Leaving ‘Housewives,' Broadway Wins, And Her Mogul Mindset
Crossposted from MadameNoire.com
Last year, Kandi Burruss turned the page on her iconic 14-season run on The Real Housewives of Atlanta —announcing she would not return for Season 16. That said, she's as busy as ever. The multihyphenate mogul keeps a full plate, with no shortage of projects in motion.
By now, Kandi's expansive body of work speaks for itself. She's a multiplatinum, Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter, TV personality, actress, restaurateur, and Tony-nominated Broadway producer. Her impact on the culture resonates through music, television, and now the world of theater.
Whether she's in the spotlight or behind the scenes, one thing fuels her staying power—Kandi is a phenomenal businesswoman. She spoke with iOne Digital from Atlanta to reflect on life after Housewives , her passion for Broadway, and the mantra guiding her journey.
We care about your data. See our privacy policy.
This fall, Burruss will receive the Wifetime Achievement Award at BravoCon in Las Vegas, celebrating her enduring run on the Housewives franchise. It's a fitting tribute marking the end of an era she helped define.
'Walking away from something that you had been a part of for 14 seasons is not easy, you know? But I feel good about my decision,' she said. 'I took the leap of faith to say, okay, that part of my life is behind me.' Source: MorrisDe Photography / MorrisDe Photography
Despite leaving the show, Burruss is still in the mix, appearing on Bravo's Next Gen NYC alongside her daughter, Riley Burruss. 'I'm really excited for her. I've been doing my best to guide her hard-headed behind,' the mom of three said with a laugh.
As for her advice to 22-year-old Riley—who stars alongside other twenty-somethings navigating young adulthood in New York City—Kandi kept it simple, 'Whatever you say, whatever you do—just stand on it. There's nothing you can do that'll make me not love you and support you. Just be a woman of integrity. Don't let them roll the tapes back on you, showing you lying! I've never been that person, and I don't want you to be that person.'
Since stepping away from RHOA , Burruss hasn't slowed down, with little time to reflect.
She'd braced herself for 'FOMO' (fear of missing out) once the new season began airing. 'But what helped is that I always have a lot going on,' she said. 'I didn't feel like I was missing out because I had other things to keep my mind occupied.'
While the show was filming in 2024, Kandi was on the road with Xscape and SWV for the 30-city Queens of R&B Tour . That same year, she joined the production team for the record-breaking Broadway revival of Othello , starring Denzel Washington and Jake Gyllenhaal.
Broadway has become another space where Kandi thrives. Before Othello , Burruss co-produced the 2024 revival of the beloved classic, The Wiz , another standout success in her producing journey.
RELATED CONTENT: Othello's Opening Night Brings Black Hollywood's Finest To Broadway: See Style Gallery Source: MorrisDe Photography / MorrisDe Photography
A theater kid at heart, Burruss fell in love with the stage early on. She graduated from Tri-Cities High School in East Point, Georgia—the starting point for a long list of famed alumni including André 3000, Big Boi, Kenan Thompson, and her fellow Xscape members Tameka 'Tiny' Harris, Tamika Scott, and LaTocha Scott-Bivens, to name a few.
'My love for theater happened in my high school years. I always felt like this is something that I wanted to do.'
Other Tri-Cities graduates who made their mark on Broadway—like actress and singer Saycon Sengbloh and sound designer Justin Ellington (who worked on Othello )—inspired Kandi to 'really go after it' in recent years.
Kandi made her Broadway debut in 2018, playing Mama Morton in Chicago . During the pandemic, she shifted behind the scenes as a producer on Thoughts of a Colored Man .
'I just wanted to be back in that world,' she said. 'Every business that I've been a part of, I start off as one of the talent—but I'm always curious about how the behind the scenes work.'
She went on to co-produce The Piano Lesson , earning a Tony nomination in 2023 for Best Revival of a Play.
Burruss understands the power of her platform and how to connect with audiences—not only as a performer, but as a producer. By drawing on her wide-reaching fanbase, she's helping usher new patrons into Broadway venues that haven't always felt inclusive.
'I've seen the audience change from when I first started,' she said, reflecting on the mostly white ticketholders who'd fill the seats. 'But now, a lot of people in the crowd are people of color, Black people. It's so cool to see so many people—and not just from New York—flying in from everywhere to come and support our shows.' Source: MorrisDe Photography / MorrisDe Photography
With a constant flow of ventures in her ecosystem, Burruss is always thinking several steps ahead.
'I realized a long time ago that you could be on top of the world, but as soon as you take your foot off the pedal, people will be like, 'Oh, they used to be so dope.''
Her cousin had a saying, 'Well, used-to-bee's don't make no honey, so don't nobody care what you used to be .' Kandi laughed, 'She wasn't trying to be mean, but she don't know how her words stuck!'
It's this mindset that keeps the mogul moving forward.
'Always work on your next move while you're in your current move. If you look at the past decade or so, I'm always working on something, trying to figure out how to make the next opportunity. Being a Black woman in any business, you don't want to wait for somebody to give opportunity to you. It's better when you can make the opportunity.'
With her legacy in motion, she's not done yet. Already a Grammy winner with Tony and Emmy nods under her belt, she's got her eye on achieving EGOT status—a rare distinction for those who've won an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony. 'My dream is definitely attainable if I keep going,' she affirmed.
As Kandi embraces this new chapter, she continues to shape culture not just by showing up—but by building the stage itself.
'Always Work On Your Next Move'—Kandi Burruss Talks Leaving 'Housewives,' Broadway Wins, And Her Mogul Mindset was originally published on hellobeautiful.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

an hour ago
Malcolm-Jamal Warner's mother launches memorial project weeks after actor's death
Pamela Warner is honoring her late son, Malcolm-Jamal Warner, with a new social media project aimed at keeping his life's work alive. On Aug. 6, she introduced the Malcolm-Jamal Warner Living Legacy Instagram page, calling it the "official account" dedicated to celebrating the Emmy-nominated actor. In her first post, Pamela shared her plans to highlight projects and causes connected to her son's passions, inviting fans to "stay connected" in the months ahead. Two days later, she followed with an emotional reflection on Warner's life, describing him as "a kind, loving man" whose greatest mission was helping others realize their own strength. She remembered him not only as an accomplished performer but also as a devoted husband, father and son, as well as her confidant and closest friend. Pamela spoke about his artistic journey, from declaring at eight years old that he wanted to be on stage forever, to his later success as a musician with his band, Miles Long. His four albums, including two Grammy-nominated projects and one Grammy win, were just one part of a career. Warner, who became a household name playing Theo Huxtable on "The Cosby Show," died on July 20 at age 54. According to Costa Rican authorities, he drowned while swimming near Cocles Beach with his 8-year-old daughter after being caught in a rip current. In her tribute, Pamela reassured friends and fans that her son "did not suffer," adding that his passing felt like a return to where his life began. "Hold onto whatever part of Malcolm's life touched yours," she wrote. "In keeping it near, you keep his spirit alive."

2 hours ago
Tom Hanks pays tribute to Apollo 13 commander Jim Lovell
"God speed you, on this next voyage, Jim Lovell.' 0:39 Tom Hanks took to Instagram to remember Jim Lovell, the astronaut he portrayed in the 1995 Ron Howard–directed film "Apollo 13." Lovell, best known for commanding the near-disastrous Apollo 13 mission, died Thursday, Aug. 7, at age 97. In a statement posted to Instagram, the Oscar-winning actor reflected on Lovell's extraordinary life. "There are people who dare, who dream, and who lead others to the places we would not go on our own," Hanks wrote. "Jim Lovell, who for a long while had gone farther into space and for longer than any other person of our planet, was that kind of guy." Hanks praised Lovell's dedication to exploration, noting that his missions were not motivated by fame or fortune but by "the challenges that fuel the course of being alive." The actor closed his tribute with a nod to the timing of Lovell's passing: "On this night of a full moon, he passes on -- to the heavens, to the cosmos, to the stars. God speed you, on this next voyage, Jim Lovell." Howard also praised the late astronaut, saying "simply knowing" the astronaut was an honor. Sharing archival images and side-by-side comparisons from the film, the filmmaker called Lovell "one of the most remarkable individuals I've ever met." "His combination of intellect, courage and commitment to duty made him extraordinary," Howard wrote. "His support of our movie-making efforts inspired authenticity and elevated our process in so many ways. Thank you, sir, for your service to our country and to humankind." Lovell's career spanned decades of groundbreaking achievements in space exploration, including flights on Gemini 7, Gemini 12, Apollo 8 -- the first mission to orbit the moon --and Apollo 13.


Tom's Guide
5 hours ago
- Tom's Guide
I just found the most suspenseful spy thriller on Prime Video — and now I don't think I can sleep tonight
In further proof that time is a social construct, it's already been more than a decade since the film world lost one of its finest actors: Philip Seymour Hoffman, the character-actor legend who died in February 2014. And while many of the performer's roles across the decades have been deservedly commended, from his iconic entrance as bratty Freddie Miles in "The Talented Mr. Ripley" to his Oscar-winning turn as author Truman Capote in "Capote" to his chilling take on a scandalized Catholic priest in "Doubt," there are still some Hoffman performances that are overdue for praise. One such credit is the 2014 espionage thriller "A Most Wanted Man," which marked Hoffman's final leading performance before his death. (He appeared in a supporting capacity in "The Hunger Games: Mockingjay" films.) In the absorbing spy drama, the actor plays a hard-drinking, world-weary German intelligence officer tasked with spying on Hamburg's Muslim community, offering up a remarkable send-off to an already stunning screen career. Need more convincing? Here's why you should add "A Most Wanted Man" on Prime Video to your watchlist. Based on the 2008 novel of the same name by John le Carré and directed by Anton Corbijn, "A Most Wanted Man" centers on Günther Bachmann (Philip Seymour Hoffman), a security agent leading a covert German government team tasked with recruiting local informants with ties to Islamic terrorist organizations. "When a half-Chechen, half-Russian, tortured half-to-death immigrant turns up in Hamburg's Islamic community, laying claim to his father's ill-gotten fortune, both German and US security agencies take a close interest," reads the drama's logline, per Prime Video. "As the clock ticks down and the stakes rise, the race is on to establish this most wanted man's true identity — oppressed victim or destruction-bent extremist?" Along with Hoffman, the star-studded ensemble features Rachel McAdams as immigration lawyer Annabel Richter, Willem Dafoe as banker Tommy Brue, Robin Wright as CIA agent Martha Sullivan and Grigoriy Dobrygin as Chechnyan refugee and suspected terrorist Issa Karpov. One of the most suspenseful and cerebral spy flicks in recent memory, "A Most Wanted Man" received wide acclaim for Hoffman's potent final performance. (The film was released posthumously in July 2014.) Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Los Angeles Times critic Kenneth Turan called it "a fitting film for him to leave on, not only because it is so expertly done but because his role was so challenging," adding that even for "as brilliant a chameleon" as Hoffman was, "making us believe he was Günther Bachmann, a German intelligence officer, had to be one of the most demanding roles in a lifetime full of them." Elsewhere, Eric Kohn of IndieWire commends the actor for imbuing his character "with an elegant quality that goes beyond topicality to suggest the timeless empathy within us all. A meticulously plotted thriller whose slow-burn pace more than pays off in the end, the film boasts a solid 86% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, where the site's critical consensus reads: "Smart, subtle, and steadily absorbing, A Most Wanted Man proves once again that John le Carré books make for sharp, thoughtful thrillers."[ Watch "A Most Wanted Man" on Prime Video now