Quincy

"In the Flow with Affion Crockett" TV Series Viewing Party at Chakra in Beverly Hills on August 14, 2011

Quincy in 2011, photo by Prphotos.com

Birth Name: Quincy Taylor Brown

Place of Birth: New York City, New York, U.S.

Date of Birth: June 4, 1991

Ethnicity: African-American

Quincy, also known as Quincy Brown and Quincy Combs, is an American recording artist, actor, and entrepreneur. His roles include the films We the Party, Brotherly Love, Dope (2015), and The Holiday Calendar, and the shows The Haves and the Have Nots, Star, and Power Book III: Raising Kanan. His songs include “Friends First.”

Quincy is the son of model Kimberly Porter and singer, songwriter, record producer, and radio host Al B. Sure! (born Albert Joseph Brown III). He was raised by his mother and producer, musician, and actor Sean Combs, after he began a relationship with Quincy’s mother when Quincy was three. Quincy grew up in Columbus, Georgia, and then Los Angeles, California.

Quincy’s parents are/were both African-American. A picture of Quincy’s biological father can be seen here. A picture of Quincy’s mother can be seen here.

A DNA test posted by Quincy on his Instagram page stated that his genetic ancestry consists of:

*59% Sub-Saharan African
——–*24% Nigeria
——–*12% Cameroon, Congo & Western Bantu Peoples
——–*10% Ivory Coast & Ghana
——–*5% Senegal
——–*5% Benin & Togo
——–*2% Southern Bantu Peoples
——–*1% Nigeria-East Central
*40% European
——–*33% England & Northwestern Europe
——–*3% Norway
——–*2% Scotland
——–*1% Sweden & Denmark
——–*1% Ireland
*1% Indigenous
——–*1% Indigenous Americas-North

Quincy’s paternal grandfather is named Albert Joseph Brown II. A picture of Albert can be seen here. Albert was a nuclear medical technician.

Quincy’s paternal grandmother is named Cassandra. A picture of Cassandra can be seen here.

Quincy’s maternal grandmother was Sarah Lee (the daughter of Steven Geen and Lila Mae Goodwin Star). A picture of Lila can be seen here.

A picture of Quincy’s other maternal great-grandmother can be seen here.

98 Responses

  1. Valentina Iglesias says:

    He doesn’t remotely look like the average african american at all to me he looks very ambiguous and visibly mixed. His dna results make sense and explains it. Very handsome guy btw

    • midori29 says:

      Please stop with your stereotypical racism. If you are not Black you would not know. The media stereotypes Africans. Africans Black people come in more than 20 skin tones and hair textures. They are the most diverse continent on earth .

      • myfellowwhitepeople says:

        You must be one of the dumbest users on this site LMAO
        You should visit Africa if you think africans are the most diverse people in the world and most africanamericans don’t look exactly like Africans in Africa. He doesn’t even look like the average afroamerican
        he’s more mixed than normal. He looks like a person from Puerto Rico.

    • midori29 says:

      You’re going off the Black people you see on tv that’s not accurate for the entire African continent. There are 100 percent Black Africans especially in Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea that look just like Quincy who aren’t mixed at all. African Americans come from West Africa , the rest of the 52 countries in Africa you don’t see. Lots of different types of Black people.

      • passingtime85 says:

        East Africans have admixed with West and South Asians for millenia though. You shouldn’t present the population of the East side of the continent, and their phenotypes, as some nebulous magically separation. Phenotype shifts and morph based on region and proximity to near populations. Most African Americans are not descended from East Africans. So Valentina Iglesias was correct, he doesn’t look African American, he looks closer to East African or North African depending on the region. Ethiopia has some of the most admixed populations in the entire African continent.

        You should know all this by now, African heritage is your realm of interest.

    • andrew says:

      If so he is:

      59% Sub-Sarahan African
      40% European
      1% Native American

      • midori29 says:

        Black in the West equals substantial Subsaharan African dna He is Black. Lots of Blacks have these dna percentages. Majority African. Even if you have other dna the African doesn’t go away you’re still recently African

  2. History Guy says:

    Kim Porter does look mixed, but has a dark medium complexion. Her mother is clearly very mixed genetically. Kim also has wavy/curly hair naturally, and thinner facial features, due to her mixed ancestry. Quincy is a mix between between his father, and Kim’s mother, phenotypically.

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