Overview:
Born to a teenage mother, Foreman grew up in a blue-collar family. Though she earned a graduate degree and built a solid professional career, the pull of the stage proved too hard to resist. Her comedy and performances have won acclaim, awards and fans from Baltimore to Broadway.
Long before she pronounced herself the “Indie Mom of Comedy,” Michelle D, Foreman —better known onstage as MESHELLE — was just a little girl growing up in Park Heights, a northwest Baltimore neighborhood where Black families built solid lives from the sweat of their brows, working in steel mills, shipping docks, and meatpacking plants.
“Park Heights was full of people who built lives without college degrees,” she recalls. “They worked, they owned homes, and they took care of their families.”
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MESHELLE took the path that many blue-collar parents want their children to follow: college (she has an undergraduate degree in psychology from Bowie State University and attended graduate school at Temple University in Philadelphia) and a dependable, white-collar career as a social worker. But her friends, co-workers and even college educators kept pointing to her natural gift for comedy, a passion she couldn’t leave behind.
‘You’re Funny!’
Ultimately, she built a career turning her own life — its triumphs, heartbreaks, and even its ordinary routines — into comedy that uplifts and heals. From growing up in Park Heights, the daughter of a single teenage mom, to raising three children of her own, surviving cancer, and weathering divorce, she’s found in laughter both a calling and a ministry.
Now, MESHELLE uses faith and family as her foundation while proving that humor, when rooted in truth, can carry people through their hardest seasons.
“I get my material from everything I live through,” she explains. “Every high and every low turns into laughter.”
My art is my calling. I have to get on stage. That’s how I heal—and how I help others heal, too.
Michelle Foreman, the ‘INdie mom of comedy’
Her story begins in a household where the teenager who gave her birth was unprepared for motherhood, which left MESHELLE and her sister to be raised by their grandmother and grandfather. Even so, MESHELLE grew up surrounded by examples of grit, faith, and determination.
That sense of perseverance carried MESHELLE through Bowie State University, where she earned a degree in psychology and envisioned a career as a counselor or social worker. But she kept hearing, “You’re funny!” from everyone around her.
By the time her co-workers secretly entered her into a comedy contest at Baltimore’s Comedy Club — and she won — her second calling was undeniable.
Balancing Purpose and Passion
Foreman didn’t immediately abandon her professional aspirations. She pursued a graduate degree at Temple University, working as a social worker while moonlighting at comedy clubs in Baltimore, Philadelphia, and beyond. Her dual lives soon collided.
“The dean of students pulled me aside because she’d heard rumors I was falling asleep in class,” she says, laughing. “Then she showed up at one of my shows and told me, ‘Michelle, you are funny.’”
Her day job became an extension of her personal mission of helping people. An Open Society Institute Community Fellow, she launched Goaldiggers: The Sankofa Project, a program helping Black teen girls connect with their heritage while gaining pathways to higher education. But she still couldn’t shake the pull of the stage.
She jokingly called her artistic alter ego “Mrs. Jones”—the other side of herself that danced, sang, and wrote jokes well past midnight. For years, she resisted making comedy her full-time focus, even as her routines, rooted in her own life experiences, drew bigger crowds.
Becoming the Indie Mom
Eventually, MESHELLE came up with the descriptor that would define her brand: the Indie Mom of Comedy, a woman who is “independent, innovative, with individuality, fearless and poised to live her dream.” Her career took off.
MESHELLE had her stage premiere in Bishop T.D. Jakes’ hit stage play, “Woman Thou Art Loosed,” appeared in the NAACP documentary “Walk a Mile in My Shoes,” and starred in her one-woman show, “Diary of a MILF (Mom I’d Love to Follow).” She’s won awards for writing and production work.
On stage, the comedian MESHELLE jokes that she doesn’t look like anybody’s wife or mother, but her three children remain her foundation. “I wouldn’t be the Indie Mom without them,” she says. “It’s God, me, and my family. My art is my gift, and it comes from the authentic life I live as a mom.”
Faith, Loss, and Resilience
That authenticity was tested when her 20-year marriage collapsed. “I invested so much of myself, more than I realized,” she reflects. “I found out he was in love with the idea of me, but not with me—and that just wasn’t enough.”
The breakup left her devastated, but not defeated. Faith had already carried her through a cancer diagnosis; it carried her again as she built a new home for herself and her children.
“God kept me,” she says. “I taught my kids that the same God we prayed to would always be there, ready to help.”
Now, with three young adult children forging their own paths, she continues to co-parent while reminding them — and her audiences — that resilience is its own kind of grace.
Healing Through Laughter
Comedy became her ministry, a way to turn pain into purpose. Her routines often center on motherhood, faith, and perseverance, delivered with sharp wit and a wink of Baltimore pride.
Her latest project, Mother Knows Best and Father Knows Less, won Broadway awards and debuted locally October 25 at Magooby’s Joke House—serving as the unofficial kickoff to Bowie State’s homecoming weekend.
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For MESHELLE, it’s another step in a journey that began in Park Heights but has reached audiences nationwide.
“My art is my calling,” she says. “I have to get on stage. That’s how I heal—and how I help others heal, too.”
Through it all, she remains grounded in the same values that shaped her as a girl: faith, family, and the belief that even in life’s hardest moments, there is something to laugh about.

