Fac fortia et patere
Fac fortia et patere

BMW Portfolio is a conglomerate envisioning wealth and legacy building
for youth of all colors through enterprises founded since 1989 by
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz.
Foundational Verticals and Doctrine
Lotus Compound™️Innovation Environments in Moab UT & Austin TX
Infrastructure and Systems Commerce • Venture Execution • IP Holdings
AI Infrastructure • Entrepreneur-In-Residence • Youth Stewardship
100 Girls of Color Billionaires by 2030™ Mural Project by MW
100 Girl Billionaires ™ by 2030 / 2035 / 2040™ Cohorts
100 Girl Billionaires™ • 100 Boy Billionaires™
Billionaire Girl Society™

100 GIRL BILLIONAIRES™ GLOBAL COHORT 2026-2030
US $1,500
✓ Premium Merit Engagement™
Direct founder engagement, recognition, encouragement, and strategic conversation.
✓ Founder Access Session
Scheduled founder engagement with
Brigette Michelle Wojnarowicz
through end of 2026.
✓ Founder Recognition Letter
Formal acknowledgment of participation and contribution.
✓ Founding Candidate Anthology Inclusion
Permanent inclusion in the commemorative founding anthology.
✓ Global Luxury Discovery Bag™
Curated premium digital and experiential discovery collection.
✓ FounderGirl™ Zine™
Launch edition founder artifact.
✓ Billionaire Girl Society™ Membership
Official Society recognition and membership inclusion.
✓ Invitation to Annual Billionaire Girl Society Soirée™
Elegant annual Society celebration featuring
music, culture, connection, and ceremonial joy.
✓ Founder Interview / Academic Citation Access
Structured founder interview / dialogue opportunities.
✓ Civic Participation & Giveback Impact
5% contribution allocation supporting American youth initiatives including
100 Girl Billionaires™ / 100 Boy Billionaires™ from Appalachia to the Delta.
✓ Selection Consideration for Global Cohort 2026–2030
Merit-based review for official participant selection.
✓ Tuition Included if Selected
No secondary tuition obligation.
100 Girl Billionaires™ Global Cohorts Program —
founded and launched in 2026 —
by BMW Portfolio LLC and Mateusz Wojnarowicz LLC,
is a founder-led and independently authored
first-principles, for-profit, and futurist four-year program
for girls of all colors ages 15 through 20 worldwide,
with the founding global cohort convening in 2026,
advancing the next generation of female billionaires through
merit-and-tuition-based structured mentorship, education, and
execution through honored access to aligned environments
in support of the program's measurable outcome
and generational impact of the
100 Girl Billionaires™ Global Cohorts Program.
100 Girl Billionaires™ is a Trademark of BMW Portfolio LLC.
© 2026 BMW Portfolio LLC & Mateusz Wojnarowicz LLC.
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz, Bernadine Louise Library™ is a first-principles, for-profit, futurist bespoke literary environment model for girls and boys of all colors across abundance-potentialed™ areas worldwide—supporting 100 Girl Billionaires™ and 100 Boy Billionaires™—school-based American youth initiatives. Inspired by Bernadine Louise wisdom: “Everything a girl needs, she can find in a book.”
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz, Black Grrrl Revolution™ Beauty is a first-principles, for-profit, futurist beauty and empowerment infrastructure featuring the resilient lip and nail lacquer collection, with enterprise revenues supporting 100 Girl Billionaires™ and 100 Boy Billionaires™ school-based American youth initiatives.
B. Wojnarowicz Photojournalism™️ is a first-principles, for-profit, futurist photojournalism and archival infrastructure documenting oppression, experiences in exile, marriage, motherhood, domestic life, education, fashion, travel, NYC arts, club and hip-hop history, resilience, and the aesthetics of surviving, supporting 100 Girl Billionaires™ and 100 Boy Billionaires™ school-based American youth initiatives.
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz, Exile Social Media™ is a first-principles, for-profit, futurist social network where AI serves as force multiplier for vetted real-world connectivity through partnered coffeehouse, dessert café, wine bar, and fine dining—an old world return to presence as platform, supporting 100 Girl Billionaires™ and 100 Boy Billionaires™ school-based American youth initiatives.
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz, Exile Supper Club™, is first-principles, for-profit, futurist annual founder-access capital activation infrastructure convening high-trust individuals for curated salons, adventure, and wealth and legacy conversations in extraordinary locations, supporting 100 Girl Billionaires™ and 100 Boy Billionaires™ school-based American youth initiatives.
Matriarchal • Matrilineal • Metamorphosis™
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz, FemmeGod™ is a first-principles, for-profit, futurist bespoke creative consulting and narrative infrastructure for female celebrities, founders, visionaries, and public figures navigating reinvention, visibility, and legacy, supporting 100 Girl Billionaires™ and 100 Boy Billionaires™ school-based American youth initiatives.
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz, Feminism In The Hood™️ is a first-principles, for-profit, futurist pop-up creative commerce infrastructure bringing punk, alternative, music, fashion, art, and DIY entrepreneurship to urban communities through live culture, marketplace economics, and creator-owned opportunity, supporting 100 Girl Billionaires™ and 100 Boy Billionaires™ school-based American youth initiatives.
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz to heal sexism and misogyny in hip-hop with a first-principles, for-profit, futurist AI-powered hip-hop temp agency and workforce protection transforming informal access into structured, merit-aligned, relationship-independent, and gatekeeping-resistant industry opportunity for girls and women, supporting 100 Girl Billionaires™ and 100 Boy Billionaires™ school-based American youth initiatives.
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz, Moore Awareness Productions™ is a first-principles, for-profit, futurist AI-powered conscious music and spoken word label redefining label architecture and infrastructure through the singular release, reinterpretation, licensing, and evolving life of the founder's Birthing My Own Affirmation™, supporting 100 Girl Billionaires™ and 100 Boy Billionaires™ school-based American youth initiatives.
Equal-rights ideology. AIAccountability infrastructure.
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz, Problackgrrrl-Feminism™ is a first-principles, for-profit, futurist enterprise focused on safety, dignity, access, and opportunity for girls and women globally, with foundational emphasis on women and girls of color. It transforms lived experience into measurable and publishable AI-powered accountability infrastructure.
Freedom operationalized.
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz, Problackgrrrl Movement for Universal Freedom™ is a first-principles, for-profit futurist enterprise of real-time freedom-navigation™ infrastructure for girls and women, with foundational emphasis on girls and women of color. The Problackgrrrl Score™, PBGS Handheld Access System™, and AI measure safety, dignity, and where freedom exists.
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigette Michelle Wojnarowicz, Swarm Tour™ is a first-principles, for-profit, futurist live cultural enterprise reimagining interdisciplinary performance across music, spoken word, theatre, dance, and visual art for prestigious touring, festival, global stage presentation, and award consideration.
Memoir innovation and cultural publishing.
Founded by BMW Portfolio LLC Founder & CEO Brigette Michelle Wojnarowicz, Unheard Girl Publishing™ is a first-principles, for-profit, futurist publishing enterprise transforming lived experience into memoir, micro memoir, editorial storytelling, and cultural media grounded in her belief that everything is memoirable.
Wealth & Legacy Partners is the designation for BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz enterprises whose purpose, services, and cultural works materially contribute to the preservation, circulation, and transmission of generational wealth, cultural memory, and creative sovereignty
within BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz as their goods, services,
and cultural capital materially contribute to our envisioning of equality
and generational wealth for girls and women of color since 1989.
BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz is a female-founded, for-profit, privately funded,
non-partisan conglomerate of enterprises envisioning wealth and legacy for girls and women
of color since 1989. BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz operates beyond
political affiliation and welcomes partnership and patronage from Republicans,
Democrats, Independents, and individuals and institutions internationally
who support our enterprises in their work of building wealth and legacy for
the generational wealth of girls and women of color.
BMW Portfolio is enterprise-led and legacy-focused,
centering on creating economic infrastructure
that enriches girls and women of color.
BMW Portfolio enterprises and founder Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
have been recognized across cultural, musical, academic, and journalistic platforms.
The work and influence have been featured, quoted, profiled, and cited in publications
such as Time Magazine, Billboard, The Source, Curve Magazine, Nylon Magazine,
and Jane Magazine, as well as in newspapers including the New York Daily News,
Chicago Sun-Times, The New York Times, and Post & Courier.
The contributions of BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz enterprises
Hip Hop Women‘s Progressive Movement™️ and Black Grrrl Revolution™️
to multicultural and music history appear in academic anthologies such as
Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in America and Role Cole:
A Generational Anthology of Social and Political Black Literature and Art,
and her early community and creative work has been documented
in university outlets like The Barnard Bulletin.
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’s legacy has been highlighted on television through
the iconic Video Music Box with Ralph McDaniels—underscoring a lifelong presence on
the cutting edge of the intersections of art, music, women‘s, fashion, and hip-hop history.
Media Features, Mentions & Citations — Since 1990
BMW Portfolio enterprises & Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz have been featured, interviewed, quoted, profiled, or cited in the following publications, newspapers, anthologies, and television programs:
Wondrous Women
The ‘F’ Word
Call them strong women, call them divas, but don’t call them feminists
Feminism’s up-and-comers
By Lisa Bertagnoll
Chicago Sun-Times Next
Viva la revolution!
Black Grrrl Revolution puts a new spin on Third Wave Feminism
Amelia McDonell-Parry
Music Editor
City On A Hill Press
University of California, Santa Cruz
The intellectual alignment of BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
with renowned academic and arts institutions across strata has been established
through invited lectures, panel appearances, moderation, and keynote:
Smith College • Wesleyan University • New York University • Yale University • Sarah Lawrence University of Wisconsin • Vassar College • Howard University • Hobart & William Smith Colleges
El Puente High School • Hunt’s Point Middle School • Danny Simmons’ Art Gallery •
The Union Institute—Washington, D.C.
Los Angeles Hip-Hop Conference
Brigétte‘s Role — Panel Organizer & Moderator
Panel Topic: Racism in the Hip-Hop Industry
Featured Panelists:
Violet Brown, Director, Wherehouse Music
Nefertiti, Female Rap Artist
Rosie Perez, Actress, White Men Can’t Jump
BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz includes performances throughout
New York City—at multicultural folk music and spoken-word venues and events:
N’kiru Books • Brooklyn Moon Café • Koko Bar • CBGB’s Café • Three of Cups •
Rainy Days Café • Nuyorican Poets Café • The Spence School •
Voice training with Richard Hilty and Melissa Cross
N’kiru Books
BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz live theatre enterprise Swarm Tour™
was hosted by entrepreneurial rap artists Talib Kweli and Mos Def (Yasiin Bey) at
N’kiru Books. This engagement situated Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’s
pioneering female voice within a leading Black-owned cultural and
intellectual institution known for advancing diasporic
arts, political consciousness, and independent
woman of color creative production.
Brooklyn Moon Café
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz curated and headlined her Problackgrrrl-Feminism™
cultural and creative salon featuring her live music and spoken word performance.
The salon also served as an early-stage platform for poet, recording artist,
and actor Saul Williams (Sinners), reflecting Brigétte’s role as
both a cultural architect and talent incubator.
Koko Bar
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz produced and headlined a cultural and creative salon
dedicated to the presentation and empowerment of independent women-of-color artistry.
This salon partnered with a Black- and biracial woman–owned upscale coffee shop
concept founded by legendary multi-instrumentalist and recording artist
Meshell Ndegeocello and author Rebecca Walker, and
notably featured underground rock singer Remileku.
CBGB’s Café
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz appeared as a featured artist and guest of poet and actress
Sonja Sohn (Slam; The Wire) at CBGB’s Café, performing within one of New York City’s
most historically significant venues for independent music, spoken word,
and countercultural expression.
Three of Cups
Under her BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz enterprise
Moore Awareness Productions™, Brigétte organized, produced, and headlined her
Problackgrrrl-Feminism™ singer-songwriter genre and presentation for Sony Music
executives who personally invited her to consider singing professionally. Demonstrating
ownership and agency, Brigétte self-produced a demo and coordinated a full-band
live performance. The event was attended by Sony Music A&R executives,
members of the Black Rock Coalition, and the after-party featured
New York City underground legend DJ Spooky.
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz dedicated her debut performance at Three of Cups--
on the flyer and in programming--to the legendary author and poet Nikki Giovanni,
whose vintage hard-copy fabric-covered copy of Gemini was an inspiration to
Brigétte as she independently self-funded and created alternatives to
gendered oppression in the music industry for women of color.
Rainy Days Café
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz conceived, booked, pioneered, and headlined a weekly
cultural and creative salon as a solo artist performing with her live band Brian Holt
and Gary Fritz. She independently managed all aspects of production, including
graphic design, on-foot citywide promotion, public relations, artist booking, hiring,
and programming.This long-running series functioned as a cultural salon,
new-talent incubator, and the formal emergence of her
original Problackgrrrl-Feminism™ music genre.
The series attracted international audiences and was notably attended by
actress Nicole Ari-Parker, an early appreciator of Brigétte’s music and spoken word.
Committed to the empowerment of Black girls, all girls of color and many languages,
Brigétte’s series provided early stages for author Suheir Hammad (Def Poetry Jam),
and notably Bajia--an grassroots writer and poet whose unique work centered on
motherhood and breastfeeding and attachment parenting advocacy, and
the series gave voice to grassroots female and male hip-hop artists.
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz was known for this defining feature of her work as an
artist, producer, and promoter-- every event formally paid tribute—on flyers and in
programming—to Black women elder artists and cultural foremothers, including
Tracy Chapman, Audre Lorde, bell hooks, and other lineage figures.
Nuyorican Poets Café
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz performed and participated within the historic
Nuyorican Poets Café, a cornerstone institution for spoken word, poetry, and
diasporic literary culture in New York City.
The Spence School
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz, while employed as the assistant to the middle school head,
was honored with an invitation to perform her Problackgrrrl-Feminism music and poetry
within an arts showcase for faculty and students held in the world class cafeteria of the
preeminent The Spence School, contributing to her interdisciplinary foundation
in performance, literature, and intellectual rigor.
Hammtramack Cafe
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz, while visiting a creative collaborator in Bloomfield, Michigan,
was honored with an invitation to the stage to perform her Problackgrrrl-Feminism
music and poetry within a creative hub of Hammtramack.
Voice training with Richard Hilty and Melissa Cross
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz received professional voice training with renowned
vocal coaches Richard Hilty and Melissa Cross, further refining her performance,
vocal technique, and endurance across musical and spoken-word disciplines.
Featured Theatre Performance
Black Nativity — “The Six Who Were There”
Role: Mary
Center Stage Theatre at the Vern Riffe Center
Featured Classical Dance Performance
Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker
Role: Corp de Ballet — Sugar Plum Fairy
Mid-Atlantic Ballet at Tarrytown Music Hall
Discography — Folk Music & Spoken Word as Cultural Record
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
Folk • Spoken Word • Cultural Documentation
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz was scouted at an Arrested Development after-party
and invited by Sony Music A&R representatives to consider singing professionally
and recording a demo. Drawing on her music business background and a
commitment to DIY and independent ethics, she agreed—on the
condition that she self-fund and self-produce the recording
in order to retain full ownership of her work.
Demo (Sony Music A&R Request)
Artist: Brigétte M. Moore
Recorded at: Studio of Fabian Asultany, U.N., New York City
Label: Moore Awareness Productions
Birthing My Own Affirmation
Format: Full-Length Album
Artist: Brigétte M. Moore
Recorded at: Studio of Earl Blaize, Brooklyn, New York
Label: Moore Awareness Productions
A ccapella album of original songs and spoken word centered on
girl of color self-definition, affirmation, and cultural autonomy.
“Temple”
Format: Single
Artist: Brigétte M. Moore
Label: Moore Awareness Productions
Compilation: Blu Magazine – Women’s Issue
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’ recorded works emerge from a folk and spoken word lineage
of Bob Dylan, Tracy Chapman, Joni Mitchell, and Edie Brickell, and her own original
Problackgrrrl-Feminism genre. Created outside traditional label control, these
recordings prioritize ownership, sovereignty, and her lived experience
as a girl and woman of color in exile.
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’ approach reflects a deliberate rejection of extractive
industry practices common in the 1980s and 1990s music business, particularly
toward women artists and artists of color. By self-funding and producing
her recordings, Moore aligned herself with DIY, independent, and
punk rock models, ensuring her work remained intact as
cultural record and pioneering commodified artifact.
The recordings function as musical and spoken word testimony—situating
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’ girl of color voice as historical evidence.
Musically and structurally:
Produced during a period when Black and women artists were frequently pressured
to surrender rights in exchange for access, Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’
insistence on ownership represents a pioneering early
act of cultural self-determination.
The work now stands as:
BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz -- Creating Stages for Artists
D.O.S.
(Descendants of Slaves)
Live Band Showcase
SIR Studios, New York City
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz produced and organized the debut of the classically trained
young musicians of New York City music and arts Caribbean-American guitarist James
Yarish and vocalis / keyboardist Brandt Abner for their Jazz, Soul, and Hip-Hop project
D.O.S. (Descendants of Slaves). In attendance were Mimi Valdes of Vibe Magazine,
whom Brigétte met previously at photographer Daniel Hastings' Latin diasporic
art exhibit in New York City, and Mary J. Blige whom Brigétte first met
two years prior at her rehearsal at SIR Studios.
BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz has been recognized across dance, feminism, arts innovation, and cultural vision — receiving competitive scholarships, foundation grants, and artistic accolades that honor both talent and purpose-driven creativity:
Igal Perry PeriDance Summer Scholarship
Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Summer Scholarship
Dance Theatre of Harlem Summer Scholarship
Third Wave Feminism Foundation Grant
Puffin Foundation Grant
The Union Institute Audre Lorde Legacy Award
Showstopper Dance Competition — First Place, Advanced Ballet
(Choreographed by pre-Taylor Swift- Keith “Tyce” Diorio)
Each of these honors functioned not only as recognition — but as seed capital and
living proof that scholarships become sovereignty — grants become legacy —
and talent, when stewarded, becomes generational investment strategy.
BMW Portfolio founder Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’ professional background reflects cultural investment—spanning education, music, fashion, hospitality, commerce, media, and publishing.
Each environment influencing the visual, social, economic, and aesthetic ethos of
BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz:
Education & Artistic Foundation
NYC High School of Performing Arts • NYC Classical Dance Training —Madame Darvash • Steps 74th Street • Broadway Dance Center • Acting Representation by Steve Carson & Kathy McComb •
Carnegie Hall • The Lincoln Center Performing Arts Library and Museum •
Ms. Carolyn Jenkins’ Bob Marley Ballet School
Music, Media & Cultural Production
Red Zone • VH-1 • Red Alert Productions • Soul Records / MCA • Tommy Boy Records / MCA •
Hannibal Records / Rykodisc • Juanita Stephens Public Relations
Fashion, Retail & Cultural Commerce
Tahari at World Trade Center • Barneys New York • Galeries Lafayette • Henri Bendel
Hospitality, Culinary Arts & NYC Cultural Landmarks
Clementine at One Fifth Avenue • The Odeon • B. Smith’s • Jezebel’s Kitchen
Education, Publishing & Institutional History
The Spence School • Scholastic • Atlas Editions–Colliers • Omega Institute
Early Cultural Labor & Domestic Patronage
Summer Nanny — Sag Harbor / Hamptons
At sixteen years old, Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz was employed as a private summer nanny
in Sag Harbor for a Time Magazine editor, caring for one child within an elite, media-adjacent household. The family rented the home of Lori Singer—acclaimed actress (Fame) and
professional cellist—placing Brigétte inside a domestic environment shaped by artistic
legacy, editorial authority, and cultural capital. This role constituted early
economic responsibility, kind childcare, and behavioral fluency
within high-net-worth creative households—an
often-unacknowledged training ground for
girls and women of color whose
labor sustains elite life.
Legacy Access & Visual Literacy Formation
Montauk & Richard Avedon’s Clifftop Beach Home — Photojournalistic Lineage
During employment as a private summer nanny in Sag Harbor, Brigétte visited Montauk
and spent a full day at the legendary oceanfront home of Richard Avedon, one of the most
influential photojournalists of the twentieth century. The house—renowned for its dramatic,
mile-long staircase descending to the beach—was not experienced as spectacle,
but as inhabited space.This exposure formed an early,
embodied understanding of:
visual authority
spatial minimalism
solitude as creative power
sustainability swimming in non-chlorinated “seaweed” pool
legacy estates as sites of authorship rather than consumption
The experience seeded Brigétte’s lifelong fluency in
image-making, archives, and cultural documentation, now foundational to
B. Wojnarowicz Photojournalism™ Archives and BMW Portfolio’s visual language.
Founder-led Domestic Infrastructure
SAHM & Homeschooling Architect
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz served as the primary architect and operator of a founder-led domestic and educational infrastructure, treating the household as a sanctuary in exile,
elite private school, entrepreneurship incubator, and strategic site of human genius
development, and multiracial, multilingual, and multicultural preservation.
This role included:
This labor functioned as direct investment, generating measurable outcomes in intellectual formation, academic achievement, and entrepreneurial readiness. It reflects founder-level
decision-making under constrained and racially and culturally adversarial conditions—
without compensation, recognition, or institutional or community support.
Founder-led Domestic Infrastructure
SAHM & Homeschooling Architect
The founder-led domestic and educational infrastructure produced
verifiable, outcome-based results, including:
All outcomes were documented contemporaneously, evaluated longitudinally,
and aligned with age-appropriate prodigious accelerated benchmarks,
while maintaining strict privacy protections for a minor child.
Scholastic — Education
Institutional systems & pedagogical authority
NYC High School of Performing Arts — Classical Arts
Discipline, embodiment, and endurance as economic practice
Madame Darvash / Steps 74th / Broadway Dance Center
Elite classical arts training & character formation
Tahari at World Trade Center — Fashion & Retail
Global markets & export design
Barneys New York — Luxury Retail
High-end consumer psychology
Galeries Lafayette — International Fashion
European commerce & curation
Henri Bendel — Trend Forecasting
Brand positioning & cultural pulse
Clementine at One Fifth Avenue — Hospitality
C-suite administrative, social and culinary management,
couture server uniform design with Banana Republic, and
cultural representation at Manhattan’s iconic locale.
The Odeon — Cultural Landmark Dining
Timelessness as economic asset
B. Smith’s — Black-Female-Owned Hospitality
Ownership, representation & equity
Jezebel’s Kitchen — Black-Female-Owned Heritage
Afro-diasporic economic autonomy
The Spence School — Elite Education
Generational wealth & access
Atlas Editions–Colliers — Publishing
Legacy, distribution & archival frameworks
Red Zone — Music Venue
Post-Studio 54 legendary Brahms family employment.—
Mr. & Mrs. Brahms modeled business as kind and mentoring.
VH-1 — Mass Media & Cultural Programming
Broadcast power dynamics & narrative control
Red Alert Productions — Hip-Hop Legacy Building
Grassroots promotions as economic uprising
Soul Records / MCA — Hip-Hop Label Operations
Distribution, negotiation & catalog value
Tommy Boy Records / MCA — Recording Artist Development
The blueprint of power — c-suite assistance, contracts, IP—
Administrative proximity = economic fluency
Hannibal Records / Rykodisc — Independent Music Distribution
Alternative & Afro-diasporic World Music artists‘ sovereignty
Juanita Stephens Public Relations — NYC Female-led PR Firm
The power of narrative through artist interpretation and copywriting
Private Nanny — Hamptons (Sag Harbor)
Richard Avedon Environment (Montauk)
Emotional intelligence, discretion, and responsibility within elite households
Observation of editorial, artistic, and legacy-making ecosystems
Early understanding of invisible labor sustaining visible power
Visual discipline and compositional restraint
Understanding legacy aesthetic authority
Early alignment with photolournalism
Through founder-led domestic operations, Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz applied
investment, governance, and systems-thinking principles to the household,
treating domestic labor, education, and caregiving as forms of wealth and legacy
strategy rather than unpaid or invisible work.This model emphasized:
The household functioned as a micro-institution, classroom, libraries, art and music studio, mindfulness and yoga practice, demonstrating that founder-led domestic infrastructure can outperform traditional systems in producing resilient, educated, and economically visionary individuals—particularly where public, cultural, or industry institutions have failed
to deliver equitable outcomes.This work constitutes applied leadership,
reframing SAHM and homeschooling roles as--
strategic inspirations for BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
enterprise Black Grrrl Revolution™ investment and trading hub nurturing
generational wealth and long-term value creation for girls of color.
BMW Portfolio by Briétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
represents a rare asset class:
lived cultural intelligence converted into institutional strategy.
BMW Portfolio founder Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz firsthand experience inside
cultural, artistic, executive, and fashion ecosystems—was acquired through
early labor, proximity, and authorship, and base inherited capital. Her
background spans classical arts institutions, major music labels,
couture retail, hospitality salons, publishing houses, and
private cultural households—each functioning
as a formative economic lesson.
Each salary, paycheck, booking fee, and honoraria is an act of independence and investment in
BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz. From luxury retail floors to legendary
dining rooms, from scholastic halls to Fifth Avenue ateliers, BMW Portfolio founder
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz traversed America’s corporate industries
not as an employee but as a cultural and creative architect of
wealth and legacy for girls and women of color.
NYC Socialite & Brand Alignment
BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz is aesthetically influenced by the iconic New York City club and art scene of the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s— as living laboratories of multiculturalism, beauty, fashion, music, creativity, event production, and party promotion—transforming socialite into sociocultural testimony and reflection of iconic New York City establishments:
The World • Mars • MK • The Tunnel • Sound Factory • SOB’s • Indochine • 6 Bond St • Temple Bar • The Lion’s Den • Milky Way • Hotel Amazon • Palladium • Jerry’s Diner (Soho NYC) • Time Cafe •
The Saint • Daddy’s House by Puff Daddy • 1018 • Caffe Dell’ Artista • The Coffee Shop •
Akwaaba Cafe • Exit Art • Kieth Haring, The Whitney, 1997 • Maya Lin, NYU, 1998 •
Soul Kitchen • Cafe Tabac • Village Vanguard • Lovely by Soraya Sélène
Milestone birthdays were documented as cultural rites of passage:
Reign Nightclub (20th) • Nell’s (25th) • Bar’do (29th)
BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
Milestone birthdays as cultural rites of passage:
REIGN NIGHTCLUB — (20TH)
Cultural Salon, Teen Matriarchal Production & Independent Girl Power
BMW Portfolio founder Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’s 20th Birthday Celebration
at Reign Nightclub, archived by B. Wojnarowicz Photojournalism™️ and documented in memoir
by Unheard Girl Publishing™️, stands as a significant cultural moment in New York City history.
Rather than a coming-of-age party, it functioned as a convergence of power—
drawing leading figures in music, media, fashion, and business to honor
a young Black woman already recognized as influential.
That these figures—CEOs, label heads, cultural architects, and artists—
gathered to celebrate a twenty-year-old Black woman is not incidental.
It is evidence of early recognition, magnetism, and authority within
industries that have historically withheld acknowledgment
from young women of color.
These leaders did not attend to “discover”
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz.
They arrived because of her.
The original hand-drawn invitation and promotional flyer by Cey Adams for
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’s 20th birthday is preserved within the
B. Wojnarowicz Photojournalism™ Archives. The flyer is not
ephemera—it is primary documentation. It records authorship,
venue, intent, and network, confirming the event
as a curated cultural gathering.
Notably, Rosie Perez appears on the flyer, with permission.
Rosie Perez flew in from Los Angeles to New York City specifically
to attend Brigétte’s celebration. At the time, she was already an emerging
force in film, choreography, and cultural advocacy. That gesture alone speaks
to the level of regard surrounding Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’s
place within the cultural fabric of the era.
Catering for the evening was provided by Brigétte’s late grandmother, Bernadine Louise—
namesake of the Bernadine Louise Library™️, a BMW Portfolio enterprise. Her involvement
anchored the event in lineage, care, and matriarchal authorship. This was not
outsourced labor; it was family stewardship. Her food nourished a room filled
with executives, artists, and cultural leaders—embodying the reality that
Black women’s legacy work has always sustained
culture from behind the scenes.
In attendance were artists from BMW Portfolio enterprise Moore Awareness Productions™️,
Brigétte’s own music company—affirming her role not merely as socially visible, but as a
founder and producer building platforms for women and girls before she was 20:
Their presence confirmed Brigétte’s leadership as someone who created space,
visibility, and opportunity—rather than waiting for institutional permission.
For the celebration, Brigétte commissioned a bespoke couture dress from an FIT student,
deliberately choosing to platform an emerging designer rather than off-rack or established
fashion house. This decision positioned the event as a site of fashion mentorship
and patronage, reinforcing her role as an early incubator of creative talent
within New York City’s fashion ecosystem.
Brigétte selected Reign Nightclub after attending model Veronica Webb’s birthday celebration
there months earlier. Recognizing Reign as a space where fashion, Black excellence, power,
and cultural leadership converged, she chose the venue as an act of alignment
—not aspiration. Reign functioned as a cultural salon, not a nightlife backdrop.
By hosting her celebration there, Brigétte placed herself within
a lineage of Black women who shaped elite cultural space
through presence, discernment, and authorship.
BMW Portfolio does not reference New York City cultural history from the outside. It emerges
from the center of it. Socialite is reframed here not as leisure, but as pre-Kardashian sociocultural testimony—a form of embodied research, access, authorship, and historical witness. Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’s early presence in these spaces—as a young Black girl, teen businessgirl, model, organizer, and cultural connector—provided direct exposure to couture fluency,
avant-garde aesthetics, underground economies, and elite creative networks.
These lived experiences continue to inform BMW Portfolio’s
visual language, institutional values, and legacy framework.
This event documents a rarely archived phenomenon: a young Black woman in New York City commanding executive attention while simultaneously nurturing artists, honoring matriarchal
lineage, and defining cultural taste. It disrupts narratives that frame Black women as aspirants
rather than originators—and nightlife as frivolity rather than infrastructure. Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’s 20th birthday at Reign Nightclub stands as documented evidence of
early, undeniable authority, where beauty, intellect, leadership, and
community converged in real time.and stands as a case study
in teen- and women-of-color-led cultural production.
REIGN AT TWENTY™️ — PART ONE
The 20th Birthday Party of Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
at Reign’Nightclub Where Hip Hop Elite Held Court
A New York City Story
Genre:
Teen Autobiographical drama / cultural thriller / coming-of-age power story
Logline:
Long before MTV’s My Sweet Sixteen, a teenage female of color’s 20th birthday party
convenes the most powerful figures in hip-hop and fashion at an elite New York nightclub—
only to discover that early, unapproved power is not rewarded, but erased.
Documentation:
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’s New York City story is canonized through
documentary treatment by B. Wojnarowicz Photojournalism™
and memoir manuscript by Unheard Girl Publishing™.
Reign at Twenty ©️1991-2026 Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz/BMW Portfolio. All rights reserved.
REIGN AT TWENTY™️ — PART TWO
THE TAKEDOWN / THE RETALIATION
The 20th Birthday Party of Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
at Reign’Nightclub Where Hip Hop Elite Held Court
A New York City Story
Subtitle:
When Girl Power Appears Without Permission
Autobiographical female cultural thriller / industry exposé / power-and-retaliation drama
After a twenty-year-old Black woman’s birthday party convenes the most powerful
figures in hip-hop and media, her unapproved authority triggers a coordinated
industry backlash—revealing how early recognition for women of color
is often followed not by reward, but erasure.
At the time of her twentieth birthday celebration at Reign Nightclub, Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
was not an aspiring outsider—she was an executive insider. She served as Assistant to the President of Tommy Boy Records, Monica Lynch, one of the most influential women in
the music industry. Her proximity to power was contractual, professional, and earned.
Brigétte‘s 20th birthday celebration at Reign Nightclub event marked a visible convergence of industry authority, executive attention, and cultural gravity around a teenaged Black
woman operating independently and without male sponsorship. Senior figures
within her professional ecosystem attended—including Albee Ragusa,
Director of Promotions at Tommy Boy Records and Kevin Maxwell,
A&R at Tommy Boy Records (both a decade her senior)—
confirming that the gathering functioned not merely
as a celebration, but as a moment
of institutional acknowledgment.
Yet Brigétte’s authority was unusual in ways the industry was not prepared to metabolize.
She was a young Black woman who had grown up in an all-white neighborhood, without
access to Black peer culture until college. Her aesthetic, speech, and presence
reflected a bohemian hip-hop hybridity—formed through classical arts
training, white institutional spaces, and deep cultural fluency—
made her both hyper-visible and structurally unprotected.
Within Black hip-hop spaces, this difference provoked suspicion and resentment. Within white-helmed corporate hip-hop, it provoked fascination without safety. Brigétte belonged fully to neither protection system—and that liminality intensified the backlash when her power became undeniable.
Also present was Prince Raheem, a Tommy Boy artist—later known as RZA, founder of the
Wu-Tang Clan—who criticized Brigétte for having a white boyfriend. This moment exposed a
deeper contradiction: while Black boys and men had often rejected, bullied, or ignored
dark-skinned Black girls, interracial choice by a Black woman was still policed
as betrayal. Brigétte’s personal autonomy—romantic, aesthetic,
and intellectual—was read as transgression.
At the time, Brigétte was also the founder of the Hip Hop Women’s Progressive Movement™️, a public-facing initiative addressing sexism and misogyny in hip-hop. Her press visibility around the movement amplified industry discomfort. She was not only present inside corporate structures—
she was naming their harm as a teenage Black female youth on the rise.
Simultaneously, Brigétte was being mentored by Kervin A. Simms, a prominent entertainment attorney known for representing Percy “Master P” Miller and other major industry figures. Simms served as Brigétte’s legal mentor and as attorney for Moore Awareness Productions™️,
formally incorporating the company and executing artist contracts pro bono—an
extraordinary level of legal sponsorship for a teen Black woman founder.
Under this mentorship, Brigétte developed the MC Light Skin™️ project as a fully realized
intellectual property. She authored the concept, wrote the rap material, scouted and sourced
the artist, rehearsed the act, and presented the project in a formal pitch to Tommy Boy
leadership, including Monica Lynch and Tom Silverman. The pitch was significant
enough that senior staff—her own elder coworkers—were brought in to observe.
Leadership expressed enthusiasm and requested more.
What Brigétte demonstrated was not aspiration, but capacity.
This convergence—executive proximity, feminist visibility, legal mentorship, and
autonomous cultural production—was perceived as threatening. Brigétte was not waiting
to be chosen. She was building, naming, and leading in real time. What followed was not an organic career shift, but a systemic withdrawal of access, protection, and opportunity. Doors closed without explanation. Alliances dissolved. Advancement stalled. This was not the punishment of misconduct, but the discipline of unapproved authority. Brigétte’s exclusion was not the result of failure.
It was the consequence of girl power and authority on brown skin.
Rather than catalyzing advancement, the concentration of attention surrounding Brigétte
triggered resentment, envy, and retaliation. Her youth, beauty, authority, and autonomy disrupted entrenched hierarchies governing gender, race, and power in the 1990s music industry.
What followed was not an organic career shift, but a systemic withdrawal of access,
protection, and opportunity—a pattern now widely recognized as blackballing.
The takedown of a college girl barley 20-years-old extended beyond the individual. In suppressing Brigétte, the industry also dismantled the Hip Hop Women’s Progressive Movement™️
back in 1991 when it was urgently needed; and in over 30 years it is still needed.
Taking her down took down a reform effort designed to heal
sexism and misogyny from within hip-hop culture itself.
This retaliation unfolded quietly, socially, and professionally: doors closed without explanation; alliances dissolved; advancement stalled. The industry did not confront her power—
it neutralized it. The takedown was not accidental. It functioned as a corrective
mechanism designed to punish Brigétte‘s girl power with brown skin
that arrived too early, too visibly, and without permission.
Documentation:
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’s New York City story is canonized through
documentary treatment by B. Wojnarowicz Photojournalism™
and memoir manuscript by Unheard Girl Publishing™.
Reign at Twenty ©️1991-2026 Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz/BMW Portfolio. All rights reserved.
REIGN AT TWENTY™️ — PART THREE
THE SPIRITUAL COUNTERPIECE:
A 20TH BIRTHDAY GIFT FROM TOMMY BOY CEO TOM SILVERMAN
The 20th Birthday Party of Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
at Reign’Nightclub Where Hip Hop Elite Held Court
A New York City Story
Subtitle:
When Girl Power Is Met With Stillness
Autobiographical spiritual thriller / cultural history / interior survival narrative
As institutional retaliation begins to close around her, a nineteen-year-old Black woman—
serving as a record label president’s assistant and attending NYU at night—on the very day
of her twentieth birthday celebration at Reign Nightclub, receives an unexpected spiritual inheritance from a powerful industry elder, revealing that foresight, protection, and survival
do not always arrive as promotion, but as preparation.
Documentation:
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’s New York City story is canonized through
documentary treatment by B. Wojnarowicz Photojournalism™
and memoir manuscript by Unheard Girl Publishing™.
Reign at Twenty ©️1991-2026 Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz/BMW Portfolio. All rights reserved.
Photographic Legacy by Iconic Photographers
The photographic legacy of BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
spans hip-hop, fashion, editorial, activism, and historic reportage — captured
by world-renowned and award-winning photographers across multiple genres:
Daniel Hastings • Jonathan Mannion • Angela Boatwright • Kesha Bruce •
Dith Pran (Killing Fields, Award of Excellence, Pulitzer Prize Photojournalist)
Daniel Hastings — Famed Hip-Hop Photographer
Photographed Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz as a model, singer-songwriter,
and founder of BMW Portfolio enterprise Moore Awareness Productions™.
Jonathan Mannion — Iconic Hip-Hop Visual Strategist
Photographed Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz as a model, hip-hop pioneer,
singer-songwriter, and founder of BMW Portfolio enterprise Swarm Tour™.
Angela Boatwright — Punk / Skate / It Girl Culture Chronicler
Photographed Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz as a model and it-girl founder
of BMW Portfolio’s Black Grrrl Revolution™ for Jane Magazine — a subcultural
iconography of a deeper, strategic vision of the “it-girl” — an intersection
of activism, entrepreneurship, beauty, style and the elevation
and legacy of girls and women of color.
Kesha Bruce — Art Photographer of Black Feminine Presence
Photographed Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz as a model, singer-songwriter,
music industry survivor, activist, and founder of BMW Portfolio enterprise
Black Grrrl Revolution™ for Curve Magazine—The Ani DiFranco issue.
Stefano Giovannini — Editorial & Fashion Photographer
Stefano Giovannini photographed Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
as a model, artist, and founder of Moore Awareness Productions
for Nylon Magazine— capturing her creative leadership within
New York City’s emerging female-led-culture vanguard.
Barron Claiborne — Cultural Portraitist
Barron Claiborne photographed Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
as a model and singer-songwriter for his body of work in homage
to New York City Black women artists, positioning her within
a lineage of creative legacy and visual sovereignty.
Dith Pran — Pulitzer Prize Photojournalist
(The Killing Fields, International Award of Excellence)
Documented Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz as a model, activist, and founder of
BMW Portfolio enterprise Problackgrrrl Movement for Universal Freedom™—
speaking at the Puerto Rican Day Parade Rally — The New York Times.
BMW Portfolio—culturally documented in photojournalism by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz— envisions wealth and legacy for girls and women of color. Its archive—built from grassroots documentation to institutional coverage—captures society with rare precision—
revealing what power conceals and documenting what the world overlooks.
A deeply committed photojournalist, BMW Portfolio founder Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz goes under-the-radar to capture the inner workings of society and culture with a level of investigation
and relentless precision rarely seen in contemporary reportage—prolific and artistic—
documenting every moment and detail of life’s experiences.
The B. Wojnarowicz Photojournalism™️ approach reflects a rare duality:
insider access paired with outsider clarity, and the mantra of being
“blessed and honored to bear witness” life at a personal level,
community level, industry, and cultural revolution level.
BMW Portfolio founder Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz‘ photojournalism muse in exile
has been motherhood—as purpose, sentiment, creative force, and radical site of genius.
In the maternal-photography traditions of Annie Hsiao-Ching Wang (The Mother as Creator),
Sally Mann, and Dorothea Lange, B. Wojnarowicz Photojournalism™️ documents mixed,
multicultural and multilingual family, youth genius, homeschooling, immersion
in arts, rituals of home, and everyday life, beauty and revolution.
CULTURAL WITNESSING: LIVE CONCERTS & PERFORMANCES
B. Wojnarowicz Photojournalism™️—awakened through motherhood as muse and the
act of documenting her child’s creative journey—is informed by cultural witnessing of
live performance as revolutionary visibility, ritual, and culture-building since 1989.
—
SELECTED CONCERTS & PERFORMANCES
Iconic Venues & Artists:
Diana Ross — Radio City Music Hall (1978)
The Jacksons, Victory Tour — Giants Stadium (1984)
Stevie Wonder — Madison Square Garden (1986)
Lauryn Hill — Radio City Music Hall
Public Enemy — Radio City Music Hall
Queen Latifah with Digital Underground (feat. Tupac Shakur as backup dancer) & 3rd Bass
Hip-Hop History & Industry Milestones:
Ice Cube & Yo-Yo East Coast debut — New Music Seminar
Leaders of the New School (Busta Rhymes) debut — Los Angeles Hip-Hop Conference
Arrested Development — The Palladium
Doug E Fresh & MC Serch freestyle — Hotel Amazon
Heavy D — Daddy’s House by Puff Daddy
Alternative, Global, & Counterculture:
Ani DiFranco — Irving Plaza
Bratmobile — Wilson Center, Washington DC
Virginia Rodrigues — Joe’s Pub
Ronnie Spector — Life NYC
Cirque du Soleil — Battery Park City
Grateful Dead Alumni feat. Jerry Garcia — Woodstock ’94
Latin, Freestyle, Urban Diasporic, & Conscious Female Rap:
La India — SummerStage
Skadanks — Wetlands Preserve
32 Tribes (feat. Ahmad Tejan Kabbah Jr.) — Wetlands Preserve
Seduction — Red Zone Music Venue
Noel — The Saint
Jodeci debut — Atlantic City Music Convention
Treach vs. LA Star Historic MC Battle — New Music Seminar
Moore Awareness Productions female rap artist Aliqui debut — New Music Seminar
Moore Awareness Productions female rap artist Aliqui debut — Amateur Night at The Apollo
Marky Mark & The Funky Bunch — Private Event, Hard Rock Café NYC (Guest of Richard Channer)
—
INTERGENERATIONAL CULTURAL WITNESSING: MOTHERHOOD AS MUSE
My cultural witnessing and visual language expanded to include intergenerational
documentation of my child’s musical journey as part of a living cultural continuum.
Mateusz Dominik Wojnarowicz — Workshop & Ohm Radio 96.3 Open Mic Series
Mateusz Dominik Wojnarowicz — Nuyorican Poets Café Open Mic Series
—
B. WOJNAROWICZ PHOTOJOURNALISM™️ WEALTH & LEGACY STATEMENT
These experiences formed my visual understanding of music as visual language,
performance as revolutionary visibility, and photojournalism as historical record—
where women, youth, artists, and communities are preserved with dignity,
accuracy, and authorship by B. Wojnarowicz Photojournalism™️.
The interactions, industries, and experiences within the BMW Portfolio history has been
documented in memoir form by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz for BMW Portfolio
enterprise Unheard Girl Publishing™️ — ensuring that no history is lost,
no lesson is wasted, and no experience goes undocumented.
Each Unheard Girl Publishing™️ memoir by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz
is a literary testimony, and as a collection they form a living archive and
definitive body of work claiming BMW Portfolio and its founder
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz as witnessed,
archived, claimed, and heard.
What others overlook becomes legacy
What others deny becomes literature
What others erase becomes record.

Dr. Denise Lowe — September 1989
A Foundational Blessing
for the Vision of
BMW Portfolio by
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz:
Envisioning Wealth & Legacy for
Girls & Women of Color Since 1989

Dr. Denise Lowe — September 1989
A Foundational Blessing
for the Vision of
BMW Portfolio by
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz:
Envisioning Wealth & Legacy for
Girls & Women of Color Since 1989

Dr. Denise Lowe — September 1989
A Foundational Blessing
for the Vision of
BMW Portfolio by
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz:
Envisioning Wealth & Legacy for
Girls & Women of Color Since 1989

Pearl Cleage — May 2002
A Foundational Blessing
for the Vision of
BMW Portfolio by
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz:
Envisioning Wealth & Legacy for
Girls & Women of Color Since 1989

Pearl Cleage — May 2002
A Foundational Blessing
for the Vision of
BMW Portfolio by
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz:
Envisioning Wealth & Legacy for
Girls & Women of Color Since 1989
“Pearl Cleage’s $25 gift carried the weight of $25 million. It was not the amount, but the courage—going against the grain of feminism to support BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz’s vision of wealth and legac

Pearl Cleage — May 2002
A Foundational Blessing
for the Vision of
BMW Portfolio by
Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz:
Envisioning Wealth & Legacy for
Girls & Women of Color Since 1989
BMW Portfolio by Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz has generated a powerful constellation of responses — including testimonials, praise, letters of support, and personal accounts from artists, academics, attorneys, journalists, authors, cultural workers, and visionary leaders.
“A woman-child genius.”
— Kervin A. Simms, Entertainment Attorney
“Brigétte’s fly.”
— Rosie Perez, Founder of The Fly Girls
“You rock!”
(hand-signatured on Nu America letterhead)
— Cey Adams, Visual Artist & Co-Founder, Def Jam Creative
“Brigétte’s a genius.”
— Kevin Maxwell, A&R, Tommy Boy Records
“A revolutionary voice for the freedom of women everywhere! Sing your song loud! We need you bad! Respect & Love, Pearl Cleage Jan., 2001” (signed copy of Mad At Miles: A Blackwoman’s Guide To Truth donated to Bernadine Louise Library™️)
— Pearl Cleage, Playwright & Author
“Who’s this kid with that kind of insight?”
— Tom Silverman, Founder, Tommy Boy Records & New Music Seminar
(Discovering Brigétte at the New Music Seminar board and planning meeting)
“You have TOO MUCH POSSE. Nothing wrong that. Congratulations on the new job—you’ll do well. Thanks for all your help in 1990. Good luck in ‘91. (chillin in Tokyo…with Major Force)”
— Dave Funken-Klein, NYC & International Hip-Hop Pioneer
“That’s my brilliant Beamer.”
— Monica Lynch, President, Tommy Boy Records
(“Beamer” boss’s nickname—slang for BMW, years before W initial.)
“You have a real gem in Brigétte.”
— Neil H. Moritz, Producer, Juice—starring Tupac Shakur
(Read and reviewed historic Juice script to prep Tommy Boy President)
“Who’s her mom? Any mother of hers should be working for me.”
— Russell Simmons, Co-Founder, Def Jam
“Brigétte. You don’t have to respect her. She took your livelihood."
— Dream Hampton, Legendary Journalist, Documentarian, and Cultural Critic
(possibly the most profoundly kind phone call and conversation of my life)
“Here’s my business card. Young lady, take my card home to your parents. Tell them to call me. Tell them I said to come to this club and stand up there in the Mezzanine and watch you dance. You are one of the the best hip-hop dancers I’ve ever seen. They need to see this.”
— Charlie Ahearn, Director, Wild Style (at Milky Way at Irving Plaza)
“I see you coming up in my shadow.”
— Sista Souljah, Activist, Writer, & Recording Artist
“Brigétte, congratulations, you’re everywhere.”
— Rebecca Walker, Author
“Anyone who looks like you should be singing.”
— Pattie Devries, A&R, Sony
“Your voice is like a new Tracy Chapman.”
— Philip Cowan, Entertainment Attorney (at demo listening)
“Keep me up to date on everything.”
— Wanda LeBron, ASCAP & Zulu Nation
“Thank you for being the beautiful person you are. I’m so happy I met you this year. I’m going to miss you. Keep in touch!! With much love from Dara.”
— Dara Hamilton-Shanks, Accessories, Galeries Lafayette At Trump Tower
“Your songs made me and my daughters cry.”
— Sonya Sohn, Spoken Word Artist, Actress, & Filmmaker
“You‘re giving birth to an illuminati.”
— Saul Williams, Spoken Word Artist, Actor, & Author
“Brigétte —president, Moore Awareness Productions, I wanna be a rapper, and I heard you have stoopid juice. You would do well in Hollywood. We hung out at an actor‘s house named Alec something who starred in Hunt for Red October. Then we rolled by Carrie Fisher’s house from Star Wars etc… I’ll come by your spot one day.”
— Funken-Klein, President, Red Alert Productions (Sheraton Universal letterhead)
“Sisters In Business!!”
— Aliqui, Female Rap Artist, Moore Awareness Productions
“Oh yeah!! I saw Dan Charnas’s name in Source Magazine! I started thinking about how we were at his place all the time tripping on him—he’s cool though.” (Aliqui’s demo was produced and recorded in Dan Charnas’s 8-track home studio)
— Aliqui, Female Rap Artist, Moore Awareness Productions
“You are the prettiest Black girl I’ve ever seen in my life.”
— Mary J. Blige, SIR Studios Rehearsal, NYC
“Hey B! Cinco de Mayo! Queens NY baby! I received your two letters today. I did a big “OMYGOD” when I saw the wedding picture. You two are absolutely gorgeous!!! You are glowing!! I also enjoyed the bat stamps —you are a goddess”
— Joan Lucas, Board Member, Black Grrrl Revolution (handwritten letter)
“Through all these years, you’ve been my teacher.”
— Juliana Plotkin, Public Relations & Marketing Strategist (handwritten letter)
“You’re a very unique & wonderful person. You’ll get everything you wish for because you’ve worked hard and you deserve it. You’ve inspired me in many ways. I’ll never forget you or what you taught me. I love you! Peace.
— Juliana Plotkin, Public Relations & Marketing Strategist (handwritten letter)
“Ever since we were young, I envied you. Ironically, that envy has helped me more than it has hurt me. I was jealous of the person you were or wanted to be. You were so ambitious that you sort of inspired me in some ways. You’ve taught me many things mostly to be myself. You’ve opened up new doors for me and wish me nothing but the best in anything I do. I know you’ll make it real big one day, I always did. Remember me when you’re famous.”
— Juliana Plotkin, Public Relations & Marketing Strategist (handwritten letter)
“Having insight into your journey just confirms that there is no wrong path. So many connections… It’s amazing. We’re on opposite ends of the globe but we share the same realizations. We are no doubt linked in a most profound way and I cherish you as a living goddess. Namaste. Om Shanti”
— Derise Tardell, Yogi (handwritten from Nepal)
“I just want you to know you are never alone, The universe is full of friends and angels, God will send you everything you need and more, you are completely supported and guided. Never fear. Just remember, you’re the channel, God is using you to send Love out.”
— Asia, A Course In Miracles
“To Brigétte: For I know the plans I have for you declare the Lord plans to prosper you and not harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. Then you will come and pray to me and I will listen to joy. — Jerimiah 29:11-12”
— Clara, co-worker, Henri Bendel (handwritten letter)
“You have an awesome personality! I know you have big dreams & I know someday they will all come true & you’re going to be someone important!
— Clara, co-worker, Henri Bendel (handwritten letter)
Our entire team and community firmly believe in this project’s potential. Together, we will not only make it a success in the market, but elevate it to become a global leader. Our determination and perseverance will take this project to new heights."
— A. Crypto, X, (Xmail)
“Brigétte, you're the Black Pocahantas."
— Norisol "Nora" Ferrari
(Childhood Friend and Future Founder & Designer,
2BNN-2 Bitches Named Nora, Norisol Ferrari LLC NYC,
and 2017 inauguration designer for First Lady Melania Trump)
“Look Brigétte, you are beautiful and a genius, you are truly phenomenal.
And you're Black. People are mean to you because they're jealous."
"But you can't let that shake you."
— Jesse L. Martin, Actor, Law & Order
(at his Tribeca Loft artist gathering and wholesome respectable slumber-party
artist-retreat celebrating his major television debut on New York Undercover)
“Brigétte, you are an amazing person."
— Matt Kadushin (Future General Counsel, New York City)
The following reflections from Sean Combs are meaningful to me not because of public stature, but because they come from a longitudinal witness whose awareness of my life stretches
back more than three decades, to a very different era in New York City when
exceptionally gifted and ambitious young Black professionals could enter
serious halls of institutional power unusually early. We began our
professional trajectories in that world:
I was nineteen, serving as assistant to Monica Lynch at Tommy Boy Records,
while Sean Combs, at twenty-one, was assistant to Andre Harrell and soon rose
to A&R at Uptown Records. I preserve these reflections here because testimony
of continuity carries unusual meaning—particularly when it comes from
someone who knew you at the beginning and before reemergence.
“You have remarkable resilience.”
— Sean (Love) Combs, Legendary Mogul, Producer, & Artist
“You have a powerful and inspiring life story.”
— Sean (Love) Combs, Legendary Mogul, Producer, & Artist
“This is a lovely project.”
— El DeBarge, Legendary Singer-Songwriter, on BMW Portfolio
"Sorry I missed you, but I tried. Please give me a call. I'm interested in talking with you
regarding a story I'm writing and wanted advise. I also want to learn anything you
have to offer. This note doesn't sound right, but my intentions sincere."
David, handwritten fan letter,
Howard University Hip-Hop Conference
"Brigétte, oh my god, you have fans."
Sophia "Sophie" Chang, business colleague in attendance,
Howard University Hip-Hop Conference, Wu-Tang Clan manager,
and author of The Baddest Bitch in the Room: A Memoir
“Being obscured can wound,
but it can also create protected incubation.”
— Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz,
Mother, Founder & CEO, BMW Portfolio LLC
Founder, Billionaire Girl Society™,
100 Girl Billionaires™ & 100 Boy Billionaires™
“Mom, you count.”
— Mateusz Dominik Wojnarowicz,
Polish-Multiracial Generation Z Prodigy & Visionary
Founder & CEO, Mateusz Wojnarowicz LLC
Entrepreneur-In-Residence, BMW Portfolio LLC
Generational & Multilingual Consultant,
100 Girl Billionaires™ & 100 Boy Billionaires™

On Juneteenth 2026, 100 girls of all colors ages 15-20 will convene as the founding cohort for the launch of 100 Girl Billionaires™ by 2030 / 2035 / 2040™™️ — with BMW Portfolio LLC founder Brigétte Michelle Wojnarowicz and multilingual generational consultant Mateusz Wojnarowicz.
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