UNCF Baltimore Masked Ball Raises the Bar for HBCU Support

UNCF Baltimore Masked Ball Raises the Bar for HBCU Support

by Staff

The grand ballroom of the Hilton Baltimore Inner Harbor came alive as the UNCF Baltimore Masked Ball brought together an elegant crowd of civic leaders, corporate partners, alumni, and friends of higher education. The Masked Ball wasn’t just an event; no, it was a rallying cry, a fundraising effort, and a reminder that the mission to support historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) is as urgent.

Setting the Stage

The event theme, black tie, mask, and black-and-white, added a theatrical flair to a serious undertaking: raising awareness and support for students who rely on scholarships and institutional backing to gain and thrive in higher education. According to the sponsorship packet, the goal for this year’s Ball was a bold $250,000, with sponsor packages ranging from $2,500 up to $50,000. That tells you how much is riding on this evening.

Honoring Changemakers

A highlight of the evening was the recognition of leaders whose work goes beyond a résumé; they’re lifting entire communities.

April Ryan, the Washington D.C. Bureau Chief of Black Press USA, stood out as one of the honorees. Baltimore-born and a Morgan State alumna, she has spent nearly three decades covering the White House and spotlighting racial justice issues.

Dr. David L. Heiber, CEO of Redemption Social Solutions and Founder of Concentric Holdings, was also recognized. He has built programs from the ground up, partnering with hundreds of schools across states to deliver tutoring, mentorship programs, and student engagement initiatives.

Otis Rolley III, President & CEO of the Baltimore Development Corporation, brought his deep local roots and national perspective into sharp relief, emphasizing economic development, access to education, and investment in the city’s future.

These honorees exemplify a vital truth: supporting HBCUs and their students is closely tied to urban development, economic growth, and overall community well-being.

Sponsors and Donors: The Foundation

Behind the evening’s glamour are corporate sponsors, benefactors, and community businesses making tangible contributions. The 2025 event includes:

  • Platinum sponsor: Whiting‑Turner.
  • Silver sponsor: WNADA.
  • Bronze sponsor: Turner (presumably Turner Construction or affiliate).
  • In-kind supporters: AFRO (the historic black-owned media company), City Ballet, DMV Fotobooths, La Grande Caviar Bar, Black Girl Magic Wines, Raising Cane’s, and Uncle Nearest whiskey.

This indicates that a combination of major national corporations and local creative firms is coming together to support this cause. The sponsorship sheet shows that when organizations contribute, even with an initial donation of $2,500, they’re not just purchasing a table; they’re investing in future leaders.

Why It Matters Now

In a climate of rising tuition, shrinking state support, and increasing competition for students, HBCUs face persistent challenges. Events like this Masked Ball are more than fundraisers; they’re symbolic of the role these institutions play in social mobility and leadership development.

As the UNCF underscores, many of the students it serves come from low- to moderate-income families, often being first-generation college students. (UNCF) The graduation rate for UNCF scholarship recipients is notably higher than national averages, which speaks directly to the value of this investment.

Looking Ahead

The question isn’t just “Can we raise the funds?” but “How do we turn fundraising into sustainable systems of support?” For the Ball and UNCF in Baltimore, the pathway involves:

  • Deepening corporate partnership: Companies that sponsor aren’t just checking a box; they can engage in mentorship programs, internship, and HBCU pipeline initiatives.

  • Boosting Alumni/Community Engagement: The Local Footprint Matters. Baltimore’s business and civic leaders stepping up send a signal to students in the region: this is your city caring for you.

  • Measuring impact: It’s not just “how much did we raise?” but “how many students moved through college, how many got jobs, how many are giving back?” UNCF’s data shows stronger outcomes when investment is consistent.

  • Telling rich stories: Masks, gala gowns, ballroom, those attract attention. But the real stories are in the halls of HBCUs, the dorm rooms, the internships, the cap-and-gowns. Events like the Ball are platforms to amplify those voices.

Final Takeaway

The UNCF Baltimore Masked Ball is elegant, yes, but beneath the sparkle is hard, purposeful work. When April Ryan, David Heiber, and Otis Rolley III are honored, when corporations raise tens of thousands of dollars, the goal isn’t just celebration. It is an investment. Real, tangible investment in young people who will design the next generation of leadership, not just in Baltimore, not just at HBCUs, but across the country.

If you’re wondering whether it’s worth writing the check, attending the gala, or sponsoring the table, the answer is yes. Because when a mind is invested in, it often repays the investment multiple times over time. And that’s tradition. That’s legacy. That’s forward-thinking, rooted in something substantial and real.

Can We Talk? I Am The Table!

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Celebrities, Leaders, and Advocates Unite

 

Taraji didn’t stand alone. The weekend was a star-studded show of solidarity, a testament to how mental health has become a collective cause.

 

Among those who came to support were:

  • Megan Thee Stallion, who joined the foundation’s “I Am The Table” benefit brunch and spoke about her own mental wellness journey.

  • Wale, the DMV native, who opened up about managing anxiety in the spotlight, saying, “Even all these cameras… I had to come to grips with being shy. These are all things connected to the mental.”

  • Sherri Shepherd, actress and comedian, who lit up the room with humor and honesty.

  • Lisa Vidal, longtime friend of Henson and mental health advocate, who has championed the foundation since its beginning.

  • Abby Phillip, CNN anchor, who lent her voice to discussions about resilience and representation.

  • Wanda Durant, motivational speaker and mother of NBA superstar Kevin Durant, emphasized the importance of self-care and community support.

  • Prince George’s County Executive Aisha Braveboy and Council Chair Edward P. Burroughs III, who reaffirmed the county’s $30 million commitment to renovate the Temple Hills Community Center, a facility that will provide vital mental health services in partnership with BLHF.

This lineup wasn’t just about star power; it was about shared purpose. Each person, in their own way, echoed Henson’s mission: to make wellness accessible, relatable, and rooted in cultural truth.

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Taraji P. Henson’s 5th Annual “Can We Talk?” Summit Brings Star Power and Healing to National Harbor

Silke Endress International was on the scene as the Oscar-nominated actress and founder of the Boris Lawrence Henson Foundation (BLHF) hosted her 5th Annual Can We Talk? Multicultural Arts & Wellness Summit at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center at National Harbor. The three-day summit, held in honor of World Mental Health Day, wasn’t just another celebrity event; it was a movement of heart, healing, and hope.

 

A Mission Rooted in Love and Legacy

Henson created the foundation in 2018 to honor her late father, Boris Lawrence Henson, a Vietnam veteran who struggled silently with mental health challenges after returning from war. Through BLHF, Taraji is changing how Black and marginalized communities’ approach mental health, replacing stigma with support, and silence with honest conversation.

 

“We need to make it okay to not be okay,” Henson has said in countless interviews. “Our community has carried trauma for generations, and we deserve to heal.”

 

That healing energy filled the air at the summit, which combined cultural expression, therapy, and conversation. Attendees took part in mindfulness workshops, global wellness panels, and even a World Art Bazaar, celebrating multicultural creativity as a path to healing.

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Beyond the Summit: Real Impact

 

The BLHF isn’t stopping at conversation. The new Temple Hills Community Center project represents a tangible investment in mental wellness infrastructure, a place where residents can access culturally competent care, community programming, and safe spaces for dialogue.

That’s what makes this summit different. It’s not just an event; it’s a catalyst. Henson and her foundation are turning awareness into action, and celebrity spotlight into sustainable change.

 

The Bigger Picture

 

For Taraji, this work is personal, but it’s also purposeful. Her foundation continues to partner with schools, churches, and community centers across the country to offer free therapy sessions, mental health resources, and wellness education.

 

“I always wanted to come back and pour into the community that poured into me,” Henson said. “We can’t heal what we don’t talk about.”

 

A Movement That’s Just Getting Started

 

The 5th Annual Can We Talk? Summit was more than a wellness conference it was a cultural homecoming. It blended art, music, therapy, and community in a way that only Taraji could curate: bold, beautiful, and unapologetically real.

If one message stood out above all, it’s this: mental health is not a luxury, it’s a lifeline. And thanks to Henson and her growing community of allies, that lifeline is reaching more people than ever before. 

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