Tag: Viola Davis
Viola Davis Proclaims “I Cannot Lead With Bull—” at Hollywood Reporter Women in Entertainment Event
At The Hollywood Reporter’s Women in Entertainment event on Wednesday, Davis was honored with the Sherry Lansing Leadership Award, given annually to a woman who is a trailblazer and philanthropic leader in her industry.
Viola Davis is speaking her truth, and speaking out about being a black woman in Hollywood.
At The Hollywood Reporter‘s Women in Entertainment event Wednesday, Davis was honored with the Sherry Lansing Leadership Award, given annually to a woman who is a trailblazer and philanthropic leader in her industry. When she took the stage, the star revealed how it can feel for her as a black actress, comparing her feelings to a scene in The Exorcist when a possessed young girl lifts up her nightgown to show “Help me” written on her stomach.
“She’s somewhere in that body but being possessed by these demons, but somewhere she musters up enough courage to say ‘Help me.’ That’s how I feel everyday in this Hollywood community and in my life, in trying to live my authentic life,” Davis told the audience at Los Angeles’ Milk Studios. “The demons aren’t gargoyles, they aren’t men with pointy noses and ears — they’re other people’s desire for your life, people who don’t see you. People who stereotype you. People who take your pathology, your complexity, everything away from you.”
The honoree continued, “How you have to water yourself down in order to meet the standards of the community who are in charge, who is not mine. That’s how it feels. And I’ll tell you the worst demon of all is a lack of purpose because let me tell you something, you do not have to know what is in the hearts of people to be a leader, but, by God, you have to know what is in the heart of the leader. And what is in my heart is I cannot lead with bullshit.”
Davis spoke about bringing change to the industry with her production company JuVee productions, which she runs with husband Julius Tennon, and aiming to tell more diverse, inclusive stories.
“We started it because I got tired of always celebrating movies that didn’t have me in it. I don’t mean me Viola, I mean me as a black woman. I was tired of seeing the expansive imagination of writers when they wrote the mess, the joy, the beauty, the femininity of white characters,” she said. “Maybe an hour into the movie you saw the obligatory black character just kind of walking into the camera, who had a name but didn’t really need to have a name because we know nothing about them.”
The actress called out The Brady Bunch, Gilligan’s Island, Leave It to Beaver and similar shows as being “a lie,” and added, “embrace the truth, that’s my biggest gift.” She also commended Steve McQueen, Barry Jenkins, Ryan Coogler and Greta Gerwig for their wild spirits and for being “people who just dare, who say, ‘You cannot silence me.'”
To wrap up her speech, Davis said, “my big thing with JuVee Productions is there is no limit to how we see narratives for people of color — that there’s only so much that I’m going to kowtow to this business. My gift to anyone is that. Don’t let anybody tell you who you are. … This is my fist pump. This is my drop the mic. This is me.”
The award was presented by Lansing herself, who commended Davis as someone who “empathizes with the underserved and she gives a voice to those who are silenced. Viola has never forgotten where she came from and she pays it forward to make sure others don’t have to suffer like she did.”
Aside from her Oscar-, Emmy- and Tony-winning career, the star is a leader in the fight against child hunger, serving as an ambassador for charitable initiative Hunger Is from 2014 to 2017, which raised more than $20 million to provide meals for children across the U.S. Additionally, Davis has worked to end poverty in her hometown of Central Falls, Rhode Island, and has donated to its public library, her high school alma mater and the charter school Segue Institute for Learning. Through her partnership with the Vaseline Healing Project, Davis returned to Central Falls in 2016 to launch a free health clinic for residents unable to afford health care. The actress has also been outspoken on issues of racism, pay inequality and sexual abuse in Hollywood.
Davis joins past Lansing Award recipients Tina Fey, Barbra Streisand, Shonda Rhimes, Oprah Winfrey, Diane Keaton, Jane Fonda, Helen Mirren, Halle Berry, Jodie Foster, Glenn Close, Barbara Walters and 2017 honoree Jennifer Lawrence.
The Power 100 Women in Entertainment event presented by Lifetime is sponsored by American Airlines, Cadillac, Fiji Water, eOne, Gersh, Loyola Marymount University and SAG-AFTRA, in partnership with Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Los Angeles and Entertainment Industry Foundation.
Article via HollywoodReporter
A Heist, And A Whole Lot More, As Viola Davis Delivers In ‘Widows’
It is one of the oldest and most sexist tropes of all that husbands make messes and wives clean them up. Widows, directed by Steve McQueen (12 Years A Slave) and co-written by McQueen and Gillian Flynn (Gone Girl), spins that idea in a new direction.
Veronica (Viola Davis) is living a high-class, meticulously art-directed Chicago life with her husband Harry (Liam Neeson) and her fluffy little dog. But Harry’s gains are all ill-gotten, and when he pulls one big robbery too many and everything goes sideways, Veronica loses him in a massive van explosion that also takes the lives of the rest of his gang.
The problem? The gang still owes a debt to the man they robbed, and if there’s a debt harder to get rid of than your student loans, it’s the money you owe to an operator as merciless as Jamal Manning (Brian Tyree Henry). Manning is himself a criminal, running for alderman against incumbent Jack Mulligan (Colin Farrell). Politics, of course, takes money. So Jamal both wants and needs his $2 million back, and he expects Veronica — and the widows of the other three men who died in the robbery, if necessary — to make good.
So Veronica goes looking for them: Linda (Michelle Rodriguez), whose husband’s gambling debts were out of control; Alice (Elizabeth Debicki), whose husband was controlling and abusive; and Amanda (Carrie Coon), who wants nothing to do with all this gangster business and won’t talk to Veronica. So she makes do with the team she has, telling Linda and Alice that if they want to live, they only have one option: carry out the heist plans she found in Harry’s notebook. Get that money, use it to pay off Jamal — whose brother Jatemme (Daniel Kaluuya) glowers where Jamal placidly threatens — and get free.
And so Widows is a heist movie. There are plans to make, there are escapes to engineer, there are unexpected challenges to confront. At the same time, Widows is a drama about Veronica — who turns out to have a long and painful history with grief — taking her fate into her own hands. It’s a film doing two very different things, and it’s very good at both.
Part of this success comes from the performance of Viola Davis, who settles into Veronica’s crime-boss phase with ice-cold determination while carrying the character’s deliciously stylish, almost over-the-top panache. She totes around a fluffy little dog that has a story reason to exist but also brings a glamorous aesthetic, together with Davis’ gorgeous and elegant wardrobe, that gives the film a particular flair.
Davis gets strong support from the other women in the group, including Cynthia Erivo as a late addition to the heist team. Debicki, in particular, has a take on the traditional crime-film gorgeous blonde that delivers wit and vulnerability; she has the best chemistry with Davis of any of the widows. And Michelle Rodriguez, it’s fair to remember, is a veteran of the hugely successful Fast and the Furious franchise. She knows her action sequences and her steely glares. Like Neeson, she works this beat regularly — but like him, she’s doing something new within it.
Any crime film is nothing without a good villain. (Anyone who’s seen Die Hard and known that Hans Gruber occasionally had a point knows it’s true.) And Widows, while it most certainly is a story of good and bad guys, has put some thought into the bad guys, too. It’s easy to note the immediacy of Jamal and Jatemme as the people who threaten Veronica; Henry and Kaluuya both know how to play heavies, even though they’ve both played some sweethearts, too. But in the wings is Farrell’s Mulligan, playing out the Chicago-politics machinations of his dying father, played by Robert Duvall. And when Jamal confronts Mulligan about the fact that he doesn’t really know the ward he represents, hasn’t really done anything for it, and barely lives in it, it highlights the difference between immediate and overarching villainy. Who picks up the gun, and who created the situation the gun was picked up to solve? None of this absolves Jamal, but it adds dimensions to his behavior. Evil comes in many forms, and consequences, like everything else, are unequally distributed.
We could certainly end here with a discussion of the dismal representation numbers in Hollywood; how unconscionably rare it is to see strongly supported studio films that offer this kind of role for an actress of Davis’ gender, age, race and shade. The same goes for major releases with a celebrated black director like McQueen, let alone one making a fabulous and fun genre film that doubles as a clever examination of what it means to be a wife and a widow. Seeing Davis, seven years after she played a maid in The Help, heading up a heist team — seeing her take charge of this group, seeing her face down her enemies in perfectly cut clothes and avenge those she loved — it’s thrilling. This is all true.
But let us not lose sight of the fact that this movie is so much fun and so satisfying, so suspenseful and exciting, that all you may want to do at the end is exhale, let your body go limp, crunch your last kernel of popcorn, and buy a ticket to see it again.
Article via NPR
Soap star Nancy Lee Grahn tweet-blasts Viola Davis’ Emmy-win speech, then apologizes
Wow… Look at the White People tears falling https://twitter.com/NancyLeeGrahn/status/645796604692160512?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
She STILL cryin’ even MORE after Black twitter put her ASS on BLAST https://twitter.com/NancyLeeGrahn/status/645813629997023232?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
She need to STFU https://twitter.com/NancyLeeGrahn/status/645819738325540864
Yeah SHE NOT SORRY *Sip Tea* https://twitter.com/NancyLeeGrahn/status/645858584283230208
Some people need to take some of that Kaopectate for their Diarrhea of the Mouth I hear it works for the fingers too!