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Playing By Her Own Rules

Viola Davis was always an integral part of Denzel Washington’s plan.

 

Having secured the rights to direct August Wilson’s Pulitzer Prize-winning plays, Washington knew Davis would bring some of Wilson’s most memorable characters to life. Davis won the 2010 Tony Award for best actress for playing Rose Maxson in the Broadway revival of Wilson’s play Fences, and an Academy Award for best supporting actress for reviving this role in the film adaptation, which Washington produced and directed.

 

Best known for her roles in films such as The HelpDoubt and Widows, as well as the TV drama How to Get Away with Murder, Davis was the natural choice, if not the only choice, for the lead in the film version of Wilson’s play Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom. With Davis as the lead and Washington again producing, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom also stars Glynn Turman, Taylour Paige and the late Chadwick Boseman. Poetic and filled with harrowing tales, the Netflix film follows the legendary “Mother of the Blues” Ma Rainey as she makes her own rules for her career in Jim Crow America.

 

At its heart, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom celebrates the transformative power of the blues and the artists who refused to let society’s prejudices dictate their path. The film, which was shot in Pittsburgh, received five Academy Award nominations, including best actress for Davis.

 

“When you have somebody as smart, ferocious and fearless as Viola playing Ma Rainey, the character resonates with that ferocity and fearlessness and emotional rawness and supreme intelligence,” says George C. Wolfe, the film’s director. “Viola brilliantly lived in all the corners and crevices and cracks of Ma’s veracity and vulnerability, and no line, no pause, no look, no moment goes uninvested when it comes to Viola.”

 

In one of the film’s most engaging scenes, Davis’s Ma Rainey takes a principled stand against her white manager and producer. Tensions and temperatures rise over the course of an afternoon recording session in 1927 Chicago as a band of musicians awaits the trailblazing performer. Late to the session, the fearless and fiery Ma Rainey engages in a battle of wills over control of her music. She threatens to walk out of the session and go back on tour.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP/Shutterstock (9974160d) This photo shows Viola Davis, a cast member in the film “Widows,” posing for a portrait at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel during the Toronto International Film Festival in Toronto 2018 TIFF – Viola Davis Portrait Session, Toronto, Canada – 09 Sep 2018

 

Davis, a 55-year-old South Carolina native, is the first African-American to achieve the “triple crown of acting,” winning an Academy Award, a primetime Emmy Award and two Tony Awards. Washington describes Davis as “one of the greats of all time.” Furthermore, he says it was “an honor for me to be able to help in a small way and find roles that give all of us the chance to see how brilliant Viola is.”

 

She’s also remarkably versatile, comfortable with genres ranging from drama and romance to action and adventure; she will reprise her role as Amanda Waller in The Suicide Squad, due to be released in August, a follow-up to the similarly named 2016 DC Films superhero movie starring Margot Robbie, Will Smith and Jared Leto.

 

Davis has used her considerable talents to make her mark in ways beyond her work on the screen. With her husband, Julius Tennon, she co-founded the production company JuVee Productions. She is also widely recognized for her advocacy and support of human rights and equal rights for women, as well as ending child hunger as a spokesperson for the nonprofit organization No Kid Hungry. As a keynote speaker at the virtual 2020 Pennsylvania Conference for Women, Davis inspired thousands of Philadelphia-area attendees and shared her remarkable journey from frightened little girl to formidable woman.

 

We recently spoke with Davis about her on-screen work, what she learned from Ma Rainey and how the challenges of her early life continue to inform her even today.

 

Q&A

Talk about portraying Ma Rainey, the jazz legend, a successful entrepreneur and a black woman who is used to obeying no one’s rules but her own. I understand that at first you didn’t see yourself stepping into Ma’s persona.

No, I hadn’t initially envisioned myself in the role, but I quickly began to see the complexities inherent within Ma Rainey, and a deep emotional bond with this character grew. The more time I spent getting to know Ma Rainey, the more I recognized just how ahead of her time she was as a singer and entrepreneur.

 

In what way?

First of all, she knew her worth and she knew how to negotiate her worth. Ma Rainey knew how valuable her music was and how much her management and record label needed her. She understood it and she was unapologetic about it. I believe that makes her very much a liberated and modern woman.

 

What else did you learn about her?

Ma Rainey was also absolutely unapologetic about her sexuality. She was incredibly authentic and tapped into her desires and her impulses. I loved that about her. There was something about that that I just wanted to channel because I feel like sometimes, I apologize for my power. To be able to play and channel someone who does not do this became like an elixir.

 

You speak candidly about your own life and your humble beginnings.

Yes, I talk about my foundation and my background, and how I started. I speak my truth every chance I get, and I will continue doing so. I always feel that I am trying to heal my younger self; that little girl who grew up in poverty, who didn’t have enough to eat, and who grew up in abuse. She follows me everywhere I go.

 

How does that inform your career and your life?

I want to honor her with everything that I do. I’m always trying to heal that little girl, and she’s always with me. I see the younger girl wanting to be embraced and squeal in delight about my future and all my possibilities. So, it’s about reconciliation and restoration. It’s about restoring the past and who we are going forward.

 

You have played a lot of different characters throughout your career. What is the best way to get to know who you are as a person?

If you want to know me don’t ask me what I eat or how I comb my hair. Instead, ask me what I live for. I will tell you that I live for honoring my worth. Every day I have to balance my life with what I have in my hands to give, to create and also to fight all of the things that were injected in me as a child in terms of insulting and challenging my worth and my value. At some point, I know there will be a beautiful time period where they all mesh together and when I fully understand that I absolutely am worthy.

 

You’re a mother in addition to all the work you’re known for. What is it like spending time with your 10-year-old daughter, Genesis?

My daughter often feels like I don’t have enough fun and will try to lighten my mood and say she yearns to laugh with me. So, she will tickle me. She does that often to get me out of myself, and it works.

 

Tell me your view of the future.

We have to harness the past and honor the women like Ma Rainey who had the courage and guts, endured the pain and dug their feet in the ground. And because of them the generation after them lived better for it, and they passed the baton. I always say, “You can preach a better sermon with your life than you can with your lips.”