Category: MoNews

  • My Appointment with Dr. Fink

    By Steven Fullwood

    Clearly I was on a roll. After publishing an interview with singer/songwriter and one-time Prince protégé Jill Jones, I was contacted by the reps of another former Prince associate, Matt Fink, known to most Princephiles and the world as the über-keyboardist “Dr. Fink.” They asked if I were interested in reviewing Fink’s debut album, Ultrasound and possibly interviewing the doctor himself. What, are you kidding? I jumped at the chance.

    Dr. Fink
    Dr. Fink (Courtesy Matt Fink)

    Dr. Fink’s tenure with the Minneapolis wunderkind began in 1979 when Prince first told us that he wanted to be our lover. Since then, the keyboard wizard performed with Prince non-stop until 1996. He co-wrote some of Prince’s most memorable songs including “Dirty Mind, “America,” “Computer Blue, “17 Days,” and “It’s Gonna be a Beautiful Night,” and was the last member of the Revolution to leave Prince’s band. Like most of the Revolution – Wendy and Lisa, Bobby Z, Brown Mark – Dr. Fink has recorded a solo joint, sans the diminutive genius.

    Of his own musical legacy Dr. Fink is modest. “I feel like I had some influence on [Prince] but for the most part he was his own man,” he says. “Prince helped me to have a better work ethic and dedication to the craft of music production because of the example he set.” Although rumors of a reunion circulated in the past few years, nothing came of it. “We [members of the band] wanted a reunion in 2000, but Prince wasn’t ready so maybe in the future,” Fink says.

    Whatever happens, Ultrasound should be more than enough to sate the musical appetites of admirers and fans alike. “Ultrasound is meant to be fun, entertaining and danceable,” he says adding “hopefully [it will] entertain people and give them something to escape into after a hard day at the office.”

    That said, Dr. Fink has enough to keep him busy. Besides facilitating the birth of Ultrasound, he has also nurtured the careers of the other musicians. Fink owns a recording studio in Minneapolis called Star Vu Studios where he has worked with a variety of Minneapolis talent including Rebekka Fisher, Vouegot, Amy Holland, Tony Burgos, Christar, The Villains, The Curbfeelers, BlackBone and Barfly. In 1996, he produced Radioactive for MCA Records and collaborated with former Revolution drummer Bobby Z for an artist named Ana Voog. Although the good doctor is pleased with his accomplishments, he will continue to further his “practice.”

    “I would like to produce and work with more up-and-coming talent in the biz than I’ve had so far,” he says, adding that he’d like to work with Moby.

    On the home front, talent apparently runs in the family. His wife Andra co-wrote lyrics on Ultrasound and their 7-year-old son Maxwell recently had his first piano recital.

    Always humble about his success, Dr. Fink is appreciative of the response he’s received about Ultrasound.

    “It’s nice to know the fans still remember me and it makes me want to put more music out there,” he says. M

    August 2002

  • Recording artist, model and actor Tyrese returns to the big screen in Universal Pictures action adventure 2 Fast 2 Furious

    2 Fast 2 Furious is the exciting sequel to the Summer 2001 box office sensation about the super-charged world of street racing. Paul Walker returns as former cop Brian O”Conner, who teams up with his ex-con pal Roan Pearce (Tyrese) to transport a shipment of “dirty” money for shady Miami-based import-export dealer Carter Verone (Cole Hauser), while actually working with undercover agent Monica Fuentes Eva Mendes) to bring Verone down. Ludacris, James Remar and Devon Aoki round out the culturally diverse cast.

    Tyrese is partnered with Walker, the only original cast member of The Fast and The Furious. “To get the two of us together on camera is a great combination because we are from two different worlds, but yet we’re perfect together. I think it’s a great balance. Paul is really open-minded and I have the utmost respect for him.”

    “My character, Roman Pearce, is from Barstow, California and that’s also where Brian O’Conner is from. We grew up together and participated in criminal activities. O’Conner decided to become a cop and he ended up being part of the Miami P.D. I couldn’t continue to be associated with a cop. If I committed a crime around him, he would have no choice but to turn me in. So I turned my back on him. However, when O’Conner is assigned to a money laundering case, he needs an inconspicuous partner, so he comes back to Barstow to get me. We end up fighting crime together and we get the job done.”

    Tyrese is a true car enthusiast and filming 2 Fast 2 Furious was a career highlight. The owner of 27 cars by the age of 23, he has now gained a new respect for vintage cars. “I hadn’t been really into old school cars, but on the set I was able to get in them and tamper with them a little bit. I can definitely see one parked in my driveway. I also can see why those cars are so respected. You know, you’ve got the modern, new stuff and then you’ve got the classics. There is nothing you can do to the new cars to give them the feel of a classic.”

    During filming Tyrese was drove a Spider that he had the luxury of having customized to his specifications, which included a special paint job, gray suede interior and Lauren Hart BR-5 chrome 20inch rims. “I think the Spider is definitely one of the hottest cars in the film. It’s pretty special having a customized car.”

    Born and raised in Watts, California, Tyrese discovered his love of music at an early age and released his self -titled debut album at 19. In January 2000 he received an American Music Award for “Favorite New Artist.” He recently signed with J Records and released his third album “I Wanna Go There.”

    In addition to his zest for music, he has also found success in the acting and modeling worlds, having appeared in several commercials and television series, as well as his exclusive contract with Guess?

    Although his work in three different industries keeps him pretty busy, Tyrese still finds time to give back to the community. Dedicated community activist, he assists inner city youth at every opportunity – making appearances and participating in charitable events – hoping that his success and can-do attitude will give others in his generation the inspiration to follow their dreams. Additionally, Tyrese has his own annual charity event “Watts Day” where he has numerous notable artists perform for the city of Watts, the community in which he was raised.

    2 Fast 2 Furious is directed by John Singleton (Boyz N The Hood, Baby Boy) and produced by Neal Moritz (The Fast and the Furious, Sweet Home Alabama).

  • Tim Reid and New Millennium Studios to Provide Services and Content For TV One

    Chicago, Il (June 9, 2003) – Emmy-nominated actor, producer and director Tim Reid will serve as Senior Executive Supervising Producer for TV One, the new cable television network targeting adult African American and urban viewers backed by Comcast Corporation and Radio One. Reid’s New Millennium Studios will also play a significant role as a content provider for the new channel scheduled to launch in January 2004. The announcement was made at the National Cable and Telecommunications Association (NCTA) convention in Chicago.

    In his role, Reid will advise TV One’s president and CEO Johnathan Rodgers on strategic planning for programming and production and will supervise post-production for many of TV One’s program offerings.

    In addition, New Millennium Studios will offer the network a first look at all of its original content targeting African American adults and will provide three made-for-TV movies that will premiere on TV One, three entertainment series and three non-fiction series, including a public affairs program, to the new network. New Millennium will also serve as TV One’s main post-production house and provide a variety of editing and production services.

    “Tim Reid’s programming expertise and advice will be invaluable to us as we work toward making TV One a prime destination for African American adult viewers,” said Rodgers. “In addition, our arrangement with New Millennium Studios will assure us access to quality content from a studio that has a solid track record in providing programming that is relevant to and respectful of our target audience.”

    “It’s an honor and a pleasure to be involved on the ground floor of this network, which has so much potential to entertain and inform the tremendously underserved African American viewing audience,” said Reid. “I have already developed a solid working relationship with Johnathan and Alfred (TV One Chairman Alfred Liggins) and look forward to playing a role in making their vision for TV One a reality.”

    In addition to a public affairs series, non-fiction series to be produced by New Millennium are expected to include “American Legacy,” based on provocative and fascinating tales featured in American Legacy magazine, which will chronicle the accomplishments, tragedies and the greatness behind some of the most unique African-Americans who helped to shape America; and “After the Glory,” which will take a penetrating look inside the world of some of America’s greatest sports heroes and discover how they are coping with life now that the cheers and glory have faded.

    Tim Reid has a distinguished career in the entertainment industry as an actor, producer and director. Reid has had starring roles in several television series, including “WKRP in Cincinnati,” “The Richard Pryor Show,” “Simon & Simon,” “Snoops,” “Save Our Streets,” “Sister, Sister” and “Frank’s Place,” for which he received Emmy nominations for acting and producing. He also produced “Frank’s Place,” “Snoops” and “The Tim & Daphne Show,” in which he and his wife Daphne Reid co-starred and co-created. Reid founded Tim Reid Productions, Inc. in 1989, and through its association with Procter & Gamble, executive produced the critically acclaimed 1998 CBS movie “About Sarah,” starring Mary Steenburgen, Kellie Martin, and Diane Baker for which he received a Christopher Award. In 1990, he co-founded United Image Entertainment through which he produced four independent films.

    In 1997, Reid brought together investors to build his own film studio. As Founder and President of New Millennium Studios in Petersburg, Virginia, Reid is setting the stage toward becoming a major player in independent movie making. NMS’ first feature production, “Asunder,” starring Blair Underwood, Debbi Morgan and Michael Beach, was directed and produced by Reid and released through New Millennium Releasing. “For Real,” the latest film directed by Reid, was produced by his studio and released by New Millennium Releasing along with the soundtrack for the film, which was produced by Reid’s new in-house label, Vigilance Records. Reid has also created Obsidian Home Entertainment, a home video distribution company in connection with Ingram Entertainment with a 4-picture distribution deal for the company’s films.

  • The Divine Ms. D

    By Steven Fullwood

    Dianne Reeves has been touted as this generation’s premiere jazz singer, the natural heir to the throne once occupied by such luminaries as Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday and Sarah Vaughan-and for sound reason. Sup with pleasure her catalog, a musical feast of incredible range and emotional depth and you too will sing her praises. Hers is a stunningly original palate that knows no bounds.

    To date, the Denver-native has recorded 14 albums, which includes a greatest hits collection that highlights her indispensable contributions to jazz and popular music for two decades. With the exception of New Mourning (1997), which was issued by the French Blue Note label, and her greatest hits package (2002), each of her US releases is reviewed here. Note that Reeves’ first two releases Welcome to My Love (1982) and For Every Heart (1985), are anthologized in The Palo Alto Sessions (1985). It is with great pleasure that I listened to and learned Dianne Reeves, and I hope what I have written will encourage you to experience the legend herself. You will be sated. M

    June 2002

  • Dianne Reeves – Staying True to Her Artistic Self and Grooving All the While

    Dianne Reeves
    Dianne Reeves (Courtesy Blue Note Records)

    By Steven Fullwood

    Dianne Reeves is used to breaking the rules. As a preteen, during the Civil Rights Movement in Denver, the Grammy-award winning artist was active in protests in high school against segregation. As an artist, she’s just as rebellious and eschews the label “jazz singer” in favor of being called an artist whose foundations lie in jazz. Hard to place comfortably in any genre, Reeves’ catalog illustrates the cross-genre path she has forged for over two decades. She points to her formative years as the basis for her way of seeing and being in the world of music.

    “I grew up listening to a lot of different kinds of music – R&B, soul, gospel, rock-n-roll – and the music was very conscious music,” she recalls. “And another thing that was happening was that jazz musicians were reaching out to world musicians and they were coming together, and I was listening to all of that.” Reeves views music as one thing – an expression of self – the spirit of which has given birth to thirteen, genre-busting albums. As her latest album reminds us, The Best of Dianne Reeves, she’s provided the world with a wide-range of musical experiences – most notably jazz – that has both expanded the genre and remained very true to its roots. Best known as a “jazz” singer, she has been criticized as abdicating the throne as this generation’s preeminent jazz artist in the tradition of Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday or Sarah Vaughan. Reeves shrugs off the critique and instead hones in on art in general and artistic integrity in particular.

    “There are so many critics that say so many things,” she laughs, “the way that I view it is me today or tomorrow it is someone else. Overall, you have to stay true to yourself and your art and keep on grooving because they, meaning critics, will call you many things.” She does acknowledge the compliment buried within the critique. “It does however feel really good, to be mentioned in such company, but at the same time there are some incredible, young up-and-coming talents that I’ve either had the opportunity to work with or talk to and they all have these unique and different voices, so you know,” she says, smiling.

    Speaking of that company, Reeves’ The Calling, Celebrating Sarah Vaughan, uses her supple vocals to honor the jazz legend that she says made a way for singers like herself to come up and pursue their artistic journeys.

    “Sarah viewed her voice as an instrument first. The album I did celebrates her artistry, not her music primarily because she sang so much music,” she says with wonderment. “This is a project that I’ve always wanted to do. So I got together with my really good friend Billy Childs, and we discussed it because I wanted to do an orchestra record mainly because when Sarah decided to do her live Gershwin project (the 1982 album Gershwin Live!), she basically put that whole project together herself.”

    Vaughan won a Grammy for that recording, a fact that disturbs Reeves greatly.

    “Can you imagine someone like her, whose career had spanned generations, and only won one Grammy? For all of that work. She wasn’t a star; she was a universe. By the time I had discovered her [it] was the ’70’s, and she had been singing for over 25 years by then,” Reeves points out. “She was not afraid to try and sing different things.”

    At best, Reeves’ own sojourn mirrors Vaughan’s (just two Grammys, so far). Most people are unaware of her catalog; that she has dabbled in straight-ahead R&B/soul (1985’s Never Too Far); that she’s covered tunes by rock artists such as Peter Gabriel (“In Your Eyes” on 1999’s Bridges), or that she was part of assembling three generations of jazz musicians for the magnificent 1996 album, The Grand Encounter.

    Although the journey has yet to end, Reeves says that 2002 is the year where she is going to take a much-needed rest.

    “I have been recording and touring almost non-stop in the last five years, and right now, I feel I need to live a little bit,” she says while sipping tea. “So now the dream is being fulfilled because we’re doing a lot of orchestra dates and it’s exciting, and the music is different, it’s challenging, and by the same token where I am right now is to stop and really try to smell the roses. M

    June 2002

  • Kaitlyn Hardy Wiltshire and Maycee Steele’s Cuff It Challenge Spotlights their Impressive Talent & Gusto

    By Ramona Prioleau

    In their FIYAH TikTok video that launched the Cuff It Challenge; Kaitlyn Hardy Wiltshire and Maycee Steele’s impressive talent and gusto leap off the mobile screen. The duo has danced since they were children and met while they were dancers at the Pulse on Tour Dance Convention.

    Fast friends, Kaitlyn and Maycee often collaborate, and they were inspired to create the Cuff It challenge while getting ready for a night out in the City of Angels.

    Their TikTok dance includes two moves that are repeated to Queen B’s single, Cuff It. The video has garnered millions of views and has audiences, including celebrities, body rolling and lateral body rocking in a crouch.

    @maycsteele @ogpartyhardy26 ♬ CUFF IT – Beyoncé

    MOSAEC caught up with Kaitlyn for a wide-ranging conversation about her flourishing career as well as creating the Cuff It challenge with Maycee.

    A graduate of the University of California, Riverside with a degree in Linguistic with a concentration in Speech-Language Pathology and a member of the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., Kaitlyn can just as easily translate for a world leader in Mandarin at the United Nations as she can flawlessly perform an intricate dance performance.  Based in Los Angeles, Kaitlyn has appeared in film and television and has worked with artists such as Lil Nas X, Doechii, Jennifer Hudson, Doug E Fresh and recently performed in the BET Awards.

    MOSAEC: How did you and Maycee meet?

    Kaitlyn: Maycee and I met at a dance convention called the Pulse on Tour at the age of eleven.

    MOSAEC: When you met Maycee, how did you know that the two of you had dance chemistry? Do you two share a love and appreciation for similar dance styles? Or do y’all just have fun together?

    Kaitlyn: Because we met at a dance convention, we both knew that we had a love for dance. As far as our friendship chemistry, that was instant. We were inseparable throughout our adolescent years even though Maycee lived in Kansas, and I lived in New York.

    We are both very passionate about all styles of dance. When we are together, we like to have fun and be kids again!

    MOSAEC: What inspires your choreography generally? What inspired the choreography for the Cuff It challenge? Was it something particular in the lyrics?

    Kaitlyn: Generally, my choreography is inspired by the 2000s era of music.

    The Cuff It challenge was made on a whim. I was getting ready for a party and Maycee was watching me get ready. We had just listened to the whole Beyoncé album and continued to focus on Cuff It for some reason. We played Cuff It six times and decided to make a TikTok dance.

    MOSAEC: The Cuff It challenge has struck a chord with audiences everywhere, what is it about that video, the choreography, the chemistry, the “dance narrative,” etc., that you think audiences are responding to?

    Kaitlyn: I think people see themselves in Maycee and me through the challenge. Being with your best friend, getting ready for a party, and pregaming are the perfect ingredients for a good time. Overall, I think through the TikTok video audiences can see our genuine friendship and love for one another.

    MOSAEC: What motivated you to start the Cuff It challenge? Tell me more about how the choreography, staging/setting, framing, lighting, costuming, & performance came together for the Cuff It video.

    Kaitlyn: The motivation behind it was that we wanted to do something fun. We had no intention of it going viral which is why there really is no staging lighting or costuming, I’m in my pajamas and Maycee is in her workout attire.

    MOSAEC: In what dance genre is the Cuff It dance?

    Kaitlyn: I think the Cuff It dance is a modern mix. There are two general moves repeated that you can do literally anywhere.

    MOSAEC: Can someone with two left feet and limited technique add the Cuff It dance to their personal repertoire :-)?

    Kaitlyn: Absolutely! I feel like anybody could learn the Cuff It dance because it is such a community-based dance. Since it looks fun, I think it makes people more intrigued to learn the dance.

    MOSAEC: As a professional dancer, how meaningful has it been (1) for your creation to go viral and (2) to see other celebrities and choreographers joining in on the challenge and crediting your work?

    Kaitlyn: I think it is very meaningful that our dance has gone viral Maycee and I were just being ourselves…besties having fun creating a Tik Tok video.

    To see celebrities and choreographers joining in on the challenge and crediting our work is AMAZING. As a professional dancer, you hope that people will see you as a dancer, see your choreography and credit you for what you have created.

    @maycsteele The cuff it challenge tutorial you all have been asking for!!! @ogpartyhardy26 #cuffit #cuffitchallenge ♬ CUFF IT – Beyoncé

    MOSAEC: A dance performance can elicit a range of emotions from the viewing audience, in thinking about your approach to choreography, how central is it that you convey a particular message and evoke certain audience reactions by your rhythmic body movements?

    Kaitlyn: I think it’s very important what message you convey throughout the dance. Depending on the piece /choreography, it will elicit certain emotions in people whether that is good or bad.

    MOSAEC: How does costuming and hair add to your dance expression?

    Kaitlyn: I believe costuming and hair help add a certain persona within the dance expression. For example, when I take a heels class, I make sure my hair and makeup is impeccable. Both add to my overall look for the class and make me feel good while dancing in my heels.

    MOSAEC: What sparked your interest in dance? When did you decide you wanted to be a choreographer as well as a dancer & why?

    Kaitlyn: I became interested in dance at the age of five when my mom took me to an audition at the Dance theater of Harlem. I was selected to attend and remained in the program for two years. My interest continued as I progressed in my training at Alvin Ailey, for 7 years. While a student at Alvin Ailey, I started to attend the Pulse on Tour Dance Convention, which took my training and dance skills to a level beyond my imagination. I decided I wanted to expand into the realm of choreography/creating at the age of sixteen. I became interested in choreographing/creating because I wanted to see my friends hit some of my dance steps to be honest.

    MOSAEC: As a child, when did you begin dancing, how important was it to your early childhood development?

    Kaitlyn: I began dancing when I was two and half years of age at Garden City Dance Studio. It was very important to my early childhood development because dance was one of my main hobbies along with playing tennis. It has shaped me not only to be the dancer that I am but the person that I’ve grown to love.

    MOSAEC: When did you know you would pursue it as a career?

    Kaitlyn: I knew I would pursue dance as a career when I had to make the choice between tennis and dance at the age 0f 10, to fulfill my early childhood goal of being an NBA dancer which was achieved through the Philadelphia 76ers.

    MOSAEC: You have been trained in a variety of dance genres, what is your favorite and why?

    Kaitlyn: My favorite dance genre would probably be hip-hop because aside from being girlie girl, an AKA and in a sorority and having the poise of such a young woman, hip hop helps me unlock and tap into an alter ego, which is grungier and more grounded with a little more umph so to speak.

    MOSAEC: How does the hip hop genre express your true nature?

    Kaitlyn: It encapsulates my entire personality as a whole because while I am a poised sorority woman that’s held to a high standard, but I am also from New York and my parents are from Brooklyn, so I have a certain type of edge that I can tap into when I dance hip-hop.

    MOSAEC: As a college-educated, Mandarin-speaking sorority girl, do you put extra pressure on yourself to fully immerse yourself into the hip hop side of your persona when auditioning or performing?

    Kaitlyn: It all depends on what the audition or performance is calling for. Since I am more of a girly girl when it comes to presenting myself in my sorority, my Jack and Jill sisters and brothers and the corporate world; I have to put extra emphasis on my hip-hop background when I dance. This is where the baggy clothes come into play and the fitted hats.

    MOSAEC: Does your diverse background and educational experience impact your dance expression? If so, how?

    Kaitlyn: I feel like my diverse background and education experience does not impact my dance expression, but it does impact my dance experience in the industry. Having knowledge educationally I can represent myself in the industry by putting my best foot forward; and knowing how to navigate through contracts, people, and events.

    MOSAEC: Describe your choreography process: Do you hear music and decide which movements will match the music? Or do you sketch your choreography moves and find music to match it?

    Kaitlyn: I do not sketch out my choreography. I usually listen to a song for a couple of days and see what part of the song I like and how I would interpret it in the best way visually.

    MOSAEC: Which do you prefer and why – performance before a live audience or a recorded performance?

    Kaitlyn: I prefer a live audience performance because the energy that the audience gives performers truly amps us up to exceed the expectations. You give energy and audiences feed off it and vice versa.

    MOSAEC: What is a typical day like for a professional dancer/choreographer?

    Kaitlyn: A typical day in the life of a professional dancer includes gym workouts, dance classes and auditions. Most dance classes start at approximately 3 PM and I usually take two classes a day. For days when there are auditions, they can last all day or half of the day.

    MOSAEC: As you pursue your dreams in dance, what keeps you striving to achieve greater success?

    What keeps me striving to achieve greater success is to see how far I can go, in terms of my career. As a child I felt that many of the accomplishments I achieved were so hard to grasp; now that I am in the realm of all this greatness, all my dreams are closer than I think.

    MOSAEC: To whom do you also credit for your success and why?

    Kaitlyn: To name all the people that I owe my success to would be a book. But off the top of my head, I would credit Kelly Peters, Brian Friedman, Dave Scott, Gil Duldulao, Cris Judd, Ian Eastwood, and my parents. These choreographers have helped mold me into the Dancer that I am, and they continue to be in the industry. My parents have sacrificed so much physically and financially, providing a means for me to train with these choreographers, who are not only my dance teachers but my mentors as well.

    (c) MOSAEC

  • Fat Joe And Ja Rule Face Off for Verzuz: See The Top Moments

    By Rivea Ruff ·September 15, 2021 Updated

    Hip hop heavy hitters Fat Joe and Ja Rule took over Madison Square Garden for their highly anticipated Verzuz battle on Tuesday, bringing their own brand of Millenial nostalgia to the stage with a host of guests and collaborators that kept them each blazing up the charts throughout the early 2000’s.

    In true Verzuz fashion, each rapper performed their top 20 chart-toppers, going head to head and

  • Misha Green To Make Her Feature Film Directorial Debut With The Next ‘Tomb Raider’

    By Mia Uzzell ·January 26, 2021January 26, 2021

    Lovecraft Country creator Misha Green is making her feature directorial debut in the next installation of the Tomb Raider, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Packed with thrilling action and adventure, the film is right up Green’s alley of creative direction. 

    Amongst Green’s previous work, Lovecraft Country stands out in all its glory as the HBO horror drama series climbed the ranks of hit shows after its release in August of 2020. Led by the cast of Jurnee Smollett, Jonathan Majors and Courtney B. Vance, the show juxtaposes the racial terrors of Jim Crow America and chilling dark fantasy. Green executive produced the show, based on Matt Ruff’s eponymous novel, alongside J.J. Abrams, Jordan Peele, Bill Carraro, Yann Demange, Daniel Sackheim and David Knoller.

    Aside from Lovecraft Country, the American television writer executive produced, co-created, and wrote Underground — a period drama series lauded for its groundbreaking ratings. Green’s leap to feature film comes as no surprise as her work for television is proof of her exemplary capabilities. 

    The next Tomb Raider installment will cast Alicia Vikander as the leading role yet again. Directed by Roar Uthaug, the 2018 film based on a video game series grossed roughly $250 million at the global box office. Green is also lending her pen to the film as a writer of MGM’s upcoming sequel. 

    On Monday, Green tweeted her expressed excitement for the directing gig and shared with her fans her favorite adventure of the game’s titular character, Lara Croft. 

    My fav from classic era is Legend & from survival era it’s a tie between Rise & Shadow. So I’m thinking something like:🔦⛏🗻🗿🧟‍♂️👊🏻🏺 🦖🔫🔫🏃🏻‍♀️*whispers* Who’s as excited as I am for a @TombRaiderMovie!?!? 🤑💃🏾🤩 #TombRaider

    — Misha Green (@MishaGreen) January 25, 2021

    The full plot of the next movie has yet to be revealed. According to sources, production was eyeing March 2021 for the film to hit theatres but with the pandemic halting filming across the world, a release date has not yet been disclosed.

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    The post Misha Green To Make Her Feature Film Directorial Debut With The Next ‘Tomb Raider’ appeared first on Essence.

  • 21 Happy Black Couples That Kept Us Smiling All 2020

    21 Happy Black Couples That Kept Us Smiling All 2020 By Jasmine Grant ·December 10, 2020December 10, 2020

    Throughout 2020’s many devastating lows, these Black celebrity couples have pushed through to remind us that love is the ultimate force guaranteed to carry us through.

    We saw couples like Dwyane Wade and Gabrielle Union, Ciara and Russell Wilson and Tobe Nwingwe and his wife Fat use this year of hunkering down at home to imagine new joint projects to tackle as a couple. We’ve also watched Barack and Michelle Obama celebrated another milestone together while using their star power to encourage change. You also have ladies like Amber Riley and Kierra sharing their newfound love (and gorgeous engagement rings) with the world, reminding us never to give up our quest for that special someone.

    Scroll through the gallery to see the Black celebrity couples who reminded us that love still reigned supreme in 2020.

    01Michelle and Barack ObamaThis year, the Obamas celebrated their 28th wedding anniversary. In a loving Instagram post, Barack said that every day he spends with his wife “makes me a better husband, a better father, and a better human.” Michelle returned the love on her own page, writing, “So grateful to have him as a partner through everything life throws at us.” 02Gabrielle Union And Dwyane Wade 03Codie And Tommy OliverThe creators of the OWN series ‘Black Love’ are committed to telling triumphant stories of Black couples who ride or die together. 04Ciara and Russell WilsonThe couple had an amazing year, welcoming their second child together and launching a dual fragrance called R&C. 05Rotimi and Vanessa MdeeThe newly-minted couple spoke to us about how they first met at ESSENCE Festival and the whirlwind romance that followed. 06David E. Talbert and Lyn TalbertThis dynamic husband and wife duo are the creative forces that brought us the fun holiday film Jingle Jangle. 07Gabrielle Union And Dwyane Wade 08Niecy Nash and Jessica BettsThe actress surprised her fans back in August by revealing she’d married musician Jessica Betts. Based on that smile on her face, the Claws has found her peace. 09Simone Biles and Jonaathan OwensThe young lovebirds debuted their relationship on Instagram this year, and it’s only been up since. 10Kandi Burruss And Todd TuckerThese Atlanta lovebirds gave back in a major way with their date night for a cause. In partnership with Meals On Wheels Atlanta, the couple hosted was a socially distanced screening Crazy Rich Asians! 11Ludacris And Eudoxie BridgesThe rapper and his wife soaked up all the vitamin D on their tropical getaway. 12Teyana Taylor and Iman ShumpertThe happy couple welcomed their second daughter this year, once again giving us Black love goals to aspire to. 13Jhené Aiko And Big SeanThe previously on-and-off-again couple seem to be going strong and bringing each other joy. Earlier this year, Big Sean congratulated his lady on the release of her latest album Chilombo, writing“Congrats my baby you earned this one [Jhene Aiko].” 14Tobe Nwingwe and FatThe married artists won our hearts in 2020 not only because of their slate of pandemic-made visual projects, but also because of their transparency about raising a young family and merging their lives with their art. 15Ashley Blaine Featherson and Darrell JenkinsDear White People star Ashley Blaine Featherson found her forever in fiancé Darrell Jenkins, and their sunset engagement photos made us believe in love even more. 16Amber Riley And Desean BlackThe former Glee star and her boo got engaged just before the holidays. Riley also gave the ladies a testimony about how shooting your shot can pay off. 17Cynthia Bailey and Mike HillThe lovebirds had their quarantine wedding on October 10th, which will be shown on this season of Real Housewives Of Atlanta. 18Judge Faith Jenkins and Kenny LattimoreThe newlyweds exchanged vows at First Congressional Church of Los Angeles. 19Saweetie And QuavoThe Migos rapper recruited his girlfriend, “Icy” rapper Saweetie, to appear in the new video for “Need It” and we couldn’t take our eyes off this biker look! 20Kierra Sheard and Jordan KellyThe lovebirds shared their engagement photos exclusive with ESSENCE. Mel B Elder, Jr. 21Kirk And Tammy Franklin TOPICS: 

    The post 21 Happy Black Couples That Kept Us Smiling All 2020 appeared first on Essence.

  • Georgia Senate Race Spotlights Black Women Leadership

    Georgia Senate Race Spotlights Black Women Leadership By Donna M. Owens ·December 7, 2020December 7, 2020

    With a runoff election just weeks away that could tip the balance of the U.S. Senate, many people across the United States have Georgia on their minds. And Black women are pivotal in the race—from grassroots organizing to being members of a key voting bloc that helped lift Democrats to the White House in November.

    The stakes are high: Democrats Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff are each locked in fierce Senatorial campaigns’ against Republican incumbents Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, respectively. The January 5th runoff election could mean that Democrats potentially flip the Senate, or the GOP maintains majority control of the chamber. Under Georgia law, candidates must receive a majority of the vote to win an election. If no candidate breaks 50 percent, the top two vote-getters face off again in a runoff election to determine the winner.

    Black voters, especially women, are essential to victory. Of the 160 million people who voted in the recent presidential election, exit polls show nearly 50 percent of registered Black women voters cast ballots. At least 90 percent voted for President-elect Joe Biden and Vice-president elect Kamala Harris. 

    “We were able to pull democracy back from the edge of the cliff,” said Oprah Winfrey, speaking during a virtual Town Hall in Georgia on December 4, part of her OWN network’s ongoing “OWN Your Vote” Initiative. The media mogul has stressed, “it is important that we own our votes and finish the job.”  

    There are 7.6 million registered voters in The Peach State, about 2.4 million of whom are Black, according to AP VoteCast data. Voter registration in Georgia ends on December 7 per state officials; early voting begins on December 14; the deadline to request an absentee ballot is December 31. According to The New Georgia Project, at least one million new Georgian voters have registered since 2018, and more than 800,000 have already requested an absentee ballot for January’s runoff. 

    “The upcoming special election in Georgia will have a huge impact on our nation,” said Jotaka Eaddy, a national consultant and senior advisor to the OWN Your Vote Initiative. “This is a pivotal moment in American history in which voters in Georgia have another opportunity to demonstrate the power of their votes.”

    Ossoff-warnock-georgiaDemocratic Senate candidates Jon Ossoff (L) and Rev. Raphael Warnock, bump elbows at a rally on October 24, 2020, in Duluth, Georgia. (Photo by ELIJAH NOUVELAGE/AFP via Getty Images)

    Launched in August, OWN  Your Vote is a bipartisan registration and get-out-the-vote campaign. It partners with local and national grassroots and voting rights organizations to provide tools and resources that empower Black women to vote. Its partners include dozens of organizations, among them, Woke Vote, Vote.org and Michelle Obama’s When We All Vote.

    Winfrey has led free public town halls via Zoom, reaching folks in Wisconsin, North Carolina, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Pennsylvania and South Carolina. Participants have included: activists Brittany Packnett Cunningham and Tamika Mallory, Charlotte, North Carolina Mayor Vi Lyles, Congresswoman Gwen Moore, Glynda Carr of the Higher Heights Leadership Fund, and Arisha Hatch, vice president of Color of Change.  

    For the Georgia forum, in partnership with the Kapor Center, Winfrey was joined by actress/activist Kerry Washington to discuss the upcoming election and champion sistas involved on the front lines. While Black women appreciate “gratitude” for their votes, said Washington, they are ready “to step into” their power. 

    To wit, LaTosha Brown, co-founder of the Black Voters Matters Fund was applauded. So was Nsé Ufot, CEO of The New Georgia Project; in a full circle moment, the voter registration leader spoke of receiving a college scholarship years ago on The Oprah Winfrey Show. Stefanie Brown James, co-founder and executive director of The Collective Education Fund was spotlighted, along with Cheryl Lowery of The Joseph and Evelyn Lowery Institute, among others. 

    “The quality of our current and future lives will be greatly impacted by the outcome of the Georgia elections; the makeup of the U.S. Senate is that important,” Brown James told ESSENCE. The Collective, which builds Black political power, has done extensive voter registration, provided 12,000 Lyft rides to the polls and more. “From access to affordable healthcare to criminal justice reform to COVID-19 relief, the issues that matter to Georgians and all Americans is what’s at stake this election.”

    Black women have long galvanized their networks and communities around voting. In Georgia, there are numerous Black women organizing on the ground. National legal organizations are active, too. Sherilynn Ifill of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and Kristen Clarke of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law–who’ve both taken part in the OWN town halls–have tackled voting rights, suppression and other election issues in the courts.  

    “Give the gift of democracy this Christmas,” said Brown, an Atlanta resident who leads Black Voters Matter with co-founder Cliff Albright.  “Vote early” and “take five friends.” 

    Black Voters Matter works in key states across the South. Traveling in a customized vehicle (dubbed “the Blackest bus in America”) they bolster voter registration and turnout; develop political infrastructure where little or none exists; and advocate for policies to expand voting rights and access. “The South is not `Red’ or `Blue.’ It’s people,” said Brown.

    Stacey Abrams preaches the power of people, too. Abrams catapulted onto the national scene after running for governor of Georgia in 2018. The Spelman educated lawyer subsequently launched Fair Fight to advocate for fair elections. She has been widely credited for her role in shifting voting outcomes in Georgia this election cycle. Biden’s margin of victory over president Donald Trump (who hosted a rally this weekend in Georgia to support the GOP candidates) was about 13,000 votes. 

    Abrams’ welcomed entertainers to Fair Fight’s “Rock The Runoff” virtual concert on December 3, co-hosting with Kerry Washington, who was fresh from her duties at the earlier OWN event. 

    Common, Monica, John Legend, Ludacris and Jermaine Dupri, Justin Timberlake and Ant Clemons were among the performers. So were Broadway stars:  Billy Porter, Brian Stokes Mitchell, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Danielle Brooks, to name a few. Audra McDonald fittingly sang “Georgia on My Mind.” 

    “Georgians have the opportunity to make history once again,” Abrams said in a statement. “We are committed to giving them the tools and resources they need to ensure they can make their voices heard at the ballot box.” 

    town hall, OprahMARIETTA, GA – NOVEMBER 01: Oprah Winfrey and Georgia Democratic Gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams greet the audience during a town hall style event at the Cobb Civic Center on November 1, 2018 in Marietta, Georgia. Winfrey travelled to Georgia to campaign with Abrams ahead of the mid-term election.(Photo by Jessica McGowan/Getty Images)

    Proceeds from the concert will go towards various mobilization efforts in the upcoming run-off election. For instance, Fair Fight is providing financial support to Georgia-focused grassroots organizations i.e. the local NAACP who are registering and mobilizing voters in the field, including Covid-safe door knocking.

    The organization has also launched www.GAsenate.com with a video from Abrams, encouraging people to financially support their work, and the Warnock and Ossoff campaigns. The page raised $9.8 million in its first four days. Advocates told ESSENCE that money is crucial to winning a high-profile race such as the Senate runoff and urged folks to give if they can, even a dollar can help. 

    Many are praying about this election, too. Rev. Dr. Cynthia Hale of Ray of Hope Christian Church in Decatur, Georgia offered prayer at the Own Your Vote town hall. 

    There was also a verbal “roll call,” from Black women-led sororities and civic groups that brought to mind the African griot tradition. Leaders of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., and the National Council of Negro Women, were among those represented. As were The Links, Inc., Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority, Inc., Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc., to name a few. 

    Melanie Campbell, convener of the Black Women’s Roundtable is hopeful about this election.

    Melanie CampbellMelanie L. Campbell, President & CEO Convener, Black Womens Roundtable (BWR), speaking at the news conference for the BWR Summit, at the U.S. Capitol on Thursday, March 15, 2018. (Photo by Cheriss May) (Photo by Cheriss May/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    Her team’s Unity#LetsDoIt Again campaign already has Black women of all ages mobilizing voters across rural and urban Georgia. “Black women are the secret sauce that wins elections,” she told the audience. 

    Community activist Shemeka Frazier Sorrells has witnessed the power of the vote. She is co-founder of `A Better Glynn, Inc.’ a social justice group in Georgia’s Glynn County. The area is where Ahmaud Arbery was gunned down by vigilante violence while jogging back in February; one or more of the men charged in his killing allegedly have white supremacist leanings. Sorrells’ registered voters who ultimately helped oust the former District Attorney who’d been criticized for her handling of the case. 

    As thousands of Black women at the virtual town hall listened, she uttered words that Winfrey felt compelled to repeat.

    “The calvary is not coming. We are the calvary.” 

    TOPICS: 

    The post Georgia Senate Race Spotlights Black Women Leadership appeared first on Essence.

  • Leslie Jones Joins Laverne Cox To Host Emmy Announcements

    There’s been some comedic relief added to the announcements for the 72nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards nominations on Thursday.The Television Academy has revealed that Leslie Jones will be on hand to share who will receive recognition for their television achievements.

    The former Saturday Night Live player will be joined by presenter Laverne Cox, who will be unveiling some of the nominees. The event will occur virtually due to enhanced safety restrictions mandated during the COVID-19 pandemic. It will begin streaming live on the Emmys website on July 28 at 11:30 a.m. ET / 8:30 a.m. PT.

    Leslie JonesLOS ANGELES, CA – SEPTEMBER 17:Leslie Jones attends the 70th Emmy Awards at Microsoft Theater on September 17, 2018 in Los Angeles, California.(Photo by John Shearer/Getty Images)

    This year’s Primetime Emmy Awards ceremony will be executive produced by Reginald Hudlin. According to Variety, he is the first Black man to ever hold the position. Hudlin received an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Special Class Program producing the 88th annual Academy Awards in 2016. He also executive produced the NAACP Image Awards for several years. 

    He will share his producing duties with Guy Carrington, David Jammy, Ian Stewart and Jimmy Kimmel

    “I’m excited to collaborate with this outstanding team as we produce a show that celebrates the best of what we do and reflects this moment in history,” said Hudlin. 

    “Television has played an integral role in navigating these unprecedented times and has brought us together as we remain apart,” said Frank Scherma, chairman and CEO, Television Academy. 

    “We are honored to have these groundbreaking actors, producers and comedians announce this year’s Emmy nominees — whose extraordinary work has been vital to the evolution of the television landscape this season.”

    The post Leslie Jones Joins Laverne Cox To Host Emmy Announcements appeared first on Essence.

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  • The Eating Disorder. The Sexual Abuse. How Thandie Newton Survived Hollywood

    Watch how you to talk to Thandie Newton, it might come back to bite you in the ass. The Westworld actress is trending on Twitter after a vulnerable Vulture interview peeled back the frosted veil on one of Black Hollywood’s most dynamic thespians.

    An eating disorder. Sexual abuse. A victim among predators. Yet still, Newton stands tall and bold enough to tell her story while naming names. Big names. It’s all a testament to the resilience of Black women and an industry that just doesn’t know what to do with us.

    Currently, Newton is isolated with her family. Right before the pandemic hit, she was filming a “demanding” role in God’s Country. And before that, she spent 12 months on set of Westworld. She talked about her love for her character Maeve Millay—a robot that discovers she’s not human—but she also has a gripe with who she’s become.

    View this post on Instagram

    At 47, Thandie Newton feels she’s more powerful than ever. And as outspoken as she has been throughout her career, there are still stories Netwon’s been holding off on telling. Not because she’s shy, but because she’s waiting for the right moment. “So careful what you do, everybody,” she says. “Because you might find yourself f*cking over a little brown girl at the beginning of a career, when no one knows who she is and no one gives a f*ck. She might turn out to be Thandie Newton.” Read @e_alexjung’s full interview with @thandienewton at the link in bio. 📸: @danascruggs

    A post shared by Vulture (@vulture) on Jul 7, 2020 at 9:02am PDT

    “I think Maeve is a metaphor for the dispossessed in the world, and she’s become that kind of leader, but she’s not had a chance to lead, and I don’t think she necessarily should. She certainly doesn’t want to,” she explained to Vulture‘s E. Alex Jung.

    Switching gears, Newton revisited her 16-year-old self. “I had no sense of myself,” she reflected. “There was a lot that people could have been interested in in me when I was young. They didn’t want to express it, because they didn’t want to praise the Black girl.”

    The petite actress learned early how undervalued Black women are. She remembers her childhood dance teacher who never rewarded her performances despite her being a star ballet student.

    “We didn’t talk about it at the time, but the damage was so done. It just made me super-vulnerable to predators.” Overcompensating became a coping mechanism she would carry with her to Hollywood. It eventually led to an eating disorder.

    HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA – MARCH 05: Thandie Newton attends the Los Angeles Season 3 premiere of the HBO drama series “Westworld” at TCL Chinese Theatre on March 05, 2020 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic for HBO)

    “It was like I had to give something back for being noticed,” she explained. “You get predators and sexual abusers, they can smell it a mile off. It’s like a shark smelling blood in the water. All you need is one of those to really drive you into the dust. In a way, an eating disorder was just like, Okay, I need to finish myself off. I need to get fully rid of myself now.

    Newton was 16-years-old when she was groomed by director John Duigan, an experience she’s talked about in detail. Oddly, some chose to describe their relationship as an affair. He was 39-years-old at the time.

    “It’s like re-abuse. I think the reason I talked about it a lot, too, is I’m trying to find someone who understands. I’m looking for help. It’s so fucking obvious to me. What is the point if we don’t expose what needs to be exposed?”

    On another occasion, Newton recalled meeting with Hollywood exec Amy Pascal, who was courting the Emmy Award winning actress for a role in Charlie’s Angels. But according to Pascal, she wasn’t believable as the character and therefore should shake her booty on top of the bar. Newton turned down the role because she refused to be objectified. She touched on the horrific casting couch incident that rocked headlines in 2016.

    “I’ve got my little black book, which will be published on my deathbed.” She won’t mention the casting producer by name.

    LOS ANGELES, CA – SEPTEMBER 17:Thandie Newton attends the 70th Emmy Awards – Press Room at Microsoft Theater on September 17, 2018 in Los Angeles, California.(Photo by David Crotty/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)

    “Got to leave something behind, love. I’m not doing it when I’m alive. I don’t want to deal with all the fallout and everyone getting their side of the story. There is no side of the story when you’re sexually abused. You give that up,” she said.

    There was something else plaguing Newton’s on a personal level, never feeling Black enough. Despite being completely different, she and Halle Berry shared the fact they’re both biracial.

    “Quite interesting that we both have one white parent,” she said. With a Black mother and white father, she yearned to be fully accepted by the Black community.

    “Like on my Instagram, it’s always my mum. I don’t put my dad up much, and that’s because I want Black people to feel they can trust me and feel safe with me—that I’m not a representative of this Establishment that degrades people of color. All my fucking career, I felt like, to Black people, I’m not a legitimate Black person.”

    View this post on Instagram

    Heh heh what’s going on here then?! Every Boxing Day our little Cornish-Zimbabwean family would go and visit Bill and Mary – an ancient couple with a tiny house stuffed full of antiques. Dad was an antique dealer which is how he knew Bill. They were surrogate grandparents of sorts (we had a few of those). Our hair was as coiffed as their lapdog’s 😂 At 6 I clearly had traces of #Maeve even back then, because Mary would give me apple juice as pretend sherry ☺Life is bonkers xxx

    A post shared by Thandie Newton (@thandienewton) on May 18, 2020 at 8:42am PDT

    Despite the blessings of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, she regrets taking on the role of in Half of a Yellow Sun because of her fair complexion.

    “I recognize how painful it is for dark-skinned women, particularly, to have to deal with being substituted or overlooked. For example, you watch Queen & Slim. I look at Jodie [Turner-Smith]. Or, you look at Lupita [Nyong’o]. To see a woman of color, to see that dark skin, that beautiful chocolate skin, my mother’s skin, onscreen … It’s holy. I do see so clearly why there’s been so much deep disappointment.”

    Newton is still healing from all the traumas she faced in the industry. She went on to talk about being intimidated by Tom Cruise. Her horrific experience working on the set of Crash and being killed off Rogue in the most degrading way. But at the core of Newton’s experiences in Hollywood, is a cautionary tale that will spare another. She’s lived. She’s learned and she’s thriving.

    Read the full Vulture interview, here.

    The post The Eating Disorder. The Sexual Abuse. How Thandie Newton Survived Hollywood appeared first on Essence.