Mar 17, 2026 · 1:18:10

Viola Davis on Good Hang with Amy Poehler

The Hang, in Short

Amy breaks protocol by interviewing a spouse for the first time, and Julius Tennon doesn't disappoint. The best part? He admits Viola almost never called him after they met on the set of City of Angels in 1999 because he had his shirt on when he gave her his card. "If my shirt had been off, she would have never called me," he says, which is absolutely incredible. They've been together 27 years now, married for 23. Julius gets real about supporting each other as struggling actors with bad credit, producing The Woman King together, and why self-esteem means actually knowing yourself. He's got serious coach energy, saying Amy's name every other sentence, and honestly it works. The episode teases Viola's interview where they'll apparently discuss Rhode Island accents, skydiving with Meryl Streep, and her new James Patterson book Judge Stone.

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  1. 0:05

    Hello everyone. Welcome to another

  2. 0:06

    episode of Good Hang. We have the best

  3. 0:08

    of the best. We have the GOAT. We have

  4. 0:09

    Viola Davis joining us. And man, we talk

  5. 0:13

    about so many fun things. We talk about

  6. 0:15

    uh growing up in Rhode Island and Boston

  7. 0:17

    and how we get rid of those accents. We

  8. 0:20

    talk about our mutual best friend,

  9. 0:22

    Merryill Streep. We talk about the time

  10. 0:24

    she jumped out of a plane and all the

  11. 0:26

    swearing she did on the way down. and we

  12. 0:28

    talk about the new book that she

  13. 0:30

    co-wrote with James Patterson called

  14. 0:32

    Judge Stone out now. So, we're going to

  15. 0:35

    get into a lot of great stuff and we're

  16. 0:37

    thrilled to have her here. And as we

  17. 0:39

    always do, we talk to someone at the

  18. 0:41

    beginning of the show uh that we that

  19. 0:43

    knows our guest or is a fan of our guest

  20. 0:45

    and has a question for us and we talk

  21. 0:47

    well behind their back and boy, we've

  22. 0:50

    got just a gem of a person. Julius

  23. 0:53

    Tenan, Viola Davis's husband, partner,

  24. 0:56

    producing partner, incredible,

  25. 0:59

    loving supportive

  26. 1:02

    wonderful man who makes us all believe

  27. 1:04

    in love. He's the only spouse that we've

  28. 1:06

    allowed to be on the show um so far and

  29. 1:09

    uh the expectation is high. So, I cannot

  30. 1:12

    wait to talk to Julius. Julius, thank

  31. 1:14

    you for joining us. Hi,

  32. 1:22

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  46. 2:05

    >> Hello, Julius. Can you hear me?

  47. 2:07

    >> Hey, I can. Hey, Andrew.

  48. 2:10

    >> Hi. It's such a pleasure to meet you.

  49. 2:11

    >> Oh, it's a pleasure to meet you, too.

  50. 2:13

    And I just want to say quickly that we

  51. 2:15

    love you and um you're always amazing

  52. 2:18

    and funny as hell and

  53. 2:22

    all that stuff. So, so nice to meet you,

  54. 2:24

    >> Julius. Thank you so much.

  55. 2:29

    >> You got me blushing already. Thank you

  56. 2:30

    for saying that. I want you to know that

  57. 2:33

    we

  58. 2:33

    >> I mean it. I mean it.

  59. 2:35

    >> Well, I I can tell that about you. I

  60. 2:37

    think you you say what you mean. You and

  61. 2:39

    Biola.

  62. 2:40

    >> Yes. Yes, we do. Mhm. Thank you for

  63. 2:42

    that. Um, we, you know, so we do this

  64. 2:45

    thing at the beginning of whenever we

  65. 2:46

    interview someone. We talk to someone

  66. 2:48

    that knows them really well and we get a

  67. 2:50

    question um for them and we just talk

  68. 2:52

    well behind their back. And I want you

  69. 2:54

    to know you are the first spouse

  70. 2:57

    that we have spoken to among all of our

  71. 3:00

    guests.

  72. 3:00

    >> I feel I feel honored

  73. 3:03

    >> and I think it's because you two seem to

  74. 3:05

    actually really like each other.

  75. 3:07

    >> We kind of do. We kind of do.

  76. 3:11

    Now, pleasure to meet you, Julius. You

  77. 3:14

    know, you're an actor, writer, producer,

  78. 3:16

    you're the president of Juvie

  79. 3:17

    Productions, which is the company that

  80. 3:18

    you and Viola and others run. And you've

  81. 3:21

    got amazing projects that you've done

  82. 3:23

    and are and are getting ready to do. But

  83. 3:26

    can I start by just asking you um to

  84. 3:30

    take us back to the day that you and

  85. 3:32

    Viola met on set?

  86. 3:34

    >> Oh, wow. That was incredible. It was

  87. 3:36

    1999. It was City of Angels. I was

  88. 3:40

    playing an anesthesiologist.

  89. 3:42

    Uh she was nurse Lynette Peeler and um I

  90. 3:46

    was passing blood to her and I was uh

  91. 3:49

    dating a girl at the time that I wasn't

  92. 3:51

    so happy with. And then so I said, "Wow,

  93. 3:54

    this lady looks like she could be

  94. 3:55

    somebody nice I could maybe give my card

  95. 3:59

    to." So at the end of the day, I gave

  96. 4:01

    her my card and I had my shirt on. The

  97. 4:04

    story is Viola said, "If my shirt had

  98. 4:05

    been off, she would have never called

  99. 4:07

    me. But I had my shirt on and I gave her

  100. 4:09

    my card and I said, "Hey, if you ever

  101. 4:11

    want to hang out, whatever, whatever,

  102. 4:13

    give me a call." Well, she did. A month

  103. 4:15

    later, she called me. I had literally

  104. 4:17

    forgot about it, but I hadn't forgot

  105. 4:19

    about her. So, when I heard her voice, I

  106. 4:21

    went "Hey

  107. 4:23

    what?" And then she invited me to uh a

  108. 4:25

    cast thing for the main cast because I

  109. 4:27

    was recurring on the show. And um we

  110. 4:30

    went out on our first date almost 27

  111. 4:33

    years ago. And here we are 23 years

  112. 4:36

    married coming up this summer, 27 years

  113. 4:38

    this October. So, it's been beautiful.

  114. 4:41

    But that's how that's how it started.

  115. 4:43

    >> Oh, I love that story. And I love that

  116. 4:45

    you guys met just your typical way, just

  117. 4:48

    passing blood to each other.

  118. 4:50

    >> Yeah. Just passing the regular stuff,

  119. 4:53

    just passing blood, you know, and she

  120. 4:55

    kind of fit in those, you know, she fit

  121. 4:57

    in those things pretty good. And I was

  122. 4:58

    like, h, okay, let me give this GIRL MY

  123. 5:03

    CARD.

  124. 5:07

    I MEAN, WHAT'S so sweet about hearing

  125. 5:11

    the two of you talk about each other is

  126. 5:13

    you both met each other

  127. 5:16

    um when you were coming up.

  128. 5:18

    >> Yeah.

  129. 5:18

    >> And absolutely.

  130. 5:20

    >> What's it like to be,

  131. 5:21

    >> you know, two young actors

  132. 5:24

    um working hard to make ends meet and,

  133. 5:27

    you know, being in love?

  134. 5:29

    >> Listen, it's tough. Listen, when I met

  135. 5:31

    Viola, she was scared to tell me she had

  136. 5:32

    bad credit. I said, "Hey, baby, it's

  137. 5:34

    okay. I got good credit."

  138. 5:37

    You know, but it's it was it's one of

  139. 5:39

    those tough things, but you know, Amy,

  140. 5:40

    it's about supporting one another. You

  141. 5:42

    one, the other one supports the other

  142. 5:45

    equally. And uh and that's what we did.

  143. 5:48

    We just went about kind of loving on

  144. 5:50

    each other and being happy for one

  145. 5:52

    another with whatever dropped, whatever

  146. 5:54

    happened. And so, uh, just so happened

  147. 5:57

    that Viola's career just really started

  148. 5:59

    to take off and it's been a beautiful

  149. 6:01

    thing and, uh, I'm glad to be a part of

  150. 6:03

    it. People, how do you handle it? How do

  151. 6:05

    you do what you do? Whatever. I said,

  152. 6:07

    cuz I know who I am. See, for a man, it

  153. 6:09

    starts with you knowing who you are. I

  154. 6:11

    don't care how powerful your woman is or

  155. 6:14

    what she's doing. If your woman knows

  156. 6:16

    that you can handle yourself and that

  157. 6:18

    you know who you are, then she's going

  158. 6:20

    to go, "Wow, hey, my guy is good." And

  159. 6:23

    so that's the way Viola and I have

  160. 6:24

    rolled. So, it's about me supporting her

  161. 6:26

    and and vice versa. So, it's just been

  162. 6:29

    easy for us.

  163. 6:30

    >> Oh, Julius.

  164. 6:33

    Everyone listening right now is just

  165. 6:35

    GOING

  166. 6:39

    JULIUS.

  167. 6:41

    I'm just going to play that on a loop.

  168. 6:44

    >> Oh, thank you. And it is the truth.

  169. 6:46

    >> But you're right. But you have to know

  170. 6:48

    who you are. You're right. Especially in

  171. 6:50

    our business because it can be so

  172. 6:51

    competitive. Even though we're not

  173. 6:53

    competing against each other. I'm a man,

  174. 6:56

    >> you're a woman.

  175. 6:57

    >> But we're not competing against each

  176. 6:58

    other, but we're in the same business.

  177. 7:00

    And sometimes that intersection when one

  178. 7:02

    is elevating and the other is kind of

  179. 7:04

    like not it can create a lot of

  180. 7:07

    different kind of uh weird kind of

  181. 7:10

    energy and things in a relationship. And

  182. 7:13

    so listen, what this is what we do is

  183. 7:15

    not who we are.

  184. 7:17

    this acting thing and all that's what we

  185. 7:18

    do. It's not who we are. So, we figured

  186. 7:20

    that out early on and so it's just been

  187. 7:23

    always easy because it's always been in

  188. 7:25

    support of one another.

  189. 7:26

    >> Well, it's a beautiful thing because

  190. 7:28

    you're you're reminding me of just the

  191. 7:30

    the word self in the phrase self-esteem.

  192. 7:33

    It really is your own work to do always.

  193. 7:36

    >> Amy, I can say that I met Viola almost

  194. 7:38

    27 years ago. She's the same woman I met

  195. 7:41

    when I met her all those years ago.

  196. 7:43

    hadn't changed a bit, but everything

  197. 7:45

    that's happened to her, she's still the

  198. 7:47

    same Viola. And I think that's what

  199. 7:50

    makes people just so drawn to Viola

  200. 7:52

    because she's so real and so authentic.

  201. 7:54

    >> Can we talk about the woman king?

  202. 7:56

    Because congratulations on that.

  203. 7:58

    >> Thank you so much. What a Yeah.

  204. 8:01

    >> What was that like making that together?

  205. 8:03

    >> It was a great journey. It was great to

  206. 8:05

    be able to do a movie like that because

  207. 8:06

    a movie like that hadn't been done in

  208. 8:08

    Hollywood ever.

  209. 8:09

    >> That's right. And so to be able to do a

  210. 8:12

    movie like that and have it come out so

  211. 8:15

    beautiful, so um accepted by the

  212. 8:18

    audiences on a global scale, it meant a

  213. 8:22

    whole whole lot to to Viola and myself.

  214. 8:24

    And so we just went all in despite the

  215. 8:27

    challenges, despite not necessarily

  216. 8:29

    having enough money to make it, but

  217. 8:31

    still saying, you know what, be damned.

  218. 8:33

    We're just going to go make it anyway

  219. 8:34

    because we know it's going to have a

  220. 8:36

    cultural impact and it's going to be

  221. 8:38

    longlasting. And as it turned out, it

  222. 8:40

    you know, AFI chose it that year to be

  223. 8:42

    one of the great films that was made

  224. 8:44

    that year. And so we're we're just so

  225. 8:46

    proud to have done that together and um

  226. 8:50

    and battling it out, you know, just

  227. 8:52

    battling it out, fighting in and what

  228. 8:54

    you want, you know, as hard as it is,

  229. 8:56

    Amy, you just have to keep putting one

  230. 8:58

    foot in front of the other. If you want

  231. 8:59

    something, you have to go for it. And

  232. 9:02

    that's what Viola and I continually with

  233. 9:04

    our team because I'm a big team guy.

  234. 9:06

    Well, I was going to say you're a

  235. 9:07

    football ex- football player.

  236. 9:08

    >> I am an ex- football player.

  237. 9:10

    >> Did you ever coach?

  238. 9:11

    >> I never coached

  239. 9:12

    >> because you have a coach. Coach, but I

  240. 9:14

    was, you know, I was I wanted to act. I

  241. 9:16

    was kind of like I looked at, you know,

  242. 9:18

    my idols back in the day when I was

  243. 9:19

    thinking about acting and playing

  244. 9:20

    football. You know, it was it was Jim

  245. 9:22

    Brown, Bernie Casey, uh Fred Williamson,

  246. 9:25

    some of the old school guys from way

  247. 9:27

    back in the day when I was saying,

  248. 9:28

    "Shit, they can do it. I can do it." So,

  249. 9:30

    you know, and so that was kind of a

  250. 9:33

    thing. And uh but I always love the

  251. 9:35

    arts. I always love it started with

  252. 9:36

    poetry and then you know obviously

  253. 9:39

    >> well you have you have Julius you have

  254. 9:41

    you have a real coach vibe and you do

  255. 9:42

    something that I absolutely love which

  256. 9:44

    is every other sentence you say my name

  257. 9:48

    and boy does it work every time he say

  258. 9:50

    my name I'm like yes

  259. 9:52

    >> he's talking to me

  260. 9:54

    I love it so much um okay I'm sure

  261. 9:58

    you've uh you've got a sense now of what

  262. 10:02

    Viola likes to be asked and what she

  263. 10:04

    like is asked constantly about and

  264. 10:07

    doesn't want to answer anymore. Like you

  265. 10:10

    know there's always these questions that

  266. 10:11

    are like you know people think they're

  267. 10:13

    asking for the first time or topics that

  268. 10:16

    is there anything you would if you don't

  269. 10:19

    mind helping me out to make sure I don't

  270. 10:20

    get into an area or a question that

  271. 10:22

    she's like h this again.

  272. 10:24

    >> Well you know I think it it would be fun

  273. 10:26

    to ask her some questions about some of

  274. 10:28

    the funny moments that we had together.

  275. 10:30

    This one is ask her the origin of Zonyi.

  276. 10:34

    Okay,

  277. 10:36

    >> ask her. Say, Viola, what's this whole

  278. 10:37

    thing about Zoom? How what is that

  279. 10:40

    thing? Well, let me just tell you a

  280. 10:41

    little bit. It's it's a it's a animated

  281. 10:44

    uh Muppet cartoon that I grew up with

  282. 10:47

    and the show was called Fireball XL5

  283. 10:50

    >> and Zouri was one of the endearing

  284. 10:52

    characters and they were going on space

  285. 10:54

    exploration. It was about that and I was

  286. 10:56

    a kid. I love that show. And so that's a

  287. 10:59

    pet name I gave Viola. I call her Zouri.

  288. 11:02

    And and the reason I do because I love

  289. 11:04

    Zouri so much and I love Viola. So that

  290. 11:07

    is so endearing to me. So when I'm

  291. 11:09

    calling her Zonyi, it's not because of

  292. 11:10

    what Zonyi looks like. It's because I

  293. 11:12

    love the hell out of Zoney.

  294. 11:13

    >> Okay. But I'm going to have to Google

  295. 11:15

    Zouri and see what Z.

  296. 11:16

    >> Yeah. You got to Google Google him real

  297. 11:17

    quick and and you'll see Fireball XL5.

  298. 11:20

    Okay. And you'll Z. But I love Zouri. So

  299. 11:23

    ask her about Zi. Okay.

  300. 11:25

    >> Other thing is ask her about our first

  301. 11:27

    theatrical experience, Shadow of a

  302. 11:30

    Gunman. Oo,

  303. 11:31

    >> just say you and Judas went to a place

  304. 11:33

    this shadow of a gunman thing. What is

  305. 11:35

    what is that? Vio, give

  306. 11:37

    >> give us let us, you know, she'll tell

  307. 11:38

    you. It's kind of a funny story. You

  308. 11:40

    know, the the regular questions about

  309. 11:41

    the business and all that. We can always

  310. 11:43

    talk about projects and stuff like that.

  311. 11:45

    And she's great to talk about that

  312. 11:46

    stuff, but she she often times doesn't

  313. 11:49

    like to talk about the mundane stuff

  314. 11:50

    that you have to answer a thousand

  315. 11:52

    times, but it always surprises me. She's

  316. 11:54

    always able to answer this stuff as if

  317. 11:56

    it was new. I'm like going, "How the

  318. 11:57

    hell you do that, Viola?" you know,

  319. 12:00

    like, yeah. I'm like, why you doing

  320. 12:02

    that? Okay. Well, she always going,

  321. 12:03

    "People think I can pull a rabbit out of

  322. 12:05

    my ass." And I'm going, "Well, you kind

  323. 12:08

    of can."

  324. 12:09

    >> Well, Julius, I know. Um,

  325. 12:12

    you guys, you're the best couple in the

  326. 12:15

    world. And you're We're not going to be

  327. 12:18

    able to interview any other spouse after

  328. 12:19

    this because you set such a high bar.

  329. 12:23

    Well,

  330. 12:26

    >> and not like it's a competition, but

  331. 12:28

    you've won a gold medal in

  332. 12:30

    relationships.

  333. 12:31

    >> Thank you so much. It's been a pleasure

  334. 12:33

    being with you this morning.

  335. 12:34

    >> Same. Love talking to you. Thank you so

  336. 12:36

    much for your time and uh and such a

  337. 12:38

    pleasure. Thanks again.

  338. 12:39

    >> You too. Have a great day.

  339. 12:41

    >> Take care. Bye.

  340. 12:44

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    >> Biola Davis is here.

  370. 14:02

    >> I'm so so happy that you're here.

  371. 14:04

    >> I'm happy to be here. I' I've been like

  372. 14:06

    not working for the longest time. So, I

  373. 14:09

    feel like it's I feel like I'm coming

  374. 14:11

    out of hibernation and I'm like, "Holy

  375. 14:14

    [ __ ] this is what I do."

  376. 14:16

    >> Well, I got to tell you, we got to start

  377. 14:17

    by saying you were the first EGOT we've

  378. 14:19

    had and probably the last. I mean, let's

  379. 14:22

    get real. I mean, that was

  380. 14:25

    >> There's not a lot of us.

  381. 14:26

    >> No, there's like 18 19.

  382. 14:28

    >> Uh-huh. I have to tell you that it

  383. 14:31

    wasn't until I won the Oscar for Fences

  384. 14:34

    and someone said, "You're one step away

  385. 14:36

    from an EGOT." I never thought of it

  386. 14:38

    before. I didn't think about it. Wasn't

  387. 14:40

    like that sort of thing for me.

  388. 14:43

    >> Is that's so cool. I mean, it's just it

  389. 14:46

    is. And I again, not something anyone's

  390. 14:48

    like thinking about when they're

  391. 14:50

    starting out, but just

  392. 14:52

    >> it's cool.

  393. 14:53

    >> It's cool.

  394. 14:53

    >> It is. It's cool.

  395. 14:54

    >> It's cool.

  396. 14:54

    >> It's not going to be on my gravestone,

  397. 14:56

    Amy, but it's cool.

  398. 14:57

    >> It is so cool. Well, my on my

  399. 14:59

    gravestone, it's gonna be that I

  400. 15:00

    interviewed you, that winner. And also

  401. 15:03

    before we get started, I just got to say

  402. 15:05

    the Timmy Sha Timothy Timote Shalamé

  403. 15:08

    shout out

  404. 15:09

    >> was so cool.

  405. 15:11

    >> Oh, and my daughter was that was it for

  406. 15:13

    her.

  407. 15:14

    >> Mhm.

  408. 15:14

    >> She's 15. That was it. Timothy Shalomé,

  409. 15:17

    mama.

  410. 15:19

    >> I mean, good company to be in. And of

  411. 15:21

    course, we all agreed with him. But you

  412. 15:23

    spoke about it and I love what you said

  413. 15:25

    about how you loved his speech. What did

  414. 15:27

    you love about it? Cuz I did too. Like

  415. 15:29

    the essence of what he was saying in

  416. 15:30

    that speech. Well, because what I loved

  417. 15:32

    about the speech is he has a spirit of

  418. 15:34

    excellence.

  419. 15:36

    >> You know, some people

  420. 15:39

    I always negotiate, Amy. So, if you feel

  421. 15:42

    like I take a long pause, I'm just

  422. 15:45

    negotiating what I'm about to say. So, I

  423. 15:47

    don't step on toes and I don't work ever

  424. 15:50

    again in the industry. But, um, some

  425. 15:52

    people don't have the spirit of

  426. 15:53

    excellence. They have this spirit of um

  427. 15:56

    mistaken their presence for the event.

  428. 15:58

    >> Yeah.

  429. 15:58

    >> For mediocrity, for just um beauty, but

  430. 16:02

    it's great that he had the spirit of

  431. 16:04

    excellence without putting me in it.

  432. 16:07

    >> Yeah.

  433. 16:07

    >> At all. I'm not saying that.

  434. 16:09

    >> But I love that with young actors. And

  435. 16:12

    and and I also I love when people are um

  436. 16:17

    uh I guess openly ambitious

  437. 16:20

    >> and in real time saying I really want to

  438. 16:23

    try to get the best out of myself and

  439. 16:25

    others like when they say it.

  440. 16:27

    >> Absolutely.

  441. 16:28

    >> Ambition too is different than ego.

  442. 16:31

    >> Yeah, that's right.

  443. 16:32

    >> And I saw the ambition in him and he

  444. 16:35

    happens to be incredibly talented. So

  445. 16:37

    what kids like I like young people

  446. 16:40

    listen just like I love bad kids I love

  447. 16:42

    a bad kid like a 2-year-old bad kid

  448. 16:45

    someone who comes you know I had a

  449. 16:47

    little bad kid at my wedding my first

  450. 16:49

    wedding I had three ceremonies Amy but

  451. 16:51

    my first wedding I had a little bad kid

  452. 16:53

    who stuck his whole finger in my cake I

  453. 16:56

    thought it was the best thing in the

  454. 16:57

    world so I love a bad kid but I also

  455. 17:00

    love young people who have an attitude I

  456. 17:02

    do listen the world is going to get at

  457. 17:04

    you it's going to kick your ass just

  458. 17:06

    leave you in the dumpster. So, it's

  459. 17:09

    really great when you go out in the

  460. 17:11

    world and you have the hutbah, you have

  461. 17:14

    that self-possession, right? That's what

  462. 17:16

    I want with my kid. I was so so much of

  463. 17:18

    a good girl.

  464. 17:19

    >> Mhm.

  465. 17:20

    >> You know, with shitty boyfriends who

  466. 17:22

    made me feel like [ __ ] and I was just

  467. 17:25

    still like worshiping at their feet. So,

  468. 17:28

    yeah. I like Yeah, I like I like

  469. 17:30

    attitude.

  470. 17:30

    >> Do you think that's an East Coast thing?

  471. 17:32

    Cuz we're both East Coast. I grew up in

  472. 17:34

    Boston. You're Rhode Island. You weren't

  473. 17:35

    born there, but you spent most of your

  474. 17:37

    time in Rhode Island.

  475. 17:38

    >> Okay. Boston.

  476. 17:38

    >> Yeah. And what's the difference between

  477. 17:40

    Boston and Rhode Island?

  478. 17:41

    >> Nothing. You still say Florida. You

  479. 17:43

    know, you parked the car and your father

  480. 17:45

    and your father and your mother viola.

  481. 17:47

    Oh my god. I eat grinders and cabinets.

  482. 17:50

    >> Okay.

  483. 17:51

    >> You drink from the bubbler.

  484. 17:52

    >> Oh yeah. Bubbler.

  485. 17:53

    >> Mhm.

  486. 17:54

    >> Yes.

  487. 17:55

    >> The first time I said bubbler was at

  488. 17:59

    California,

  489. 18:00

    >> which is a water fountain anywhere else.

  490. 18:01

    >> And I said, "You know where the bubbler

  491. 18:03

    is?" And guy literally he he stood there

  492. 18:06

    for the longest time. He was like, "What

  493. 18:09

    the [ __ ] are you talking about?"

  494. 18:12

    >> Totally.

  495. 18:12

    >> And he finally said the water fountain.

  496. 18:14

    I was like, "Water fountain with the

  497. 18:16

    statues?"

  498. 18:18

    >> Well, did you say pocketbook instead of

  499. 18:20

    purse?

  500. 18:20

    >> Oh, no. Pocketbook all the way.

  501. 18:22

    >> Pocketbook and wicked good. Wicked.

  502. 18:25

    Everything is wicked good. I mean, my

  503. 18:27

    parents would they would go into a bar,

  504. 18:28

    they'd be like, "Can we have a beer?"

  505. 18:30

    And they'd be like, "Oh, you're from

  506. 18:31

    Boston." And they'd be like, "How do you

  507. 18:32

    know? Well, just one word. There's a

  508. 18:35

    part of growing up on the East Coast

  509. 18:37

    that gives you a directness that I I

  510. 18:40

    wouldn't want to trade. I like that

  511. 18:41

    about people.

  512. 18:42

    >> Yes.

  513. 18:43

    >> But the other side of that coin can be

  514. 18:46

    like a roughness, like a just a

  515. 18:48

    toughness and roughness.

  516. 18:49

    >> And you know, Amy, I'm black. So, um,

  517. 18:52

    comes with a different set of rules of

  518. 18:55

    roughness. Yeah.

  519. 18:56

    >> You know, and so, you know, I came from

  520. 19:00

    >> plain spoken people.

  521. 19:01

    >> Yeah. You know, I always say it's like

  522. 19:03

    it's like

  523. 19:07

    I'm negotiating. Um

  524. 19:09

    >> Oh my god. I love the sound of your

  525. 19:11

    negot

  526. 19:12

    when you're thinking what to say.

  527. 19:14

    >> Yeah. Tupac. You can put Tupac music,

  528. 19:17

    but I just remember visiting someone's

  529. 19:21

    at one point and I took a bus.

  530. 19:23

    >> Mhm.

  531. 19:23

    >> And I got off the bus and I told my

  532. 19:26

    friend, "Well, make sure some the person

  533. 19:28

    who's coming to pick me up, they know

  534. 19:29

    who I am." Okay. I waited there, Amy, 30

  535. 19:34

    minutes, maybe longer,

  536. 19:36

    >> waiting for the person to pick me up.

  537. 19:39

    Finally, I find them. I go to my friend

  538. 19:41

    and I said, "Why couldn't they find me?"

  539. 19:43

    And he said, "Well, I described you." I

  540. 19:45

    said, "Well, how did you describe me?"

  541. 19:48

    "Oh, I just said you were cute and you

  542. 19:50

    had long hair, Amy. I'm black with long

  543. 19:53

    braids." I said, "Did you tell him I was

  544. 19:55

    black?" I was the only black girl on the

  545. 19:56

    bus. He was like, "Oh, I didn't feel

  546. 19:58

    like I could say that." You know, but

  547. 20:01

    the thing with Well, you're talking

  548. 20:03

    about plain spoken thing about black

  549. 20:05

    people, they call it as it is. You know,

  550. 20:07

    that black girl who come out and and she

  551. 20:09

    got the tattoo on her left titty and she

  552. 20:12

    got one tooth coming out of her mouth.

  553. 20:13

    It's that girl.

  554. 20:14

    >> Yeah.

  555. 20:15

    >> So, it's it's that sort of plain

  556. 20:18

    spokenness I grew up with with my mom

  557. 20:20

    and dad. They were that plain spoken.

  558. 20:22

    Well, you talk I mean you've spoken

  559. 20:24

    beautifully about your childhood growing

  560. 20:26

    up and the difficulties in it and the

  561. 20:27

    way that you've like

  562. 20:29

    >> been processing it in real time as an

  563. 20:31

    adult now and but I think and I I don't

  564. 20:33

    know if this is the same for you as I

  565. 20:35

    get older

  566. 20:36

    >> I start trying to look at my my origin

  567. 20:38

    the place of origin and figure out what

  568. 20:41

    gifts it gave me and what pain it gave

  569. 20:43

    me at the same time right and there is

  570. 20:45

    this something about growing up in the

  571. 20:47

    east coast I don't know that sticks with

  572. 20:50

    you And I know this sounds silly, but

  573. 20:52

    like the accent that we just did, like

  574. 20:54

    the accent sticks around. I always say

  575. 20:57

    like when I'm angry or really excited,

  576. 21:01

    my accent comes out sometimes.

  577. 21:03

    >> Yeah.

  578. 21:03

    >> Does your accent

  579. 21:05

    >> My accent comes out too, even when I'm

  580. 21:07

    acting?

  581. 21:08

    >> Yeah.

  582. 21:08

    >> Especially in an emotional scene. And it

  583. 21:11

    just surprises me. It'll jump out at me.

  584. 21:14

    And you know, of course, I went to a

  585. 21:16

    school in New York that kills your

  586. 21:18

    accent. Yeah. you you'll get thrown out

  587. 21:20

    if you still have an accent at Giuliard

  588. 21:22

    by your fourth year, right?

  589. 21:24

    >> And by my second year, they warned me

  590. 21:26

    and said, "You cannot come back to the

  591. 21:28

    school until you

  592. 21:30

    >> fix up whatever the hell this is going

  593. 21:32

    on." And so I remember like every single

  594. 21:36

    day for two hours practicing how to say

  595. 21:40

    father

  596. 21:41

    >> instead of father.

  597. 21:42

    >> Father. And and you know at Giuliard

  598. 21:45

    when you speak too if when you're

  599. 21:47

    walking around they put a pencil in your

  600. 21:48

    mouth

  601. 21:50

    >> during rehearsal. They put a pencil in

  602. 21:51

    your mouth to see where your tongue is

  603. 21:54

    when you're articulating your sentences.

  604. 21:56

    So I was traumatized into just

  605. 22:00

    catapulting that

  606. 22:02

    >> not realizing that's a beautiful thing.

  607. 22:04

    >> Yeah. Have you ever got to play anyone

  608. 22:05

    with a you know with an a Rhode Island

  609. 22:08

    accent or Boston accent and like let it

  610. 22:10

    rip?

  611. 22:11

    >> No. pay me.

  612. 22:13

    >> Nobody's writing a black girl from Rhode

  613. 22:15

    Island roles.

  614. 22:16

    >> Well, maybe we do a road trip. Maybe I

  615. 22:18

    need to write it.

  616. 22:19

    >> Maybe you need to write I mean I mean

  617. 22:22

    you're what you're talking about going

  618. 22:24

    to Giuliard and and you've talked a lot

  619. 22:26

    about it and your training there and

  620. 22:28

    like what you took from it and before

  621. 22:31

    you got there who told you or when did

  622. 22:34

    you have that feeling of I want to I

  623. 22:36

    want to be an actor? It's

  624. 22:38

    >> the reason why I ask I was I'm I'm the

  625. 22:40

    daughter of of of school teachers. No

  626. 22:42

    one I knew was an actor. I didn't know

  627. 22:44

    any actors. I didn't like of course I

  628. 22:47

    knew famous people in movies and TV, but

  629. 22:49

    I didn't know that would be a job of

  630. 22:50

    mine,

  631. 22:51

    >> but I was in school plays and people

  632. 22:54

    would come up and say, "You were good."

  633. 22:56

    >> Yeah. Exactly.

  634. 22:56

    >> You know, like you

  635. 22:57

    >> Exactly. And it surprises you, right?

  636. 23:00

    Yeah.

  637. 23:00

    >> But but for me it's um it's gradual. So,

  638. 23:04

    it's hard to pinpoint one person in one

  639. 23:06

    moment,

  640. 23:07

    >> but I swear to you, the more I think

  641. 23:09

    about it, I have to pinpoint the moment

  642. 23:12

    that we won the skit contest at Jens

  643. 23:15

    Park

  644. 23:16

    >> when I was 8 years old.

  645. 23:18

    >> Amy, that was it.

  646. 23:20

    >> Yeah.

  647. 23:20

    >> Cuz I was so shy.

  648. 23:22

    >> Yeah.

  649. 23:22

    >> You know, and brutally shy. Like to the

  650. 23:25

    point where I couldn't speak in public.

  651. 23:28

    And so, we did the skit, you know, and I

  652. 23:30

    played the ooey kid from That's My Mama.

  653. 23:33

    That's Ted Lang. I don't know if you

  654. 23:34

    remember that show. I don't want to age

  655. 23:36

    you or whatever.

  656. 23:37

    >> What show?

  657. 23:38

    >> It's called That's My Mama.

  658. 23:40

    >> Okay.

  659. 23:40

    >> And he was a ooey kid. He was a gossipy

  660. 23:43

    guy. He would come in and go, "Oo,

  661. 23:47

    I got it. I got it. I'm here to report

  662. 23:49

    it." So I was a ooey kid. My sister

  663. 23:52

    Dolores was um what's his name from

  664. 23:54

    Let's Make a Deal. Montel.

  665. 23:56

    >> Oh, Monty Hall.

  666. 23:57

    >> Monty Hall. She was Monty Hall. My

  667. 23:59

    sister Anita was uh was uh Esther. Aunt

  668. 24:02

    Esther from Sanford and Son and my

  669. 24:05

    sister um uh Diane was Fred Sanford.

  670. 24:08

    >> Oh my god.

  671. 24:10

    >> I think I put I have it in my book, but

  672. 24:12

    we created a uh a game show sort of

  673. 24:15

    reality show where we had to come on and

  674. 24:18

    tell a story of how you saved a life and

  675. 24:20

    whoever had the best story won a million

  676. 24:22

    dollars.

  677. 24:23

    >> What were what are you in the in the

  678. 24:24

    birth order of the sisters?

  679. 24:26

    >> Um next to the youngest. I have one

  680. 24:28

    younger sister who was my baby.

  681. 24:32

    >> Mhm. Yeah. So, wow. So, three So, four

  682. 24:36

    girls in the same family rehearsing like

  683. 24:39

    doing skits, doing comedy,

  684. 24:40

    >> having rewrites.

  685. 24:41

    >> Yeah. Really,

  686. 24:43

    >> having rewrites. We had a little

  687. 24:45

    wardrobe budget of $2.50. We go to

  688. 24:49

    Salvation Army and, you know, or raid my

  689. 24:51

    mom's closet. The whole thing was we did

  690. 24:54

    the skit contest cuz we were like these

  691. 24:57

    [ __ ] people in this town, [ __ ] her,

  692. 25:00

    [ __ ] her. I mean, people who like were

  693. 25:02

    bullies, you know, and we were like,

  694. 25:04

    we're going to stick it to them. We're

  695. 25:05

    going to win. The confidence once again,

  696. 25:08

    the self-possession and just being and

  697. 25:11

    everyone in Central Falls was there.

  698. 25:13

    People were sitting on rocks,

  699. 25:15

    >> you know, the newspaper was there, Amy,

  700. 25:18

    and we won. Damn, that must have been so

  701. 25:21

    exciting, Viola. I mean, it's going to

  702. 25:24

    be hard for me to not

  703. 25:27

    talk about how great you are this whole

  704. 25:29

    time. To me, that story feels like when

  705. 25:32

    a athlete realizes like, oh, I'm

  706. 25:35

    naturally good at hitting a baseball or

  707. 25:37

    something. You know,

  708. 25:39

    >> you are

  709. 25:41

    so good at what you do.

  710. 25:43

    >> Well, I appreciate that. and the

  711. 25:45

    naturalness of what you do combined with

  712. 25:48

    your determination and skill. It's just

  713. 25:52

    >> so I mean I wish I could have a time

  714. 25:54

    machine and go back to that day and see

  715. 25:56

    you performing because I can only

  716. 25:58

    imagine that people pointed at you and

  717. 26:01

    said wow.

  718. 26:03

    >> Well, I don't know if anyone pointed at

  719. 26:06

    me and said wow, but I pointed at myself

  720. 26:08

    and I said wow.

  721. 26:10

    >> And how do you go from there to

  722. 26:13

    Giuliard? How do you You know what?

  723. 26:16

    We'll never know.

  724. 26:17

    >> You never know.

  725. 26:19

    >> But what do you what do you audition

  726. 26:21

    with to get into Giuliard?

  727. 26:23

    >> I auditioned with Sely from Color

  728. 26:26

    Purple.

  729. 26:27

    >> Oh god. That was my dramatic. And then I

  730. 26:30

    auditioned with a sort of comedy piece

  731. 26:32

    from um God damn it, I'm forgetting. Oh

  732. 26:36

    boy. But um it was a sort of French

  733. 26:40

    comedy

  734. 26:41

    >> like for like a forest kind of thing.

  735. 26:42

    Uhhuh. Yeah.

  736. 26:44

    >> I mean, when you were doing Shakespeare,

  737. 26:48

    what do you have a way to memorize

  738. 26:50

    Shakespeare or like how do you like to

  739. 26:53

    memorize?

  740. 26:56

    >> It's a process. So, you have to figure

  741. 26:58

    out who you are, what you live for, all

  742. 27:00

    that other stuff that nobody ever wants

  743. 27:02

    to hear about, by the way. It's It's so

  744. 27:04

    boring. It It really is. It's

  745. 27:07

    >> I know what you mean. But what I what is

  746. 27:09

    cool about it is I think that the skill

  747. 27:13

    involved with the you know the the hard

  748. 27:16

    work which is the theme I would say of

  749. 27:19

    >> looking at your body of work and your

  750. 27:21

    life is that you just have never shied

  751. 27:23

    away from hard work. You've never run

  752. 27:25

    away from it.

  753. 27:26

    >> Thank you.

  754. 27:26

    >> And memorizing is really hard.

  755. 27:29

    >> Memorizing is but you know what

  756. 27:32

    memorizing is the least difficult part

  757. 27:35

    of acting. O I I think I these days

  758. 27:39

    these days now lately it's so hard

  759. 27:41

    >> now lately it's like I was like

  760. 27:43

    >> you know when you have another actor

  761. 27:45

    looking in your face and they're waiting

  762. 27:46

    for the line now I'm big with this is

  763. 27:48

    and then you know that someone is dro I

  764. 27:50

    I did this with Merryill Street you know

  765. 27:53

    in doubt she had a line I had a line or

  766. 27:56

    whatever and then nothing

  767. 27:58

    >> I'm looking in her face nothing she's

  768. 28:01

    saying nothing I'm saying nothing

  769. 28:03

    obviously someone dropped the line Yeah.

  770. 28:05

    >> And then I realiz she's the one who

  771. 28:08

    dropped the line.

  772. 28:08

    >> Oh my god. Thank God

  773. 28:12

    dropped the line. And so then we did it

  774. 28:14

    three more times. Three more times that

  775. 28:16

    scene. She kept dropping the line. And

  776. 28:19

    in my brain I was like,

  777. 28:20

    >> "Say the [ __ ] line."

  778. 28:22

    >> Of course.

  779. 28:23

    >> But I can't tell Merryill Street, you

  780. 28:25

    forgot the line, Mel. You keep

  781. 28:27

    forgetting the line. And finally we did

  782. 28:30

    it. And she was like, "Why is does

  783. 28:32

    something feel off?" And I said,

  784. 28:33

    "Because you you keep forgetting the

  785. 28:35

    line.

  786. 28:38

    You forgot the line, Merrill."

  787. 28:40

    >> And she's like, "I'm not perfect."

  788. 28:42

    >> And then she No, she just said, "Well,

  789. 28:43

    why didn't you say something?"

  790. 28:49

    >> And you did say something. And but but

  791. 28:52

    the the the the um Shakespeare itself

  792. 28:55

    feels just like you really got to I

  793. 28:57

    guess your point, you got to just keep

  794. 28:59

    living in it. Living in it. Well, the h

  795. 29:00

    the hint's the hardest thing about

  796. 29:02

    Shakespeare too.

  797. 29:03

    >> Please,

  798. 29:04

    >> what the hell are you saying?

  799. 29:05

    >> What the [ __ ] are you saying?

  800. 29:06

    >> And and what are you saying? And and

  801. 29:09

    also the amic pentameter and also

  802. 29:13

    >> boy actors are going to kill me for

  803. 29:15

    this,

  804. 29:16

    >> but I went to Giuliard and you don't

  805. 29:18

    want it to be boring.

  806. 29:20

    >> Ex listen, they're not going to kill you

  807. 29:22

    for that. Here's the thing about

  808. 29:24

    Shakespeare. All it is is people acting

  809. 29:27

    it and listening to it and going like

  810. 29:29

    this. Mhm. Mhm. And I'm like, you don't

  811. 29:31

    know what you're talking about and we

  812. 29:33

    don't know what you're saying.

  813. 29:34

    >> Well, well, well, well. Here's the

  814. 29:36

    thing, too. And if you don't know what

  815. 29:37

    they're saying, then they're not doing

  816. 29:38

    it correctly. Exactly. See, but but you

  817. 29:40

    can't say, you know what,

  818. 29:43

    >> it's boring.

  819. 29:44

    >> I know.

  820. 29:44

    >> And Jiuliard, I would fall asleep a lot.

  821. 29:47

    Oh my god. I have a friend who it would

  822. 29:49

    piss her off. As soon as I was in the

  823. 29:51

    class, we'd have the greatest actors,

  824. 29:54

    greatest Shakespearean actors in the

  825. 29:56

    world come to the school. within 5

  826. 29:58

    minutes I would be dead sleep. I would

  827. 30:00

    be knocked out with my lip hitting my

  828. 30:02

    lap. I mean I would be knocked out. And

  829. 30:06

    to this day she was like, "I can't even

  830. 30:08

    believe you would do that. I can't

  831. 30:10

    believe you would do that." And I said,

  832. 30:12

    "Did you ever did it ever occur to you

  833. 30:14

    that it just didn't excite me?"

  834. 30:17

    >> Mhm.

  835. 30:18

    >> But that's the thing with Shakespeare.

  836. 30:20

    You just don't want it to be boring

  837. 30:21

    because at the end of the day, here's

  838. 30:23

    the thing. It's just about people. be

  839. 30:26

    can be kings and

  840. 30:26

    >> I mean it's a soap opera most of the

  841. 30:28

    time those plays but is it I mean thank

  842. 30:32

    you for saying that because the thing

  843. 30:34

    about like art in general is if you

  844. 30:38

    don't figure out how to find a way in

  845. 30:41

    sometimes you feel really strange when

  846. 30:43

    everybody else is in there and you're

  847. 30:45

    like what is it where how come I can't

  848. 30:47

    connect

  849. 30:48

    >> yeah but Amy let me tell you something

  850. 30:50

    we going down the road of talking by

  851. 30:52

    acting like it's real deep people don't

  852. 30:54

    see it. I see it as deep. You see it as

  853. 30:57

    deep. Most people do not see it as deep

  854. 30:59

    because once again, it's about mistaking

  855. 31:02

    your presence for the event. It's about

  856. 31:04

    >> That's right.

  857. 31:05

    >> being I mean, my big thing are love

  858. 31:08

    scenes. I can't stand love scenes. I

  859. 31:10

    can't stand watching them. I can't stand

  860. 31:12

    doing them. I'm like,

  861. 31:14

    >> oo,

  862. 31:15

    >> I finally said how to get away with

  863. 31:17

    murder. I'm not doing any more love

  864. 31:18

    scenes anymore. I mean, that's it. You

  865. 31:20

    You write a love scene. I'm not doing

  866. 31:22

    it. Unless you give me a boyfriend who

  867. 31:26

    has a stomach.

  868. 31:29

    >> Wait, say more.

  869. 31:31

    >> A big gut.

  870. 31:32

    >> Yeah.

  871. 31:33

    >> And you know why?

  872. 31:34

    >> Why?

  873. 31:35

    >> Cuz you'll actually write the scene.

  874. 31:38

    >> It won't be about taking off the shirt

  875. 31:40

    and the six-pack abs. That's right.

  876. 31:42

    >> I mean, I'm watching I did a scene with

  877. 31:44

    Billy Brown, who I love all Billy Brown.

  878. 31:47

    Love everyone.

  879. 31:49

    >> And it's TV.

  880. 31:50

    >> Yeah. So Annelise Keading is in bed.

  881. 31:54

    Anelise Keading is sort of sleeps with a

  882. 31:56

    lot of people, men, women, which cannot

  883. 31:59

    be any opposite for me. I mean, I'm

  884. 32:01

    like, "Oh my god."

  885. 32:03

    >> So, and I'm in the bed. I'm laying down

  886. 32:06

    and everything. And then he gets up with

  887. 32:09

    his underwear and they I mean, they're

  888. 32:12

    literally just taking his underwear

  889. 32:14

    down, putting his makeup on, and he's

  890. 32:16

    got his abs. And then they want him to

  891. 32:19

    walk into the bathroom and come out

  892. 32:22

    with, you know, one of those scrub

  893. 32:23

    brushes and slap it on his hand as if

  894. 32:27

    he's slapping my ass. So he's like,

  895. 32:29

    "Slap, slap, slap." As we're saying the

  896. 32:31

    dialogue,

  897. 32:33

    >> I'm in the scene, Amy, and I'm like,

  898. 32:35

    "You got to cut. You got to cut. Please

  899. 32:39

    cut."

  900. 32:41

    >> That is That's That's my nightmare.

  901. 32:43

    That's a nightmare.

  902. 32:43

    >> It's a freaking nightmare.

  903. 32:44

    >> That's a nightmare. So I said, "If you

  904. 32:46

    write someone with a gut, maybe we won't

  905. 32:48

    be in bed. Maybe it'll be about

  906. 32:50

    everything else. And then when we

  907. 32:52

    finally kiss, it's like something that's

  908. 32:54

    organically happening."

  909. 32:56

    >> But right now, for me, a lot of love

  910. 32:58

    scenes, it's like that's the time to go

  911. 33:00

    to the bathroom.

  912. 33:02

    >> If you want to pick up, go to the

  913. 33:04

    bathroom. You come back. You haven't

  914. 33:06

    missed anything.

  915. 33:06

    >> Oh my god. I feel you. I feel you. the

  916. 33:08

    couple I've not done many, but the

  917. 33:10

    couple times it's been on the call

  918. 33:12

    sheet, I'm like, "Oh no, this is my this

  919. 33:14

    is the worst day." And any, by the way,

  920. 33:16

    anybody that's like, "Oo, I got a love

  921. 33:18

    scene today." Red flag.

  922. 33:22

    I had to do a love scene with um

  923. 33:26

    Tom Verica, who cannot be more lovely.

  924. 33:30

    How to get away with murder. First love

  925. 33:31

    scene. Well, actually, my first love

  926. 33:33

    scene was with Billy Brown in the and it

  927. 33:37

    got cut and I'm so happy it got cut

  928. 33:40

    because we were having sex on my car in

  929. 33:43

    in Philadelphia and it was 12°. I was

  930. 33:46

    terrified.

  931. 33:48

    >> First love scene of my life, but the

  932. 33:49

    second love scene, Tom Verica, who plays

  933. 33:51

    my husband, Hanukkah, murder. So, we're

  934. 33:54

    getting prepared for the love scene in

  935. 33:57

    the trailer and the makeup artists are

  936. 34:00

    saying, "So, do you want anything to

  937. 34:01

    cover?" I mean, I have stretch marks.

  938. 34:03

    >> Yeah.

  939. 34:04

    >> I mean, I got stretch marks everywhere.

  940. 34:05

    I got stretch marks on my ass. I got

  941. 34:07

    stretch marks on my arms. I got stretch

  942. 34:08

    marks everywhere. I'm just going to say

  943. 34:10

    it. We do.

  944. 34:10

    >> And so, I'm like, "Yeah, I want makeup.

  945. 34:13

    I want makeup on my arms. I want makeup

  946. 34:15

    on my ass." And it's like,

  947. 34:17

    >> "I got makeup on my ankles."

  948. 34:19

    >> Mhm.

  949. 34:20

    >> Okay. He's getting makeup on. I mean,

  950. 34:22

    we're just basically spraying ourselves

  951. 34:25

    with with makeup. Both of us terrified.

  952. 34:28

    Okay. And then finally, I had the big

  953. 34:31

    aha moment. I said, "Tom, this is what

  954. 34:34

    we're going to do. We going to hold it

  955. 34:36

    up for the regular people."

  956. 34:37

    >> Yes.

  957. 34:38

    >> We're going to hold it up for the people

  958. 34:39

    out there who, you know, may have a

  959. 34:41

    little bit of something sticking out

  960. 34:43

    there, whatever. And there was makeup

  961. 34:47

    all over the sheets,

  962. 34:50

    makeup all over the bed, you know. You

  963. 34:53

    know, thank God my wig didn't come off,

  964. 34:56

    you know. And that was

  965. 34:58

    >> there's nothing sexy about it. Nothing.

  966. 35:00

    When you do a love scene, in my opinion,

  967. 35:02

    there's nothing sexy about it. It's just

  968. 35:04

    >> it's hard your search for the realness

  969. 35:07

    in things, like the the the way you're

  970. 35:09

    looking for the truth in things in your

  971. 35:10

    own life and in your work. It it it

  972. 35:14

    dovetales so beautifully with August

  973. 35:16

    Wilson. Can you talk about your how you

  974. 35:18

    felt about doing his work and like well

  975. 35:21

    how important he is to you as a as a

  976. 35:22

    writer?

  977. 35:23

    >> Well, he's important because he writes

  978. 35:24

    about black people. It's our cadences.

  979. 35:27

    It's my mom, my dad, my father. It's how

  980. 35:30

    we talked, you know, how I listen to

  981. 35:32

    them, how I talked, you know, and um

  982. 35:35

    that's the beauty of it because, you

  983. 35:37

    know, otherwise, listen, I went to

  984. 35:39

    Giuliard. We were doing George Bernard

  985. 35:41

    Shaw at Stinberg, you know, check off

  986. 35:43

    with who I love, you know, Shakespeare.

  987. 35:46

    So, I did Blanch Dubois.

  988. 35:48

    >> Yeah.

  989. 35:48

    >> I mean, it was just a scene and but I

  990. 35:50

    have to do if if you've ever read Blanch

  991. 35:53

    Dubois, I could not be any different

  992. 35:56

    than Blanch Dubois. She's extremely

  993. 35:58

    fragile.

  994. 35:59

    >> Yeah.

  995. 36:00

    >> You know, fading beauty queen,

  996. 36:03

    >> you know, all of those things. So to see

  997. 36:05

    and to hear me, you know, take my deep

  998. 36:08

    voice and try to will it down and sound

  999. 36:11

    like a white southern woman and doing

  1000. 36:14

    all that, it was like, oh my, I can't do

  1001. 36:16

    this. I mean, it I shouldn't say I can't

  1002. 36:18

    do it. I can do it. I can transform. I

  1003. 36:21

    could do all of that. But then, you

  1004. 36:23

    know, people in the audience have got

  1005. 36:25

    to, you know, let me ignore the fact

  1006. 36:27

    that this is a deep voiced black woman

  1007. 36:29

    who is self-possessed and very grounded

  1008. 36:32

    and is not.

  1009. 36:33

    >> But with August Wilson,

  1010. 36:36

    >> I don't have to do any of that.

  1011. 36:38

    >> I still have to do the work,

  1012. 36:40

    >> but I could do a work in a way that

  1013. 36:43

    invites me in,

  1014. 36:45

    >> you know, and that's the beauty of

  1015. 36:47

    that's the beauty of August Wilson. And

  1016. 36:49

    you're nominated for a Tony 3 years

  1017. 36:52

    after you got out of school for that. I

  1018. 36:54

    mean, do you remember when you found out

  1019. 36:56

    you were nominated? That must have been

  1020. 36:59

    >> incredible feeling.

  1021. 37:00

    >> I found out I was nominated, you know,

  1022. 37:03

    back in the day. Back in the day when

  1023. 37:05

    you had those um um uh answering

  1024. 37:08

    machines that you had to call,

  1025. 37:11

    >> you had to call the answer machine. I

  1026. 37:12

    would call every single day to see if I

  1027. 37:14

    had an audition. So I called and my

  1028. 37:17

    agent at the time said, "Viola, you got

  1029. 37:19

    a Tony nomination.

  1030. 37:22

    Oh my god."

  1031. 37:24

    >> I ran to my parents' house.

  1032. 37:27

    >> They don't know what a Tony Award is.

  1033. 37:30

    >> And my little nieces and neph, they

  1034. 37:31

    don't know what the hell a Tony Award

  1035. 37:33

    is. I ran in the house. I said, "You

  1036. 37:35

    guys," my little nieces and nephews,

  1037. 37:36

    they were in their diapers running

  1038. 37:38

    around acting bad like I love bad kids.

  1039. 37:41

    Um, I ran in the house. And I said, "You

  1040. 37:44

    guys, I got a Tony nomination." And they

  1041. 37:47

    went, they started throwing themselves

  1042. 37:50

    on the floor. They didn't know what the

  1043. 37:51

    hell a Tony nomination was, but we all

  1044. 37:54

    just jumped. And I mean, come on.

  1045. 37:57

    >> Yeah. Amazing.

  1046. 37:58

    >> Come on.

  1047. 38:07

    You were a very accomplished working

  1048. 38:09

    actor on a lot of shows before a kind of

  1049. 38:13

    America at Large knew your name. You had

  1050. 38:15

    a a a really substantial body of work.

  1051. 38:19

    Do you feel like that allowed you, you

  1052. 38:22

    know, it was just like that 10,000 hours

  1053. 38:23

    idea that you worked really hard and

  1054. 38:26

    often and kind of figured out and you

  1055. 38:30

    worked in TV, you worked in film, you

  1056. 38:31

    worked on stage, you like got to like

  1057. 38:34

    feel confident in your skill.

  1058. 38:36

    >> Yes. But once again, that's the task.

  1059. 38:39

    >> Yeah. But it's not always everyone's

  1060. 38:41

    root.

  1061. 38:41

    >> No, I I understand.

  1062. 38:43

    >> Yeah.

  1063. 38:43

    >> And I understand that. And there in lies

  1064. 38:45

    the problem.

  1065. 38:46

    >> Yeah. with the business that anyone

  1066. 38:50

    feels like they can do it, you know, but

  1067. 38:53

    there was never a time when I was at the

  1068. 38:55

    Guthrie Theater or working in Newton,

  1069. 38:57

    Massachusetts. I worked in Newton,

  1070. 38:58

    Massachusetts. Um,

  1071. 39:00

    >> every I I've worked everywhere. I worked

  1072. 39:02

    with everyone. Huntington Theater, ACT,

  1073. 39:05

    Mark Taper Forum, Goodman Theater.

  1074. 39:08

    >> I thought I'd already made it.

  1075. 39:10

    >> Yeah,

  1076. 39:11

    >> I did. Yeah. Yeah, you know, making your

  1077. 39:12

    650 a week and then you did your 10

  1078. 39:15

    weeks and then you qualified for

  1079. 39:17

    unemployment. So, you got your

  1080. 39:18

    unemployment and sure you call in that

  1081. 39:20

    unemployment every Sunday, got that 350.

  1082. 39:23

    I think it went up to 3 $390 a week.

  1083. 39:27

    >> I thought I'd already made it cuz I

  1084. 39:28

    could say that I'm an actor, but you do

  1085. 39:32

    have to put in those hours in order to

  1086. 39:34

    have some level of a process. Because

  1087. 39:36

    here's what I think. What I um whenever

  1088. 39:39

    I do a job, this is my thing with

  1089. 39:42

    actors. It's a little bit of my pet

  1090. 39:44

    peeve a little bit. Is this if you have

  1091. 39:49

    a criticism

  1092. 39:51

    for a writer,

  1093. 39:53

    >> you never have it for another actor.

  1094. 39:55

    >> You don't criticize them. That's like a

  1095. 39:57

    no no.

  1096. 39:58

    >> Okay? I don't care if it's a day player.

  1097. 40:00

    You don't tell anyone how to act. That's

  1098. 40:02

    the director's job.

  1099. 40:03

    >> But I love it. If you have a criticism

  1100. 40:06

    of the work, if you say, you know, this

  1101. 40:08

    scene is not working, you have to tell

  1102. 40:10

    them why and you have to know how to fix

  1103. 40:13

    it.

  1104. 40:15

    I will say

  1105. 40:17

    once again, I'm a negotiating. I would

  1106. 40:20

    say 98% of the time people don't know

  1107. 40:22

    how to fix it.

  1108. 40:23

    >> Yeah, that's such a great point because

  1109. 40:26

    I've often said that actors should spend

  1110. 40:29

    a day being a writer getting notes from

  1111. 40:33

    actors. Because the way that people give

  1112. 40:36

    writers feedback is often appalling.

  1113. 40:39

    It's like this isn't and not just

  1114. 40:41

    actors, anybody, but like the way

  1115. 40:43

    writers receive feedback is like

  1116. 40:45

    dismissive. It's insulting. They don't

  1117. 40:47

    have a fix. Like your to your point,

  1118. 40:49

    something they've worked really really

  1119. 40:50

    hard on. They hand it over and people

  1120. 40:52

    just kind of like open it up and barely

  1121. 40:54

    pay attention to it. They barely read

  1122. 40:56

    it. They don't know the words. They

  1123. 40:58

    don't they don't they're like

  1124. 40:59

    challenging stuff before it's even tried

  1125. 41:01

    out. And then conversely, I always say

  1126. 41:03

    to writers,

  1127. 41:05

    >> now put on someone else's clothes.

  1128. 41:07

    >> That's right.

  1129. 41:08

    >> Mhm.

  1130. 41:09

    >> Go over there and uh uh scramble an egg.

  1131. 41:13

    >> Yep. Exactly.

  1132. 41:13

    >> While you remember

  1133. 41:15

    >> Yeah.

  1134. 41:16

    >> Two two pages of dialogue while everyone

  1135. 41:19

    you know is on the other side of the

  1136. 41:21

    room drinking coffee, looking at you.

  1137. 41:23

    >> Exactly.

  1138. 41:24

    >> And then we're even.

  1139. 41:25

    >> Yeah. Absolutely. Whenever you have to

  1140. 41:28

    fix a script, sometimes it's really not

  1141. 41:31

    that deep to fix something. It could be

  1142. 41:33

    a simple choice, but what happens is the

  1143. 41:36

    filter that goes through is okay. Is it

  1144. 41:39

    going to get more viewers? Are people

  1145. 41:41

    going to want to see? Is going to turn

  1146. 41:42

    on the 18 to 34 year old boys who come

  1147. 41:45

    see the movie. That's a big one, Amy.

  1148. 41:47

    >> Oh, yeah. I mean,

  1149. 41:48

    >> the boys.

  1150. 41:49

    >> The boy. And also, will men Yeah. Will

  1151. 41:51

    men care? Will men care about this

  1152. 41:54

    project? is like,

  1153. 41:54

    >> "Yeah, that was the woman king."

  1154. 41:56

    >> Oh, yeah. I I bet there was a lot of

  1155. 41:59

    discussion about like, "We want to make

  1156. 42:00

    sure men show up." And it's like, "Do we

  1157. 42:03

    >> do we want to make sure men SHOW UP LIKE

  1158. 42:06

    THESE DAYS?" ME, TOO. I've been like,

  1159. 42:08

    "Maybe they don't come to this one."

  1160. 42:09

    >> Yeah. Exactly.

  1161. 42:10

    >> How about we just make one? We just make

  1162. 42:12

    one for us. Just one.

  1163. 42:14

    >> I'm playing a a goji warrior. I've just

  1164. 42:16

    chopped off five men's heads in the

  1165. 42:19

    first two minutes. So, and maybe it's

  1166. 42:21

    just not for them. I mean, it's it's

  1167. 42:23

    like it's like a lot of the uh the notes

  1168. 42:26

    were, you know, um less dirt and more

  1169. 42:28

    lipstick.

  1170. 42:30

    >> Are you freaking kidding me?

  1171. 42:31

    >> Wild.

  1172. 42:32

    >> Are you kidding me?

  1173. 42:33

    >> Wild.

  1174. 42:34

    >> I'm playing an a gogi warrior and I'm

  1175. 42:37

    thinking about lipstick

  1176. 42:39

    and eyelash extensions.

  1177. 42:41

    >> That film, you are so badass in that

  1178. 42:44

    film. That film is so beautiful. I loved

  1179. 42:46

    it. You and your husband produced it

  1180. 42:48

    together, generated it, made it for

  1181. 42:51

    yourself. Such an example of like taking

  1182. 42:53

    the currency that you had

  1183. 42:55

    >> and using it and making that project.

  1184. 42:57

    And the thing I wanted to ask you about

  1185. 42:59

    Woman King, the woman king

  1186. 43:02

    >> is and for people that don't know, it's,

  1187. 43:04

    you know, based on a real story for

  1188. 43:07

    people that don't know about uh could

  1189. 43:09

    you explain what it was based on? It's

  1190. 43:10

    based on the Aogia uh uh tribe or

  1191. 43:14

    warriors in Dome in Benin, West Africa

  1192. 43:17

    in like 1854 and they were all female

  1193. 43:21

    army unit that would go out and fight

  1194. 43:23

    neighboring tribes and you know Euroba

  1195. 43:25

    tribes. Now you know the controversy is

  1196. 43:28

    is there was a lot of controversy you

  1197. 43:31

    know involved with the Algoia warriors

  1198. 43:34

    because they would have slaves.

  1199. 43:36

    >> Okay. I think ultimately that is what

  1200. 43:39

    maybe people had problems with. And the

  1201. 43:41

    other problem is, you know, it was an

  1202. 43:44

    all black cast, mostly female cast,

  1203. 43:48

    >> mostly without getting into it cuz there

  1204. 43:50

    will never be enough time in the world.

  1205. 43:52

    Dark-kinned females

  1206. 43:55

    >> who have muscles and who are taking men

  1207. 43:58

    down. I mean, I trained for 5 hours a

  1208. 44:00

    day and I was the oldest mother freaking

  1209. 44:03

    warrior in the movie.

  1210. 44:06

    So, we trained 5 hours a day for months,

  1211. 44:08

    handtohand combat. I have to tell you

  1212. 44:11

    though, with that movie, without getting

  1213. 44:14

    too much into it, cuz there's a lot

  1214. 44:16

    about that movie.

  1215. 44:17

    >> Yeah.

  1216. 44:18

    >> That was like very important to me.

  1217. 44:20

    >> Yeah.

  1218. 44:21

    >> I didn't think it was a big deal for

  1219. 44:24

    women to be warriors,

  1220. 44:26

    >> right?

  1221. 44:28

    >> I didn't think that it was a big deal to

  1222. 44:30

    have a title like the woman king.

  1223. 44:33

    >> Mhm. Because first of all, there's a lot

  1224. 44:35

    of kings who are women in Africa.

  1225. 44:38

    They're actually called kings.

  1226. 44:40

    I didn't know that that was going to be

  1227. 44:42

    a controversy

  1228. 44:44

    until we did it.

  1229. 44:46

    >> I thought this is badass. I mean, I

  1230. 44:49

    would take my toy machete home to

  1231. 44:52

    practice with my husband. I mean, not

  1232. 44:55

    around my husband cuz he would say, "Oh,

  1233. 44:57

    V, this is a lot." But but um but I just

  1234. 45:01

    didn't know it was a big deal until we

  1235. 45:02

    started shooting it and there was, you

  1236. 45:05

    know, can we make your curls looser and

  1237. 45:07

    more pretty?

  1238. 45:09

    >> Mhm.

  1239. 45:09

    >> Could we do eyelash extensions?

  1240. 45:12

    >> Mhm.

  1241. 45:13

    >> Maybe a different title.

  1242. 45:14

    >> Mhm.

  1243. 45:15

    >> You know, this whole sort of watering

  1244. 45:19

    down

  1245. 45:20

    like just don't forget to stay soft.

  1246. 45:23

    >> Yeah. Like while you're the hardest

  1247. 45:25

    warrior ever, don't forget to be a

  1248. 45:27

    little bit cute and soft because God

  1249. 45:29

    forbid you just step into your full

  1250. 45:33

    power.

  1251. 45:34

    >> Absolutely. And God forbid that you

  1252. 45:36

    don't turn me on.

  1253. 45:38

    >> That's right.

  1254. 45:39

    >> That you don't look sexy.

  1255. 45:40

    >> That's right.

  1256. 45:41

    >> And you know, it it it it sort of leads

  1257. 45:44

    into the whole thing of the value of

  1258. 45:46

    beauty,

  1259. 45:48

    >> you know.

  1260. 45:48

    >> That's right. I mean, I'm definitely

  1261. 45:50

    like at 60 years old, I feel fabulous

  1262. 45:55

    because I am one of those women. I got

  1263. 45:57

    that done and over with very very early

  1264. 46:00

    in life.

  1265. 46:01

    >> You know, I feel for the the beautiful

  1266. 46:04

    women who were younger and now they're

  1267. 46:06

    older and they walk in the room and no

  1268. 46:07

    one's looking at them.

  1269. 46:08

    >> Yeah. That's tough when be your beauty

  1270. 46:10

    is your number one currency because it

  1271. 46:11

    goes away fast.

  1272. 46:13

    >> Exactly.

  1273. 46:13

    >> It's really fickle. And but I will say

  1274. 46:16

    and you spoke about this when you were

  1275. 46:17

    doing the woman king like the way in

  1276. 46:20

    which you created this new relationship

  1277. 46:22

    to your body

  1278. 46:24

    >> in your 50s. I think a lot of women I

  1279. 46:26

    know a lot of women I know I speak for

  1280. 46:27

    myself you start to really take you

  1281. 46:29

    really kind of look and you say okay

  1282. 46:31

    this is my one body I really you know

  1283. 46:33

    the the ways in which I got to kind of

  1284. 46:36

    >> put it in the on the back burner in my

  1285. 46:39

    20s and 30s I really have to pay

  1286. 46:40

    attention to it now. And I've joked on

  1287. 46:42

    here like we got to eat 85 grams of

  1288. 46:45

    protein and we have to lift weights. But

  1289. 46:47

    you did that. You What What did you

  1290. 46:50

    learn about yourself when you were

  1291. 46:52

    training 5 hours a day? And

  1292. 46:54

    >> you know what, Amy? It was the first

  1293. 46:55

    time I could walk into a room with that

  1294. 46:59

    um um it it was a leather sort of shirt

  1295. 47:03

    I had on, armor that I had on, and so my

  1296. 47:06

    stomach was exposed. It was the first

  1297. 47:08

    time I can walk on the field and in a

  1298. 47:11

    room and totally be in my body.

  1299. 47:14

    >> You know, there there is something about

  1300. 47:16

    the female body, what you're sort of um

  1301. 47:19

    conditioned to believe about it, that

  1302. 47:21

    it's got to be beautiful, right? So,

  1303. 47:23

    it's got to be thin and beautiful.

  1304. 47:26

    >> And the why and the how it has to be

  1305. 47:29

    beautiful is always tied to male

  1306. 47:33

    desiraability.

  1307. 47:34

    >> That's right. It's never tied to being

  1308. 47:37

    capable.

  1309. 47:38

    >> It's tied to a shrinking.

  1310. 47:40

    >> Yeah. Like that.

  1311. 47:40

    >> Exactly. Shrinking and not being

  1312. 47:42

    capable, not being strong, not being,

  1313. 47:46

    you know,

  1314. 47:46

    >> it's never ours.

  1315. 47:48

    >> Yeah.

  1316. 47:49

    >> And so even in the practicing

  1317. 47:54

    I was going to lie a little bit.

  1318. 47:56

    I was going to lie a little bit.

  1319. 47:58

    >> I hope it was a little tiring. Like I

  1320. 47:59

    hope this is what the lie was. Okay.

  1321. 48:02

    >> This is what the lie was, Amy. cuz

  1322. 48:04

    >> Okay. Q music for negotiating

  1323. 48:07

    >> Q uh you know hit them up like Tupac.

  1324. 48:14

    >> I was going to say, you know, if you

  1325. 48:16

    know just to in in the in the practicing

  1326. 48:20

    cuz we would do an hour of

  1327. 48:21

    weightlifting, 30 minutes of running on

  1328. 48:24

    the treadmill at 10.0.

  1329. 48:25

    >> Oh no. I've done 10.0. That is a

  1330. 48:29

    disaster.

  1331. 48:30

    >> It's it and it was a disaster. 30

  1332. 48:32

    minutes straight of 10.0 like was it

  1333. 48:35

    sprints or

  1334. 48:36

    >> sprints?

  1335. 48:36

    >> God damn it.

  1336. 48:37

    >> And then three and a half hours. I mean

  1337. 48:39

    by the end I mean and you saw all these

  1338. 48:41

    young girls they'd have a little sweat

  1339. 48:43

    on their bodies. I would sweat out three

  1340. 48:45

    four shirts a day. So I would go to coro

  1341. 48:48

    for three and a half hours and you're

  1342. 48:50

    taking down

  1343. 48:52

    eight seven dudes at the same time.

  1344. 48:54

    Okay. Eight seven dudes. What I was

  1345. 48:57

    going to say is, you know, it was it was

  1346. 48:59

    so great because then I could really tap

  1347. 49:02

    into the part of me that I never tapped

  1348. 49:04

    into before. That's [ __ ]

  1349. 49:07

    >> I was always that girl that wanted to

  1350. 49:09

    kick someone's ass and probably did a

  1351. 49:12

    couple of times, but it gave me

  1352. 49:14

    permission to do it.

  1353. 49:16

    >> Yes.

  1354. 49:17

    >> And I mean I'm there was one guy the

  1355. 49:19

    huge 64

  1356. 49:22

    260.

  1357. 49:24

    I mean, come on. That's exciting.

  1358. 49:26

    >> And to make and and I felt like I could

  1359. 49:29

    do it.

  1360. 49:29

    >> Yeah. Yeah.

  1361. 49:30

    >> Now whether I could do it or not in real

  1362. 49:32

    life, who knows? But the feeling like I

  1363. 49:35

    could.

  1364. 49:36

    >> You have stood toe-to-toe with such

  1365. 49:37

    amazing actors. Denzel, you talked about

  1366. 49:40

    Merrill. You worked with Chadwick. When

  1367. 49:42

    you're in that zone with people that

  1368. 49:44

    good and you're like, what is it? I

  1369. 49:47

    guess I guess I'm like I'm asking you

  1370. 49:49

    like what's it like to be in the World

  1371. 49:51

    Series?

  1372. 49:52

    >> Exactly. and and not piss in your pants.

  1373. 49:56

    >> Um well, with Merrill, that was it.

  1374. 49:59

    >> Yeah. I mean, she's the best. She's so

  1375. 50:01

    great and funny

  1376. 50:02

    >> and funny and cool

  1377. 50:04

    >> and cool. It's like you could be that

  1378. 50:07

    great and that cool.

  1379. 50:09

    >> Well, you're like that, too. That's why

  1380. 50:10

    you guys are so good. Cuz you're

  1381. 50:12

    >> you're so good that you don't have to be

  1382. 50:16

    [ __ ] because you know how good you

  1383. 50:18

    are.

  1384. 50:18

    >> And you know there's [ __ ] out there.

  1385. 50:20

    >> Yes. because they're not that good,

  1386. 50:22

    >> you know, or I should say they're not

  1387. 50:24

    being led by insecurity. So you you and

  1388. 50:26

    Maril meet, of course you guys are

  1389. 50:28

    friends and like respect each other cuz

  1390. 50:29

    you're both so but I followed her

  1391. 50:32

    everywhere

  1392. 50:33

    >> on set.

  1393. 50:35

    >> On set I mean to the point where it was

  1394. 50:37

    like you know when you say to yourself,

  1395. 50:40

    okay, tomorrow I'm not going to do that

  1396. 50:42

    because I don't think it made her

  1397. 50:44

    >> it didn't make her feel comfortable. Cuz

  1398. 50:46

    at one point she would never admit this.

  1399. 50:49

    She probably doesn't remember it, but

  1400. 50:50

    she was going to set and I was trying to

  1401. 50:53

    keep her from going to set

  1402. 50:55

    >> cuz I was too excited. So I was like,

  1403. 50:57

    "So, how's it going?" She was like, "Oh,

  1404. 51:00

    good. So, I'll see you later." She was

  1405. 51:01

    going up the stairs and then I was like,

  1406. 51:03

    "So, so it's going good, right?"

  1407. 51:06

    >> So, so the day was really good and you

  1408. 51:08

    could, you know, when someone's trying

  1409. 51:09

    to do something and you're stopping them

  1410. 51:11

    from doing it and they don't feel like

  1411. 51:13

    they don't want to be rude to you by

  1412. 51:15

    going, "Shut the [ __ ] up. I got to get

  1413. 51:16

    to set." So she was being really nice

  1414. 51:18

    and I said, "Okay, so I'll see you

  1415. 51:20

    later, right?" So I work next week. So I

  1416. 51:23

    work next week and you know, she was

  1417. 51:24

    like, "Yeah, yeah." So that was the

  1418. 51:27

    first day and then I was like, "I'm not

  1419. 51:29

    going to do that tomorrow." So I'm not

  1420. 51:31

    going to do that tomorrow. I went back

  1421. 51:33

    tomorrow.

  1422. 51:34

    >> Oh yeah. I mean,

  1423. 51:35

    >> and we're SAT WE'RE SITTING THERE and

  1424. 51:38

    then I'm staring at her

  1425. 51:40

    >> and I'm really shy.

  1426. 51:42

    >> She's not that shy. She's sort of shy,

  1427. 51:44

    but not that shy. So then I don't

  1428. 51:47

    because I'm I'm not good with small

  1429. 51:48

    talk.

  1430. 51:49

    >> Mhm.

  1431. 51:50

    >> And I go longest pause and then I said,

  1432. 51:54

    "Um, can I get you some tea?"

  1433. 51:58

    And she said, she said, "No, baby. No,

  1434. 52:01

    you don't have to get me any tea." And I

  1435. 52:03

    was like, "Okay."

  1436. 52:07

    So I couldn't think of anything else. I

  1437. 52:10

    kept staring, staring, and you could

  1438. 52:12

    tell, you know, when you stare, you

  1439. 52:13

    could tell she was really trying to be

  1440. 52:15

    gracious. And the only thing I could

  1441. 52:17

    come up with, I was like, "You got

  1442. 52:20

    beautiful skin."

  1443. 52:23

    I know.

  1444. 52:24

    >> I actually said that to Meryill Street.

  1445. 52:26

    >> I love you.

  1446. 52:28

    >> And then finally my husband who was

  1447. 52:30

    like, "B, did you tell that woman that

  1448. 52:33

    you love her work? YOU DIDN'T TELL THAT

  1449. 52:35

    WOMAN YOU LOVE HER WORK?" I SAID, "WELL,

  1450. 52:37

    JULIUS, I just she's when I get to that

  1451. 52:40

    damn set, I'm going to tell her that I

  1452. 52:41

    love her work and I'm going to tell her

  1453. 52:43

    that that she is your favorite actress."

  1454. 52:46

    I said, "Don't say that."

  1455. 52:48

    >> And Julius finally came to the set and

  1456. 52:50

    he said, "Viola loves you so much and

  1457. 52:53

    you are so beautiful, Merrill. You are

  1458. 52:55

    such a wonderful actress." She blushed.

  1459. 52:59

    She was like, "Oh, Julius."

  1460. 53:01

    >> Well, I have met Julius and Julius is

  1461. 53:05

    something else.

  1462. 53:06

    Do you find I mean I know I I find that

  1463. 53:08

    sometimes in my life people want me to

  1464. 53:11

    be funny and they're a little

  1465. 53:12

    disappointed when I'm not quite bringing

  1466. 53:14

    it.

  1467. 53:14

    >> Do you feel conversely that sometimes

  1468. 53:17

    people assume that you're going to like

  1469. 53:20

    exchange in something very deep and

  1470. 53:23

    serious with them and you just want to

  1471. 53:25

    laugh

  1472. 53:26

    >> all the time?

  1473. 53:28

    >> Because I feel like what I'm learning

  1474. 53:30

    about you is that you're you love you

  1475. 53:33

    love to joke around and laugh. Oh, but I

  1476. 53:36

    mean I can't really even joke around

  1477. 53:37

    like I want cuz I'm

  1478. 53:39

    >> dirty with it.

  1479. 53:41

    >> Fantastic. Why can't you do that?

  1480. 53:42

    >> Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,

  1481. 53:45

    no, no. You don't want to go down like

  1482. 53:46

    that Amy.

  1483. 53:48

    >> No, you don't want to go down. I'm dirty

  1484. 53:50

    with it.

  1485. 53:50

    >> Who did you love grow? Like, who were

  1486. 53:51

    your

  1487. 53:52

    >> Oh, the first one.

  1488. 53:54

    >> Who did you love?

  1489. 53:55

    >> Mom's Maple.

  1490. 53:56

    >> Oh, yeah.

  1491. 53:56

    >> And she was dirty dirty.

  1492. 53:58

    >> So dirty.

  1493. 53:59

    >> I would play that album over and over

  1494. 54:01

    again. Flip Wilson over and over again.

  1495. 54:04

    Red Fox.

  1496. 54:05

    >> Red Fox over and over. And the dirtier

  1497. 54:08

    the better.

  1498. 54:08

    >> Yeah.

  1499. 54:09

    >> We can't go there.

  1500. 54:10

    >> Yeah. So funny.

  1501. 54:12

    >> Yeah. Yeah.

  1502. 54:13

    >> So, you would play those records when

  1503. 54:15

    you were

  1504. 54:15

    >> Oh, I would.

  1505. 54:16

    >> Yeah.

  1506. 54:16

    >> And you know why too? Because they told

  1507. 54:19

    stories.

  1508. 54:20

    >> Mhm.

  1509. 54:21

    >> And come on, the original dirty of the

  1510. 54:24

    dirtiest of the funniest is Richard

  1511. 54:27

    Prior. Yeah. Whenever I feel down, I

  1512. 54:29

    play that live in concert

  1513. 54:32

    >> over and over and over again. Oh my god,

  1514. 54:35

    that's just the best. And he talks about

  1515. 54:37

    his kids one part where he talks about

  1516. 54:39

    his kids and how he doesn't know how to

  1517. 54:41

    swim. And every time he gets into the

  1518. 54:43

    pool, he's drowning. He's basically

  1519. 54:45

    drowning. And his KIDS ARE LIKE, "AH,

  1520. 54:47

    DADDY, YOU'RE SO FUNNY." And he's like,

  1521. 54:49

    "You [ __ ] I'm drowning." You

  1522. 54:52

    know, it's like I love that, you know.

  1523. 54:55

    >> Yeah. Okay. Now, I want to get to your

  1524. 54:57

    book before we finish because, you know,

  1525. 55:00

    your relationship to writing is an

  1526. 55:03

    interesting one to me. I mean, I'm sure

  1527. 55:04

    you have, you know, we talked about it

  1528. 55:06

    earlier, this idea of like when you're

  1529. 55:08

    acting and you're writing and you're

  1530. 55:09

    working with writers and what that kind

  1531. 55:11

    of writing looks like. And then there's

  1532. 55:12

    the different kind of version of writing

  1533. 55:14

    when you're writing a book, when you're

  1534. 55:16

    writing fiction. Um, and when you're

  1535. 55:19

    writing a memoir, which your memoir was

  1536. 55:21

    a huge hit, you won the Grammy. Uh that

  1537. 55:24

    was your EGOT was your um when you did

  1538. 55:28

    the recording of it when you read your

  1539. 55:29

    book on tape and that book came out a

  1540. 55:33

    while ago and I'm curious you know when

  1541. 55:35

    we write about our stories and then they

  1542. 55:37

    go out into the world and everybody gets

  1543. 55:39

    to kind of

  1544. 55:42

    >> um read them and process them. Have you

  1545. 55:45

    ever heard from anyone from your past

  1546. 55:48

    after that book came out?

  1547. 55:50

    >> I hear from various ones all the time.

  1548. 55:53

    my fourth grade teacher in fourth grade.

  1549. 55:56

    I I have the story in my book. That was

  1550. 55:58

    and I actually went back to my fourth

  1551. 56:00

    grade class too, the actual classroom,

  1552. 56:02

    >> but my fourth grade that was almost the

  1553. 56:06

    height of my dysfunction, my

  1554. 56:08

    dysfunctional life.

  1555. 56:09

    >> But in the book, um

  1556. 56:14

    it still has a lot of shame for me.

  1557. 56:16

    >> Um I would go to school, I would smell

  1558. 56:18

    so bad.

  1559. 56:20

    I mean, there were no words for it,

  1560. 56:23

    okay? And this teacher that I had that I

  1561. 56:27

    loved. I loved her, Mrs. Cody. She sent

  1562. 56:31

    pictures to my sister who was a school.

  1563. 56:35

    She was a school teacher in Central

  1564. 56:36

    Falls. She sent all these pictures that

  1565. 56:38

    she had saved of me.

  1566. 56:41

    >> Wow.

  1567. 56:41

    >> I have no pictures of my childhood. She

  1568. 56:44

    saved these pictures and she saved some

  1569. 56:46

    of my writings.

  1570. 56:48

    >> Wow. And in one of the pictures,

  1571. 56:53

    I was at a museum looking at this

  1572. 56:56

    sculpture and all the kids were behind

  1573. 56:58

    me who were in my class. But I was

  1574. 57:01

    looking at the sculpture and my mouth

  1575. 57:03

    was gapped open in awe.

  1576. 57:08

    And I thought to myself, you captured

  1577. 57:11

    something in me that I didn't know I had

  1578. 57:13

    in me. M

  1579. 57:15

    >> was already that when something was

  1580. 57:19

    beautiful, when something was created

  1581. 57:21

    that had

  1582. 57:22

    >> that I would have no connection to

  1583. 57:25

    otherwise, I saw it.

  1584. 57:28

    >> That was in one of the pictures.

  1585. 57:31

    And she told my sister that she never

  1586. 57:33

    forgot me as a student. And she was the

  1587. 57:36

    one who actually told me that I needed

  1588. 57:39

    to go to the nurse one day because I

  1589. 57:41

    smelled so bad.

  1590. 57:42

    >> That my mom had to get some soap and hot

  1591. 57:45

    water and you need to wash yourself cuz

  1592. 57:47

    the odor is too much.

  1593. 57:49

    >> She was a teacher who told me that

  1594. 57:51

    >> and I loved her. That's why it hurt so

  1595. 57:53

    bad.

  1596. 57:53

    >> Yeah.

  1597. 57:54

    >> See, once again, the paradox, right, the

  1598. 57:57

    paradox looking out for you,

  1599. 57:58

    >> but of feeling shamed. She's the one who

  1600. 58:01

    I felt shamed me. She didn't really

  1601. 58:03

    shame me.

  1602. 58:04

    >> Yeah. Do you know what I'm saying? But

  1603. 58:06

    that was a big one.

  1604. 58:06

    >> I mean, it feels like writing has been

  1605. 58:08

    something that's that's been a big thing

  1606. 58:10

    that you've wanted to do for a long

  1607. 58:12

    time. And then you write you're now

  1608. 58:14

    co-written a book with James Patterson.

  1609. 58:18

    It's on my shelf.

  1610. 58:19

    >> It's right here.

  1611. 58:20

    >> Judge Stone.

  1612. 58:21

    >> Judge Stone book is out.

  1613. 58:23

    >> Yeah.

  1614. 58:24

    >> What is What is it about?

  1615. 58:26

    >> It is about a 13-year-old girl named

  1616. 58:29

    Nova who has an abortion. who gets raped

  1617. 58:32

    and has an abortion in um Union Springs,

  1618. 58:36

    Alabama. Alabama has the strictest

  1619. 58:38

    abortion laws and the doctor who

  1620. 58:42

    performs the abortion is now on trial

  1621. 58:45

    for murder. So, it is definitely to kill

  1622. 58:49

    a mockingb bird. It is just it's

  1623. 58:52

    pulsating. It's all of those things. But

  1624. 58:56

    you know even like to kill a mockingb

  1625. 58:58

    bird which you know the courtroom was

  1626. 59:00

    pulsating you know Tom Robinson Mayella

  1627. 59:03

    Yuo it was just just heartstoppping

  1628. 59:06

    right but the characters within it

  1629. 59:11

    >> were just as memorable as the trial.

  1630. 59:14

    That's what I feel about uh you know

  1631. 59:16

    Judge Stone and James Patterson is like

  1632. 59:19

    >> you can do anything and

  1633. 59:21

    >> no I can't I can't you know

  1634. 59:23

    >> tell us what you can't do. Oh, I can't

  1635. 59:27

    bake.

  1636. 59:28

    >> Okay.

  1637. 59:28

    >> You know,

  1638. 59:29

    >> you could probably learn.

  1639. 59:30

    >> I have a 15year-old at home. It's like

  1640. 59:33

    it's Trust me. And you're probably out

  1641. 59:36

    of the teen years.

  1642. 59:37

    >> No, I'm right in the middle of it. I got

  1643. 59:38

    a 15 and a 17-y old.

  1644. 59:40

    >> Oh, I have a 15-year-old.

  1645. 59:41

    >> Yeah. There's no easier way to feel

  1646. 59:42

    uncool than when your kid, your teen kid

  1647. 59:46

    looks at you like, "What?

  1648. 59:47

    >> I'm not cool."

  1649. 59:48

    >> No. But you're not supposed to be cool

  1650. 59:50

    to your kid. If you're cool to your kid,

  1651. 59:52

    that's weird.

  1652. 59:52

    >> I know. I think so. It's like I'm not

  1653. 59:56

    >> Nobody wants to be the parent that like

  1654. 59:58

    hangs with their kids and like their

  1655. 1:00:01

    kids are like, "Wow, your mom is so

  1656. 1:00:02

    cool." Like,

  1657. 1:00:04

    >> I don't want to go to an escape room.

  1658. 1:00:06

    >> No,

  1659. 1:00:07

    >> you don't have to. You don't have to.

  1660. 1:00:09

    >> I tried to. That's why I jumped out of a

  1661. 1:00:11

    plane. I tell people I jumped out of a

  1662. 1:00:13

    plane.

  1663. 1:00:15

    Aahu, um, Hawaii. I jumped out of a

  1664. 1:00:18

    plane to be cool for my daughter. I did.

  1665. 1:00:21

    Amy,

  1666. 1:00:22

    >> what year was this? Just recently,

  1667. 1:00:24

    >> I was 57. 56. 56. 57. So, I'm 60 now.

  1668. 1:00:30

    Yeah.

  1669. 1:00:30

    >> What did you um think of jump What What

  1670. 1:00:33

    was it like? Did you Was it awful? Seems

  1671. 1:00:35

    awful. It seems It truly seems like

  1672. 1:00:38

    awful.

  1673. 1:00:39

    >> Have you ever So, obviously jumping out

  1674. 1:00:41

    of a plane.

  1675. 1:00:42

    >> I jumped out of a plane because we had

  1676. 1:00:45

    the most awesome nanny. When I say

  1677. 1:00:48

    awesome, it's like everyone else's great

  1678. 1:00:50

    nanny and ours was like God. Okay.

  1679. 1:00:55

    >> She jumped out of the plane.

  1680. 1:00:59

    >> You know, you're you're jumping in

  1681. 1:01:01

    tandem with someone who's talking like

  1682. 1:01:03

    >> I was going to say you're jumping in

  1683. 1:01:04

    tandem with someone you met like

  1684. 1:01:05

    yesterday.

  1685. 1:01:06

    >> Yesterday. And he was like, "So, B, you

  1686. 1:01:08

    know, you're a great actress. So, what

  1687. 1:01:10

    do you like better, theater or film?"

  1688. 1:01:11

    And I would say, "Shut the [ __ ] up."

  1689. 1:01:13

    Like focus Zack.

  1690. 1:01:17

    My favorite movie is the parachute

  1691. 1:01:19

    working

  1692. 1:01:22

    >> and look at that's yummy mommy volcano

  1693. 1:01:24

    right there and that erupted in I don't

  1694. 1:01:27

    [ __ ] want to get out of the volcano

  1695. 1:01:29

    and then they roll the curtain up and

  1696. 1:01:31

    they say okay

  1697. 1:01:32

    >> so let's go

  1698. 1:01:33

    >> that's cool I mean Violet that's badass

  1699. 1:01:37

    that you did that

  1700. 1:01:38

    >> I will never do it again although

  1701. 1:01:39

    although it was a terrific experience I

  1702. 1:01:42

    told my daughter as I was uh falling

  1703. 1:01:45

    down cuz she said, "Mama, if you die,

  1704. 1:01:47

    can I have your wigs and your money?"

  1705. 1:01:49

    So, I'm falling down.

  1706. 1:01:52

    So, I'm falling down. I'm falling down.

  1707. 1:01:54

    And I told her, "Don't listen to mama.

  1708. 1:01:57

    Don't listen to me." I think every cuss

  1709. 1:02:00

    word that I could possibly imagine. I

  1710. 1:02:04

    mean, it was coming out of my mouth. You

  1711. 1:02:06

    have no idea.

  1712. 1:02:10

    >> But I did it because of Molly.

  1713. 1:02:13

    >> I did it because of Molly. And you and

  1714. 1:02:15

    Julius, we talked about your husband a

  1715. 1:02:16

    little bit.

  1716. 1:02:18

    >> You guys have like when you do stuff

  1717. 1:02:21

    together and you um talk publicly

  1718. 1:02:24

    together, you laugh a lot. You laugh a

  1719. 1:02:27

    lot and you laugh,

  1720. 1:02:29

    >> Amy.

  1721. 1:02:30

    >> You have fun. I mean, look, your your

  1722. 1:02:32

    relationship is very aspirational. And I

  1723. 1:02:34

    don't want to project upon it cuz I I I

  1724. 1:02:36

    know everyone's relationship is their

  1725. 1:02:38

    own private

  1726. 1:02:39

    >> you know a relationship is like a

  1727. 1:02:41

    country with its own set of rules and

  1728. 1:02:42

    you don't really know it unless you live

  1729. 1:02:44

    there

  1730. 1:02:45

    >> but what it seems like is you have the

  1731. 1:02:47

    best relationship ever and you have a

  1732. 1:02:48

    wonderful marriage and beautiful loving

  1733. 1:02:50

    partner.

  1734. 1:02:51

    >> It's fantastic. It drives me crazy. I

  1735. 1:02:53

    drive him crazy. I want to hit him but

  1736. 1:02:55

    then I the love of my life.

  1737. 1:02:58

    >> Yeah.

  1738. 1:02:59

    >> You know he's just the love of my life

  1739. 1:03:01

    you know. And when I say laugh,

  1740. 1:03:05

    >> no Amy, I mean just he is a character

  1741. 1:03:10

    and every time he comes up and you know

  1742. 1:03:12

    in public, you know, he puts, you know,

  1743. 1:03:14

    the brave, the mask and everything on,

  1744. 1:03:16

    but the guy is absolutely hysterical. I

  1745. 1:03:20

    mean,

  1746. 1:03:21

    >> and and does the oddest things that for

  1747. 1:03:24

    me I'm there's a little bit of me that

  1748. 1:03:27

    says, "Is he crazy?"

  1749. 1:03:29

    He could be crazy. I mean, he lost his

  1750. 1:03:32

    salt. He couldn't find his saltine

  1751. 1:03:35

    crackers one day.

  1752. 1:03:36

    >> That's impressive.

  1753. 1:03:37

    >> Saltine damn crackers. Yeah. And he was

  1754. 1:03:40

    convinced that someone broke into our

  1755. 1:03:42

    house, was living in our attic, and had

  1756. 1:03:45

    stolen his saltine crackers.

  1757. 1:03:48

    And so I was like,

  1758. 1:03:51

    why are you walking around the house

  1759. 1:03:53

    with a baseball bat? B, there's so I

  1760. 1:03:56

    can't find my saltine crackers. B.

  1761. 1:03:59

    I said, "Well, did you look in the

  1762. 1:04:01

    cabinet behind the tuna fish?" Yeah. And

  1763. 1:04:03

    and there there was four packages, V.

  1764. 1:04:06

    Now there's only three packages left. V.

  1765. 1:04:09

    There's someone in that attic. And

  1766. 1:04:11

    here's for me what for me is about love.

  1767. 1:04:14

    I was like, "Oh my god. I He's crazy.

  1768. 1:04:20

    There's someone living in the attic."

  1769. 1:04:24

    And what did I do? I grabbed my baseball

  1770. 1:04:26

    bat, too. And we looked for the person

  1771. 1:04:28

    together in the attic until I finally

  1772. 1:04:30

    found the saltine crackers there, the

  1773. 1:04:32

    tuna fish.

  1774. 1:04:33

    >> And it's just like I love it. I do.

  1775. 1:04:39

    >> I mean, your love is very,

  1776. 1:04:41

    >> you know, and then talking about his mom

  1777. 1:04:44

    and just the stories. He's another one

  1778. 1:04:46

    that could tell. Well, we tal we talked

  1779. 1:04:48

    to him before your interview and I want

  1780. 1:04:50

    you to know he's the only spouse we've

  1781. 1:04:52

    talked to

  1782. 1:04:53

    >> uh in the you know we we do a thing

  1783. 1:04:55

    where we kind of talk well behind

  1784. 1:04:56

    somebody's back before they come in and

  1785. 1:04:58

    I get a question to ask our guest and

  1786. 1:05:01

    Julius was the only spouse we wanted to

  1787. 1:05:03

    talk to because we were like first of

  1788. 1:05:05

    all they seem like they really like each

  1789. 1:05:07

    other. Um um and but he he he spoke so

  1790. 1:05:11

    beautifully of course about you Viola,

  1791. 1:05:13

    but he also speaks to a bigger idea of

  1792. 1:05:16

    what women a lot of women yearn for and

  1793. 1:05:20

    hope for which is that somebody really

  1794. 1:05:22

    sees them like somebody sees them in

  1795. 1:05:24

    real time and celebrates their wins.

  1796. 1:05:27

    >> Oh yeah.

  1797. 1:05:28

    >> He does.

  1798. 1:05:29

    >> He does. You seem like you do that for

  1799. 1:05:31

    each other.

  1800. 1:05:32

    >> Oh yeah, totally. And again, a simple

  1801. 1:05:34

    thing to say, but but sometimes hard to

  1802. 1:05:36

    find like that. Do you think that is the

  1803. 1:05:39

    secret to why you have been together so

  1804. 1:05:41

    long is the way you do that for each

  1805. 1:05:43

    other?

  1806. 1:05:44

    >> You know, by the time I met Julius, I

  1807. 1:05:46

    absolutely understood what love is.

  1808. 1:05:49

    >> You know, first of all, I thought he was

  1809. 1:05:50

    cute. You know, I thought he had a tight

  1810. 1:05:53

    ass. I'm not going to lie to you, Amy.

  1811. 1:05:54

    >> Yeah. Don't

  1812. 1:05:56

    >> Yeah, he had a tight ass. He was a

  1813. 1:05:57

    football player.

  1814. 1:05:59

    >> You guys were actors on a set. He was

  1815. 1:06:01

    handing you blood. You were in a hot

  1816. 1:06:03

    nurse's outfit.

  1817. 1:06:04

    >> Yeah.

  1818. 1:06:05

    >> And I was like, he's really cute. And I

  1819. 1:06:07

    was really lonely.

  1820. 1:06:09

    >> And um

  1821. 1:06:10

    >> so that was it, of course. I mean, I

  1822. 1:06:13

    just with him it was. And I prayed for a

  1823. 1:06:15

    football player type dude, you know, and

  1824. 1:06:18

    it was him.

  1825. 1:06:19

    >> Yeah. And um but you know what got me

  1826. 1:06:23

    with him is he told me his story

  1827. 1:06:28

    >> cuz he's a talker but he told me his

  1828. 1:06:30

    whole story from the giddy up.

  1829. 1:06:32

    >> Cool.

  1830. 1:06:33

    >> Everything good and bad.

  1831. 1:06:34

    >> Straight no chaser.

  1832. 1:06:36

    >> You know he raised his kids on his own.

  1833. 1:06:39

    He's been married. You know all of those

  1834. 1:06:41

    things. It just and for me it opened me

  1835. 1:06:44

    up.

  1836. 1:06:45

    >> He's just a dude. He's he's been wired

  1837. 1:06:48

    right. He he has

  1838. 1:06:50

    >> well he has

  1839. 1:06:52

    three really weird questions for me to

  1840. 1:06:54

    ask you.

  1841. 1:06:57

    I know he's great in every way but I

  1842. 1:06:59

    don't understand these questions.

  1843. 1:07:03

    >> Julius one of them is tell ask her about

  1844. 1:07:06

    Zouri.

  1845. 1:07:09

    Who is Zouri? And can I Google it?

  1846. 1:07:12

    Because Julius was talking about a TV

  1847. 1:07:13

    show that he grew up with. I've never

  1848. 1:07:15

    heard of.

  1849. 1:07:15

    >> Power XL5.

  1850. 1:07:17

    >> What? Oh no. Amy.

  1851. 1:07:19

    >> Zouri.

  1852. 1:07:20

    >> Amy. It's a cartoon with puppets that he

  1853. 1:07:23

    watched when he was a kid.

  1854. 1:07:24

    >> Wow.

  1855. 1:07:25

    >> Zi. Do you see Zony?

  1856. 1:07:26

    >> Hold on. Z U N I.

  1857. 1:07:29

    >> Okay.

  1858. 1:07:30

    >> You see Z now

  1859. 1:07:31

    >> with the giant head.

  1860. 1:07:33

    >> Yeah. You see that?

  1861. 1:07:33

    >> Let's see. Let's see. Let's see.

  1862. 1:07:35

    >> And you did you pressed in the images of

  1863. 1:07:36

    it.

  1864. 1:07:37

    >> Let's see. Images. See where Zouri?

  1865. 1:07:40

    >> Okay. Zouri. Z O O N I.

  1866. 1:07:44

    >> Oh, Z O N I. That's why I a classic

  1867. 1:07:47

    spelling something wrong

  1868. 1:07:48

    >> for you listeners. Zouri looks like

  1869. 1:07:51

    >> Z who Zouri look No, I'm going to tell

  1870. 1:07:53

    you who Zouri look like.

  1871. 1:07:57

    >> We were laying in bed and Julia said,

  1872. 1:07:59

    "V, you know who you look like was soon

  1873. 1:08:02

    as I met you, I was like, she make me

  1874. 1:08:04

    feel all warm and fuzzy inside. She

  1875. 1:08:07

    remind me of somebody I know." And then

  1876. 1:08:09

    I thought about it. Zouri, you look like

  1877. 1:08:13

    Zouri. That's who you are. V. Zoney. And

  1878. 1:08:16

    that's the This is the show that he

  1879. 1:08:17

    would watch every Saturday. He was the

  1880. 1:08:20

    only one in his family who wanted to

  1881. 1:08:21

    watch it.

  1882. 1:08:22

    >> I can't believe the show. It looks like

  1883. 1:08:23

    it's Dolls and Puppets.

  1884. 1:08:25

    >> Dolls and Puppets. And he was the only

  1885. 1:08:27

    one who wanted to watch it. None of his

  1886. 1:08:28

    brothers and sisters wanted to watch it.

  1887. 1:08:30

    They say, "Mom, uh, Julius, he want to

  1888. 1:08:33

    watch. We don't want to watch Zoney."

  1889. 1:08:35

    And his mom would say, "LET THAT LET

  1890. 1:08:37

    THAT DAMN BOY WATCH YOUR ZONEY. THAT'S

  1891. 1:08:40

    ALL YOU TALK ABOUT, LELY. Is Zooni.

  1892. 1:08:42

    Zoney Zoney. DAMN ZONEY. WATCH THAT damn

  1893. 1:08:44

    Zoney and get your ass out of the house

  1894. 1:08:46

    after you watch that Zonyi. So Zouri, I

  1895. 1:08:49

    remind him of Zonyi. Big lips and big

  1896. 1:08:51

    eyes.

  1897. 1:08:52

    >> It's like almost like a little ferret

  1898. 1:08:54

    meets a sloth meets a

  1899. 1:08:56

    >> Amy. No, Amy.

  1900. 1:08:58

    >> It's cute though. Zi messed up. No,

  1901. 1:09:00

    Zoney is messed up.

  1902. 1:09:01

    >> I call him Ferdinand cuz he looks

  1903. 1:09:03

    exactly like Ferdinand. We we name Yeah,

  1904. 1:09:06

    we name people. You look just like

  1905. 1:09:08

    Ferdinand.

  1906. 1:09:11

    Okay. The other question he wanted me to

  1907. 1:09:13

    ask you is ask her about um Shadow of a

  1908. 1:09:17

    Gunman.

  1909. 1:09:19

    >> He said he's setting you up for some

  1910. 1:09:21

    stories.

  1911. 1:09:22

    >> Oh, he's setting me up. It was one of

  1912. 1:09:24

    our first dates. He said, "V, you want

  1913. 1:09:26

    to come?" If you if you know him, you

  1914. 1:09:28

    would know that this is a great

  1915. 1:09:30

    imitation of Julius V, one of my friends

  1916. 1:09:33

    is doing Shadow of a Gunman. You know

  1917. 1:09:35

    that play? You know that Irish play

  1918. 1:09:37

    Seaun O Casey Shadow of a Gunman in some

  1919. 1:09:40

    small theater off Abbott Kenny Boulevard

  1920. 1:09:42

    in Santa Monica. So we go to see Shadow

  1921. 1:09:46

    of a Gunman. And I'm walking in going,

  1922. 1:09:47

    "Oh, we're going to go see some

  1923. 1:09:49

    theater." And so we go to this theater.

  1924. 1:09:51

    We walk in and I'm like, "Okay, let's

  1925. 1:09:53

    sit in the front." 99 seats. No, no

  1926. 1:09:56

    one's at the theater. So I'm said,

  1927. 1:09:57

    "Let's let's sit in the front." He was

  1928. 1:09:59

    like, "Uh-uh. We ain't sitting in the

  1929. 1:10:00

    damn front. Let's sit all the way in the

  1930. 1:10:02

    back. Let's sit up there IN THE BACK." I

  1931. 1:10:04

    was like, "But Julius, we're all the way

  1932. 1:10:06

    in the back." He said, "V, let's sit up

  1933. 1:10:08

    in the back." We sit up in the back.

  1934. 1:10:10

    He's got the chair near the wall. As

  1935. 1:10:12

    soon as the curtains go up, he's dead

  1936. 1:10:15

    asleep. The only reason why he wanted to

  1937. 1:10:18

    sit in the wall is to take a nap all

  1938. 1:10:20

    throughout the play. And the only time

  1939. 1:10:21

    he woke up is when he thought some sex

  1940. 1:10:23

    scene was going to happen. He woke up

  1941. 1:10:25

    for two seconds. He woke up for two

  1942. 1:10:27

    seconds thinking he was going to see

  1943. 1:10:29

    some good goodus, as we call it, and

  1944. 1:10:32

    nothing happened. It was the worst

  1945. 1:10:33

    production in the world. And oh my god.

  1946. 1:10:37

    And then afterwards he went up to his

  1947. 1:10:39

    friend and he said, "I love that

  1948. 1:10:41

    performance.

  1949. 1:10:43

    >> You were f and you know when you did

  1950. 1:10:45

    that thing that thing you did?" I was

  1951. 1:10:47

    like, "Julius, you slept through that

  1952. 1:10:49

    whole damn performance."

  1953. 1:10:54

    >> Well, are you guys watching, listening?

  1954. 1:10:56

    Are you Are you What What's making you

  1955. 1:10:58

    laugh these days? Where do you get your

  1956. 1:11:00

    comedy?

  1957. 1:11:01

    >> In bed. Yes. With each other. With each

  1958. 1:11:04

    other. It sounds like

  1959. 1:11:05

    >> Oh my god. With his imitations.

  1960. 1:11:08

    I mean, no. Amy, like I mean just

  1961. 1:11:12

    absolutely hysterical.

  1962. 1:11:14

    >> Yeah. It's so

  1963. 1:11:15

    >> I'm telling you,

  1964. 1:11:16

    >> it's so fun to hear how you guys like to

  1965. 1:11:18

    play.

  1966. 1:11:19

    >> Oh, yeah.

  1967. 1:11:20

    >> Like it's like it really feels like

  1968. 1:11:22

    there's like young versions of you, like

  1969. 1:11:24

    healed young versions of you.

  1970. 1:11:25

    >> I mean,

  1971. 1:11:26

    >> together.

  1972. 1:11:28

    This morning we were just talking when I

  1973. 1:11:30

    first when we first got together and

  1974. 1:11:33

    they wanted me to do the play that I won

  1975. 1:11:34

    my first uh Tony Award for King Hadley.

  1976. 1:11:37

    >> Yeah.

  1977. 1:11:38

    >> But I remember when I was offered the

  1978. 1:11:40

    role

  1979. 1:11:41

    >> and I said I don't know if that role is

  1980. 1:11:44

    good enough for me. Julius, first of

  1981. 1:11:46

    all, can I just tell you I never talk

  1982. 1:11:48

    like this. So the fact that I remember

  1983. 1:11:50

    talking like this shows you that I'm

  1984. 1:11:52

    full of [ __ ]

  1985. 1:11:53

    >> So I said, Julius, that role is not good

  1986. 1:11:55

    enough for me. and he's sitting in the

  1987. 1:11:57

    living room. He's just listening to me.

  1988. 1:11:59

    He just got out of the shower. I said,

  1989. 1:12:01

    "This role is not good enough for me."

  1990. 1:12:03

    And you know, they think I'm going to go

  1991. 1:12:04

    to New York and they think I'm going to

  1992. 1:12:06

    do A, B, and C, and they think I'm going

  1993. 1:12:07

    to do that role. I need the lead role. I

  1994. 1:12:09

    need to get the lead role and blah blah

  1995. 1:12:11

    blah blah blah. And he's listening,

  1996. 1:12:12

    listening, listening. And then there's a

  1997. 1:12:14

    pause. And I said, "So, what do you

  1998. 1:12:16

    think, Julius?" He said, "This what I

  1999. 1:12:19

    think, V. You need to take your ass to

  2000. 1:12:22

    New York and you need to do that damn

  2001. 1:12:24

    play because here's the thing. you ain't

  2002. 1:12:26

    got no damn job and we ain't and we and

  2003. 1:12:29

    we not bringing in any damn money. So,

  2004. 1:12:31

    you need to go on and take your ass to

  2005. 1:12:32

    to New York and do that play. And we

  2006. 1:12:35

    talk about that all the time.

  2007. 1:12:38

    >> You know, those moments,

  2008. 1:12:40

    >> you know, of when I told him for the

  2009. 1:12:42

    first time that I had the most horrific

  2010. 1:12:44

    credit.

  2011. 1:12:45

    >> Yeah.

  2012. 1:12:46

    >> And I was about to cry. I said my credit

  2013. 1:12:49

    score was 500. And I kept that as a

  2014. 1:12:52

    secret because he was so organized and

  2015. 1:12:55

    together and responsible,

  2016. 1:12:57

    >> you know. And I said, "Julius,

  2017. 1:13:01

    >> I have to tell you something." He said,

  2018. 1:13:02

    "Okay, V, go ahead. Tell me."

  2019. 1:13:05

    >> I said, "Julius,

  2020. 1:13:09

    I have bad credit."

  2021. 1:13:11

    And he said, "I knew your black ass had

  2022. 1:13:13

    bad credit from the moment I met you. I

  2023. 1:13:15

    could tell by the way you dressed and

  2024. 1:13:17

    everything, you were all over the damn

  2025. 1:13:19

    place. That's okay. I know you starting

  2026. 1:13:21

    to cry. Come over here. We use my

  2027. 1:13:22

    credit. Don't worry about it. I knew

  2028. 1:13:24

    your black ass had bad credit

  2029. 1:13:26

    >> and that was it. Like moments like that

  2030. 1:13:28

    of levity, but also

  2031. 1:13:30

    >> levity

  2032. 1:13:31

    >> levity of

  2033. 1:13:32

    >> safety.

  2034. 1:13:33

    >> Safety of connection of

  2035. 1:13:36

    >> you know the the freedom that I had to

  2036. 1:13:39

    tell him I had bad credit, but but also

  2037. 1:13:42

    how he helped me build from there. Yeah,

  2038. 1:13:45

    >> that's the thing.

  2039. 1:13:46

    >> Yeah,

  2040. 1:13:47

    >> that was my big thing. I finally found

  2041. 1:13:49

    it.

  2042. 1:13:50

    Someone who makes your life better.

  2043. 1:13:52

    >> That's love.

  2044. 1:13:54

    >> I think so.

  2045. 1:13:55

    >> Yeah. That's a that's that's what a

  2046. 1:13:56

    healthy relationship looks like. And a

  2047. 1:13:58

    tight ass and a

  2048. 1:14:02

    >> to end our convo today. What's the best

  2049. 1:14:05

    thing about being in your 60s? It's the

  2050. 1:14:07

    next decade up for me. And I mean, I've

  2051. 1:14:10

    been loving my 50s more than my 40s and

  2052. 1:14:12

    more and more and more. What what what

  2053. 1:14:14

    what's what are you loving about your

  2054. 1:14:16

    60s?

  2055. 1:14:18

    in your 60s, your life is yours.

  2056. 1:14:22

    >> That's the best part of it. Your life is

  2057. 1:14:25

    yours. You realize that, you know, it's

  2058. 1:14:28

    it's a quote that it's it's been running

  2059. 1:14:31

    through my mind is I know it's sort of

  2060. 1:14:34

    morbid, but on your last day on earth,

  2061. 1:14:38

    the definition of hell is your last day

  2062. 1:14:40

    on earth, who you became

  2063. 1:14:44

    meets the person you could have become.

  2064. 1:14:48

    I feel that that's 60s, man.

  2065. 1:14:52

    >> The 60s is I'm going to become that

  2066. 1:14:55

    woman

  2067. 1:14:56

    >> because all that [ __ ] that I was

  2068. 1:14:58

    told in the past that, you know, I had

  2069. 1:15:00

    to make a certain amount of money or to

  2070. 1:15:02

    be smart enough or pretty enough or thin

  2071. 1:15:04

    enough or whatever, none of that sh

  2072. 1:15:07

    means [ __ ]

  2073. 1:15:08

    >> Yeah.

  2074. 1:15:09

    >> My life right now is about who I love,

  2075. 1:15:13

    who loves me, and what I leave behind.

  2076. 1:15:17

    That's it. It is clean.

  2077. 1:15:21

    >> And it's given me a certain level of

  2078. 1:15:22

    bravery too.

  2079. 1:15:24

    >> Now, if I could put some hormones in

  2080. 1:15:26

    there, that would be beautiful.

  2081. 1:15:29

    >> That's amazing. I It makes me really

  2082. 1:15:31

    look forward to what's ahead.

  2083. 1:15:32

    >> Yeah. Well, yeah. It's the other stuff,

  2084. 1:15:35

    too. But we won't talk about

  2085. 1:15:36

    >> We don't want to talk about that. Yeah.

  2086. 1:15:37

    We We're just We'll get We'll deal with

  2087. 1:15:39

    that when it comes. Yeah. Biola Davis, I

  2088. 1:15:43

    it means so much that you did this.

  2089. 1:15:44

    Thank you. I mean, thank you for being

  2090. 1:15:47

    here today and for talking to me and for

  2091. 1:15:49

    doing the show. It's I just

  2092. 1:15:53

    >> absolutely adore you and your work.

  2093. 1:15:55

    >> Well, I love you, too.

  2094. 1:15:56

    >> And I'd love to move in with you and

  2095. 1:15:57

    your husband. It won't be weird. I'll

  2096. 1:15:59

    just be a roommate. Um,

  2097. 1:16:00

    >> but don't go into the attic and don't

  2098. 1:16:02

    eat the saltine crackers because you may

  2099. 1:16:04

    get the baseball bat on your head. Don't

  2100. 1:16:06

    steal the crackers in your attic. And

  2101. 1:16:07

    I'm sorry I steal your husband's

  2102. 1:16:08

    saltines, but I get hungry up there, but

  2103. 1:16:10

    I want to listen to the two of you.

  2104. 1:16:12

    >> Um, thank you so much for coming. It

  2105. 1:16:14

    really means a lot.

  2106. 1:16:15

    >> Thank you, Amy.

  2107. 1:16:17

    >> Thank you so much, Viola. Um, you're

  2108. 1:16:20

    incredible and so good at what you do

  2109. 1:16:22

    and it was so wonderful to talk to you.

  2110. 1:16:25

    Thank you for for uh stopping by for

  2111. 1:16:28

    this Polar Plunge. Um, one person we

  2112. 1:16:32

    didn't get a chance to talk to Viola

  2113. 1:16:34

    about that I know she highly rever and

  2114. 1:16:37

    was deeply influenced by was the actress

  2115. 1:16:39

    Sicily Tyson. And so I just wanted to

  2116. 1:16:42

    say her name here because I know Viola

  2117. 1:16:44

    has spoken about her and got to work

  2118. 1:16:47

    with her on many projects including in

  2119. 1:16:49

    in How to Get Away with Murder. But do

  2120. 1:16:51

    yourself a favor. Um and um uh if you

  2121. 1:16:54

    haven't seen Sicily Tyson's work um it

  2122. 1:16:57

    spans an incredible

  2123. 1:16:59

    amount of time in in American history.

  2124. 1:17:02

    She lived to 96 and um many of us got to

  2125. 1:17:05

    know her when she um played um

  2126. 1:17:08

    Kaikinte's mother in Roots. Um but

  2127. 1:17:11

    Sicily at that point had been working on

  2128. 1:17:13

    on the stage for a very long time and

  2129. 1:17:15

    she's just been in an incredible wide

  2130. 1:17:19

    variety of television and movies and is

  2131. 1:17:21

    a really terrific actress and was one of

  2132. 1:17:25

    uh one of our Hollywood legends. So, um,

  2133. 1:17:30

    check her stuff out, I guess. Plunge

  2134. 1:17:32

    into Sicily Tyson and her work. And

  2135. 1:17:34

    Biola Davis, uh, we we love you. We

  2136. 1:17:37

    can't wait to see what you're doing

  2137. 1:17:39

    next. So, thanks so much for joining us

  2138. 1:17:41

    and see you soon. Bye.

  2139. 1:17:44

    You've been listening to Good Hang. The

  2140. 1:17:46

    executive producers for this show are

  2141. 1:17:48

    Bill Simmons, Jenna Weiss Berman, and

  2142. 1:17:49

    me, Amy Polar. The show is produced by

  2143. 1:17:52

    The Ringer and Paperkite. For the

  2144. 1:17:53

    Ringer, production by Jack Wilson, Cat

  2145. 1:17:56

    Spalain, Kaia McMullen, and Alia

  2146. 1:17:58

    Xanerys. For Paperkite, production by

  2147. 1:18:00

    Sam Green, Joel Levelvel, and Jenna

  2148. 1:18:03

    Weiss Berman. Original music by Amy

  2149. 1:18:05

    Miles.

  2150. 1:18:08

    really good. Hey

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