The Hamilton Spectator

Anthony Anderson keeps it real on black-ish

- SARAH RODMAN

Get Anthony Anderson going and the voluble “black-ish” star will keep on going. The actor, who also serves as a co-executive producer on the ABC series, received his third consecutiv­e Emmy nomination last month for portraying patriarch Dre Johnson.

We sat down with Anderson to talk about how “black-ish” manages to find a balance between serious, topical issues and laugh-out loud funny family moments and how the classic Norman Lear sitcoms of the ‘70s serve as a guide.

Q: I wanted to talk first about Dre’s evolution because I’m proud of Dre.

A: Has there been? Please share with me.

Q: For me, the real pivotal thing was when Zoey (Yara Shahidi) went to look at schools, and you and Bow were just like, “Oh, God, our baby is going away.” But eventually you came to your senses, which Dre often does, but I feel like he comes to his senses sooner and with more enlightenm­ent this season. Is that just natural evolution?

A: With that particular episode, he had to have some sensibilit­ies and be sensible and sensitive to, you know, his baby, his first-born, his best friend leaving the nest, and him not wanting her to fly far away from that nest. So yeah, it is a natural evolution.

Q: I love that, over the course of the show, you and series creator Kenya Barris have drawn from your real lives. Do you have to run those actual experience­s past your family before you write them into the show?

A: No, I don’t. And the reason I don’t have to run it by them is because my children, their private school is paid for because of our show, private high school and private college, and — Q: So they don’t get to complain. A: They don’t get to complain at all. I mean, they live a life of privilege because of “black-ish.” But there was one thing that I had to go out and explain and apologize for my son, and it was the sex talk episode where Bow walks in on Junior pleasuring himself. And, you know, since the show is based on my family and Kenya’s family, when my son went to school, he was ridiculed a bit, poked fun at a bit because of that. They’re like, “Oh, man, your mom caught you?” Well, then I had to go on and confess that it wasn’t actually my son who was caught; it was me who was caught at my son’s age. And so I just put it on him on the show.

Q: You guys have been able to walk a line between things that are absurd and wacky and even fantasy-type sequences with some really grave stuff, which, of course, Norman Lear was doing back in the ‘70s. Is that something that has to be tinkered with or does it come as naturally as the wackier elements?

A: It comes natural. We don’t have to tinker with much. No matter how wacky or how absurd we get, it’s all grounded by the actors that we have, you know, especially in Laurence Fishburne and Jenifer Lewis.

 ?? KELSEY MCNEAL, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Anthony Anderson has received his third consecutiv­e Emmy nomination for his role as Dre Johnson "black-ish."
KELSEY MCNEAL, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Anthony Anderson has received his third consecutiv­e Emmy nomination for his role as Dre Johnson "black-ish."

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