Windsor Star

ACTRESS HAVING DOUBLE THE FUN

Monae shines in pair of Oscar-nominated movies

- NEKESA MUMBI MOODY The Associated Press

The journey from pop star to serious thespian is littered with casualties. For every Justin Timberlake, there are big-name hitmakers whose movie careers have stalled with dubious and disappoint­ing results.

Which is just one reason Janelle Monae’s magical movie ride is so noteworthy. The Grammy-nominated performer made her acting debut last year with two films — and both are nominated for best picture at Sunday’s Academy Awards.

She first wowed critics in her small but pivotal role in Moonlight as Teresa, the nurturing girlfriend of a drug dealer who befriends an introverte­d, impoverish­ed boy who senses he is different.

But her biggest breakout would come with Hidden Figures, portraying one of three pioneering black women at NASA whose contributi­ons to the space race were critical, but overlooked by history. As engineer Mary Jackson, Monae shows a depth and range that wowed critics and proved she could hold her own along a star-studded cast.

Though Monae may be one of the biggest surprises of the Oscar season, the 31-year-old sees her acting ascension as part of her natural progressio­n as an artist (she studied acting for years).

“I always did both, and I consider myself not just an actor or a musician or singer, but an artist-storytelle­r, and my hope is to continue to tell untold, unique universal stories in unforgetta­ble ways,” said Monae. Monae’s career so far has certainly been unforgetta­ble. Her albums — a captivatin­g mix of funk, psychedeli­c soul, R&B and pop — have been critically lauded, and her electric stage presence recalls James Brown or Prince, who was a close friend and mentor. She’s a CoverGirl spokeswoma­n and a fashion muse known for her eclectic style: On this day, her hair was dotted with eye ornaments.

Space permeated Monae’s artistic world long before Hidden Figures — her alter ego was a futuristic android Cindi Mayweather, and on her last album, she paid tribute to Sally Ride, the first American woman to travel in space. She even dreamt of being an astronaut.

“I’ve been obsessed with space and sci-fi. I was obsessed and still am with Mae Jemison,” she said of the first black woman in space.

And yet Monae was unaware of the story of Jackson or the other central characters in Hidden Figures, based on Margot Lee Shetterly’s book of the same name.

Jackson was one of the black female “human computers” working for NASA in the segregated South; while the main character, Katherine Johnson (played by Taraji P. Henson) was responsibl­e for the mathematic­al formula that launched John Glenn into orbit, Jackson petitioned and won her case to study engineerin­g at an allwhite school to further her career.

“I thought it was a fictitious story,” she said. “Once I found out that these women in fact did exist, and they did contribute to the space race and were an integral part of helping us win the space race, I wanted to make sure that no other young boy or girl or American, human being, went through life without knowing these phenomenal, brilliant-minded women.”

Monae was cast as Jackson after the Oscar-nominated Henson and Oscar-winner Octavia Spencer (up for another Oscar for her portrayal of Dorothy Vaughan) were on board.

“We auditioned everyone, and we were having a hard time finding someone who had the fire of Mary Jackson,” said director Theodore Melfi. “And then in walks Janelle, who auditioned, and I think she was burning up inside herself. She’s such an activist and such a passionate and strong woman, she lit it up for us and did Mary Jackson so much justice and depth.”

We auditioned everyone, and we were having a hard time finding someone who had the fire of Mary Jackson. And then in walks Janelle.

 ?? AMY SUSSMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Janelle Monae had roles in Oscar-nominated films Hidden Figures and Moonlight.
AMY SUSSMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Janelle Monae had roles in Oscar-nominated films Hidden Figures and Moonlight.

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