Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Mary J. Blige’s latest triumphant chapter

‘Queen of Hip-Hop Soul’ plays queenpin in ‘Power Book II’

- By Greg Braxton

When Mary J. Blige had a brush with history recently, she almost missed the celebratio­n.

The singer-actress was not tuned in to the Democratic National Convention when Sen. Kamala Harris accepted the Democratic Party’s nomination for vice president, becoming the first woman of color officially nominated to a major party’s presidenti­al ticket. Just hours earlier, Blige had been busy promoting her latest endeavor, playing a ruthless crime boss in “Power Book II: Ghost,” the spinoff to Starz’s hit crime drama “Power.”

While Blige missed Harris delivering her rousing address — and the moment when former Vice President Joe Biden’s running mate waved to a giant screen of virtual viewers with Blige’s anthem “Work That” booming loudly as her exit music — she certainly heard about it. Quickly.

“I was busy, but then my phone started going crazy,” she said. “I had to rush everyone away so I could watch it. And the next day, it was all over the news. Wow, what a moment!”

The musical shout-out is clear evidence that Blige, who has been branded the “Queen of Hip-Hop Soul,” continues to be an influentia­l and powerful force in the entertainm­ent arena almost 30 years after her debut album, “What’s the 411?,” revolution­ized R&B music with its blend of hip-hop and soul. She marked another milestone in 2018 with the film “Mudbound,” becoming the first person nominated for Os

cars for acting and songwritin­g in the same year.

Her turn in “Power Book II: Ghost” is the latest triumphant chapter in a career that had previously been clouded by personal hardships and difficulti­es, including emotional trauma, addiction and divorce, but also defined by path-breaking success. Blige has always met those challenges head-on, using her music as catharsis for her pain and despair. That raw honesty has earned her millions of fans.

“Power Book II: Ghost,” which premiered last month, brings Blige together with longtime friend and former collaborat­or Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, who is one of the executive producers. Even before the curtain had come down on

“Power,” Blige, Jackson and “Power” creator Courtney Kemp had discussed developing a character for the singer.

“To be part of the ‘Power’ world is too good to be true,” said Blige. “Courtney and 50 wanted to have a story about a female queenpin.”

Blige plays Monet Stewart Tejada, the head of a vicious crime family. She’s fashioned her portrayal on “a combinatio­n of women trying to raise their families without men — not just queenpins, but singlepare­nt(ing) mothers, women with that survival mentality. By any means necessary doing what it takes to provide for their families. I know a lot of women like that — my mother, my aunt, friends.”

As an admirer of what she calls its authentici­ty, Blige said she eagerly leaped into the “Power” franchise: “It was easy to put this character into play because I know what ‘Power’ is about. I grew up in the inner city, in the projects. I’ve seen what it really is, and Courtney and 50 have been so brilliant in showing it.”

Kemp, already a “huge fan” of Blige, said via email that in crafting Monet, she “really wanted to write about motherhood when the stakes are life and death.” And Blige made it possible to write the character as “a boss and a mother at the same time,” because “every choice she makes as an actor is completely believable and true.”

“In many ways, she is the

soundtrack to my life,” Kemp added. “She is a survivor, an inspiratio­n and an all-around superhero to me and millions of fans — especially women. She is a tremendous actress with a ton of physical presence and power.”

“Power Book II: Ghost” is the first of several planned spinoffs for “Power,” around which Starz executives hope to establish a “cinematic universe” akin to those of “Star Trek’s” space travelers or Marvel’s caped superheroe­s.

The role of Monet is worlds away, literally, from Blige’s most recent regular TV role, as a time-traveling assassin named Cha-Cha in the Netflix series “The Umbrella Academy,” a darkly funny comic-book adventure following a group of adoptive siblings with special powers as they try to avert the apocalypse. It was her first major role after “Mudbound,” and she spoke highly of her experience filming the series — particular­ly because she had the chance to perform many of her own stunts.

“‘The Umbrella Academy’ was a beautiful challenge,” Blige said. “It was amazing to learn martial arts and learn how to shoot every gun. So many guns.”

With these roles, both under Netflix’s shingle and Starz’s, Blige continues her creative evolution, diving deeper into filmmaking while continuing her music endeavors. “Mudbound,” in which she played the suffering but resilient matriarch of a Black sharecropp­ing family, was as much a revelation for her as it was for audiences that marveled at her deglamoriz­ed appearance and understate­d performanc­e.

She is not allowing herself to be lulled by the rave reviews, feeling that she still needs to prove she belongs in the ranks of other honored Black actresses.

“The accolades and the two Oscar nomination­s put me in a position of humility in this field,” she said. “Now I have to work as hard as an Oscar-nominated actress. I have to be better than I was in ‘Mudbound’ and keep evolving and growing.”

Fans of Blige’s music will also have something to look forward to — a new album.

“It will be out this fall or winter,” she said. And unlike some of her previous projects, the new music will have a more optimistic tone.

“It’s about life, love, struggle, but mostly triumph,” she said. “Because I’m learning how to rejoice in the valleys and the droughts.”

 ?? MATT SAYLES/INVISION ?? “Power” creator and executive producer Courtney Kemp, left, and Mary J. Blige participat­e in a 2019 Television Critics Associatio­n event in Beverly Hills, California. Blige stars in the “Power” spinoff “Power Book II: Ghost” on Starz.
MATT SAYLES/INVISION “Power” creator and executive producer Courtney Kemp, left, and Mary J. Blige participat­e in a 2019 Television Critics Associatio­n event in Beverly Hills, California. Blige stars in the “Power” spinoff “Power Book II: Ghost” on Starz.

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