The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

NEW ATLANTABAS­ED ‘STAR’ GOES GRITTY

- By Rodney Ho rho@ajc.com

Lee Daniels, the Academy Award-nominated movie producer, found shocking TV success in 2015 with the meteoric rise of Fox’s soapy hip-hop drama “Empire.”

Although the show has lost considerab­le steam since then, Fox placed faith in Daniels to create a second hit, hoping to turn him into the next TV producer extraordin­aire like Shonda Rhimes or Chuck Lorre.

Daniels decided to go grittier with his new Atlantabas­ed and -produced show “Star,” which is being given a preview at 9 tonight after the fall finale of “Empire.”

In it, three young women try to become the 2017 answer to Destiny’s Child. Queen Latifah plays their surrogate mom, and Benjamin Bratt (“Law & Order”) becomes their talent agent. Lenny Kravitz guest-stars.

Daniels — who has produced dark dramas such as “Monster’s Ball” and “Precious” — does not deny the pressure placed on him by the network — and himself. “I’m terrified,” he said on set earlier this fall.

“Do we have to say this is from the creator of ‘Empire’? I didn’t intend to do television ever. For me to be here again, are you kidding me? I should be doing theater right now but I’m here. I’m going to do the best I can do.”

“Star” feels far more realistic than glossy “Empire.” Two sisters escape a neglectful, broken foster care system. One is an ambitious white girl trying to break into R&B. The second is her sensitive, sexually abused biracial younger sister. They join a third girl, a wealthy black teen who leaves her life behind for the art.

“I want to make a statement,” Daniels said. “I’m trying to talk about race relations in America. We’re in hard times right now. I want to help heal.”

Bratt said Daniels has the ability to take so many rough elements and “illuminate and dramatize it and in doing so humanize the experience and make it relatable.”

But Daniels includes fun musical set pieces as well. “If you study my body of work, it’s really operatic,” he said. “Music lives in all my stuff, my theater and my films.”

Jude Demorest, who plays the tough lead role with the appropriat­e name Star, said the trailers are a bit misleading. “It’s a mean trick,” she said. “It looks shiny and glittery like ‘Dreamgirls.’ But we get a chance to talk about stuff that’s important.”

Her own character, she admits, is “extremely narcissist­ic. It drives her. Her only soft spot is her little sister. She never had control in her life. She thinks fame will solve that.”

Queen Latifah has produced and starred in several movies and TV shows in Atlanta over the years, including “Joyful Noise,” “Steel Magnolias,” “Bessie” and “Single Ladies.” She said she and Daniels have wanted to work together for many years. They’d talk every few months. “Star” intrigued her.

“It involved music,” she said. “It involved gay, straight, trans. It involved women of all ages. My character, Carlotta, has a strong will and a loving heart.”

One of the regular characters is a transgende­r hairdresse­r, played by Atlanta’s Amiyah Scott, who is also transgende­r. She plays Carlotta’s daughter.

“I related to her on so many levels,” she said. In the first episode, her character gets beat up.

That scene, she said, “wasn’t fun. It was based on a real-life issue. Transviole­nce is very prevalent right now. It’s terrible. I think a light needs to be shined on things like that. It goes hand in hand with Black Lives Matter. We deserve better. We deserve respect.”

 ?? ANNETTE BROWN / FOX ?? Jude Demorest (from left), Ryan Destiny and Brittany O’Grady are singers looking for fame in “Star,” which will have a special premiere at 9 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 14, on Fox. “Star” makes its time period premiere with an allnew episode at 9 p.m. Jan. 4.
ANNETTE BROWN / FOX Jude Demorest (from left), Ryan Destiny and Brittany O’Grady are singers looking for fame in “Star,” which will have a special premiere at 9 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 14, on Fox. “Star” makes its time period premiere with an allnew episode at 9 p.m. Jan. 4.

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