The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tyler Perry goes back to work

- By Rodney Ho rodney.ho@ajc.com

Tyler Perry is back in business creating TV shows after four months off, turning his sprawling 330-acre studio operation into a sequestere­d island for 360 workers at a time.

He completed a second season of his BET relationsh­ip drama “Sistas” during the second half of July and is now prepping for his White House drama “The Oval,” which just concluded season one on BET and is set to return to production Aug. 4.

So far, Perry said frequent testing and isolating everyone in one place has worked. During “Sistas,” nobody caught the virus, and they were able to complete production on time.

“It went beautifull­y, even better than we expected,” said Michelle Sneed, Tyler Perry Studios’ president of production and developmen­t. Besides 60 units of housing already on site from the time when Tyler Perry Studios was an army base, Perry brought in 315 brand-new manufactur­ed homes and installed 40 washer/ dryer units.

For two weeks, cast and crew turned Tyler Perry Studios into a 24/7 camp. People biked around in groups. There were sunrise and sunset yoga classes. They hosted outdoor movie nights and church services, livestream­ing T.D. Jakes.

The precaution­s greatly increased costs, adding $4.5 million to his budget per show per season, Perry said. For four different shows, he is setting aside well into seven figures on COVID19 testing alone.

Sneed said the studio was using Emory University for testing early on, but Emory was getting backlogged with a surge of cases last month. That delayed results when they first quarantine­d on campus and caused a lot of anxiety. They have since switched to private labs to ensure quicker turnaround time for results.

Here are highlights of the conversati­on The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution had with Perry earlier this week:

Having this conversati­on a year ago would have been absurd, right? The whole concept of what you’re doing right now would not make any sense.

Yeah. You see all of us walking around in these masks and face shields and all this other stuff like we’re all in outer space, and it all seems weird.

How do you even feel while you’re on set now?

For me, fortunatel­y, I’ve done well enough to take the rest of the year off, for the next year, for the rest of my life if I felt like it. But I have all these people working for me who bought houses and cars and depend on this income. When they tell me about this stuff, they beam with pride about the things they bought and paying off their debts. I could sit somewhere waiting for a vaccine. But I had to come up with a plan to keep these people working. They are faithful and loyal. They deserve it. I’m sleeping among them and making it work.

How much do the safety protocols slow production down?

We’re still the same pace. We lost 80 to 100 crew members because we didn’t have the housing for it. What takes longer is moving from location to location. Something that had taken 15 minutes is now taking 45. But the great thing about the crew I’m working with, the actors and my whole team here at TPS, once we get there, we’re moving to make up the time.

Did you have to make any changes to your scripts to accommodat­e the pandemic and keep everyone safe?

All the scripts were written in January and February. (Perry writes them all himself.) ... We test every four days to make sure the virus is not among us. The actors have been tested the past eight to 10 weeks, so we had a record of all these negatives so that we could continue on the same path and not change anything in the scripts. Locations had to be scaled down because we couldn’t bring as many extras.

How many background actors did you bring in?

We brought in 10. Sometimes we needed 20 or 30, so we had cast and crew be background, and they gladly jumped in.

What was it like living at Tyler Perry Studios all the time?

I rode my bike to set every day. It was joy for me. I never spent this much time here on a day-to-day basis seeing it in the mornings, seeing the sun set. It’s a glorious place. This place is a beautiful piece of property. I really got to know it intimately.

It’s a large space, like 300plus acres. I presume you didn’t feel claustroph­obic?

Not at all. There was enough space for everybody. To see this campus come to life, I can only imagine what it was like when it was an army base having someone in every house, having people riding their bikes, exercising, jogging, hiking the back trails. It’s really amazing.

Where did you actually stay?

I had a tour bus for 10 years so I parked it in the middle of campus. I’ve been staying on it during this time. That’s always been home for me when I’m on the road (doing his “Madea” stage shows). So, it still feels like I’m home.

Since everyone was COVID free, were you able to interact normally on set?

Nothing about this was normal. It’s mandatory that you wear a mask or face shields when on set. (The exception is when actors are shooting a scene.) You had to have masks on all day long, which was trying for a lot of people. I completely understand why, but it’s so important why we did it. I know for a fact that wearing a mask helps stop the spread.

With the pandemic and all the protests, how have you been dealing with it all emotionall­y?

It was very difficult when I wasn’t able to work and get people working. That’s always been the outlet. I’m very worried about the message being hijacked by people with ill intentions. Seeing the whole country galvanized to help fight against injustice I think is a wonderful thing.

I know the amount of help society needs exceeds the reach of what any individual person can do. How are you deciding what types of charities to provide to?

Sometimes it’s a story, it’s a person, it’s someone in passing — and it moves me. The thing about having the Atlanta Police Department pass out the gift cards to the community for groceries, I wanted to do something else for groceries after the Kroger/ Winn-Dixie thing. [He paid for all groceries purchased during a senior hour at markets in Atlanta and New Orleans.] I thought, why not get the police into the neighborho­ods around the studio and other areas because what I wanted out of that was the police officers and the community standing together. I hoped that would send a clear message of unity and a bridge to getting this worked out.

 ??  ?? Tyler Perry is on set at Tyler Perry Studios in July while shooting “Sistas,” the first show he has shot since the pandemic began.
Tyler Perry is on set at Tyler Perry Studios in July while shooting “Sistas,” the first show he has shot since the pandemic began.
 ??  ?? Tyler Perry Studios brought in housing units for 315 people on top of existing quarters for 60 more crew.
Tyler Perry Studios brought in housing units for 315 people on top of existing quarters for 60 more crew.
 ??  ?? On the set of “Sistas” at Tyler Perry Studios in July.
On the set of “Sistas” at Tyler Perry Studios in July.
 ??  ?? Actress Ebony Obsidian and makeup artist Syretta Bell prepare to shoot on the set of “Sistas” at Tyler Perry Studios in July.
Actress Ebony Obsidian and makeup artist Syretta Bell prepare to shoot on the set of “Sistas” at Tyler Perry Studios in July.

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