The Commercial Appeal

Smith, Williams sisters break down truths of ‘King Richard’

- Brian Truitt

“King Richard” star Will Smith bears the crown of playing tennis coach Richard Williams and also wears the willful personalit­y, Louisiana accent and ubiquitous shorts of the famed and controvers­ial father of Venus and Serena Williams.

“It’s like giving Superman the cape. Putting those shorts on Will was like sinking into the role,” director Reinaldo Marcus Green says. “Once the shorts went on, it was game over.”

Set in the early 1990s, the biopic “King Richard” (in theaters now and streaming on HBO Max) follows the determinat­ion of Richard and his wife Oracene (Aunjanue Ellis) to make their daughters tennis champions and tracks the fledgling careers of Venus (Saniyya Sidney) and Serena (Demi Singleton) from training on dingy courts in Compton to Venus’ 1994 profession­al debut at age 14.

“I felt like I knew him immediatel­y,” says Smith, who watched 100 hours of tape to research the role. “He’s very similar to my father in some ways. I understood what it meant to feel brutalized by the world and to have a dream that nobody believes in but you, and you’re not going to let that deter you. I got the heart of him.”

Serena Williams, who executive- produces the movie alongside sisters Venus Williams and Isha Price, says it was “an unbelievab­le experience” being on the set watching Smith play “such an intimate part of our lives.” She also promises “only true stories in this film, which really doesn’t usually happen when it goes to Hollywood.”

The Williams sisters shared many memories with the filmmakers, and here are some of the most interestin­g facts about “King Richard”:

Tennis wasn’t Richard Williams’ biggest priority

Early on, the Williamses told filmmakers the movie needed to portray “how loving and kind their father was to them,” Smith says, and how different their perception of him was from the public’s. “He was not a father who was pushing them and hammering them to be successful at tennis. It was quite the opposite,” the actor says. “He was pushing them to go to church and to get good grades and to be good people. Tennis was fourth or fifth on the list of priorities. He was using tennis to teach them how to survive in this world.”

But the devoted dad wasn’t exactly a tennis ace

To accurately portray Richard’s oncourt presence, Smith reached out to an instructor who knew him. “About halfway through the first lesson, the guy was like, ‘Look, Will, listen. I could teach you how to play tennis, but I think you want me to teach you to play how Richard played and Richard really didn’t know how to play tennis,’ ” Smith says with a chuckle. “When he worked with the girls, Richard bounces the ball and hits it and (the instructor’s) like, ‘No pro would do that. You would never teach them like that. But I gotta show you what Richard did.’ So I never actually learned the proper ways of playing tennis.”

Venus and Serena Williams are really close on screen and in life

The sisters are good friends in the movie, always there for each other as the family moves from California to Florida and Venus takes her next step toward the pros. That close bond is “pretty much spot-on to what it was then and what it is now,” says Venus. That closeness was important for the sisters to preserve on screen, Green adds. “Venus said something along the lines of, ‘Serena’s the kind of sister that would skip a match to see me practice.’ And that just hit home

for me because I know how close I am with my own sibling. That’s not something you mess with. That’s real.”

Richard had a signature way of disrupting meetings

One of Venus Williams’ favorite scenes finds Richard at a contentiou­s meeting with sports agents about her younger self’s tennis future, and when he doesn’t like how it’s going, Richard loudly passes gas. The sisters told Smith this was a common occurrence back in the day. “If it didn’t happen for real, you would think it was fake. You wouldn’t believe that somebody would actually do that,” Smith says with a laugh. “He would do that if he wasn’t hearing what he wanted to hear in the meeting.”

Venus had a tennis coach, but Serena would watch tapes

Richard enlists Paul Cohen (Tony Goldwyn) but they can only afford to have him coach Venus. So Richard tapes the sessions for Serena to watch as she trains with Oracene. Serena Williams recalls that period being “definitely hard, but also at the same time, I knew I wasn’t on that level yet. I wasn’t playing at the level that Venus was playing.” She knew she needed to work harder to be better, “but I really did not like working with my mom because she was so tough. In hindsight, she really prepared me mentally on so many things and I had to just have a lot more tenacity than I thought I could have ever had.”

Serena once entered a tournament without telling her parents

Venus goes on a tear in the juniors tennis circuit, and in one sequence where Venus is playing, no one can find Serena. Then Richard and Oracene discover that she’s on a nearby court, having entered a different competitio­n. “My dad said I was too young and kept saying it. And eventually I was like, well, I’m going to just enter myself in a tournament,” Serena says.

Her sister still isn’t sure how she pulled it off: “Back in the day, you fill out the card, you have to send it in the mail (and) she hadn’t paid the bill. (Richard’s) like, ‘Well, OK, I guess we’ll pay.’ ” Serena reports she didn’t get in trouble: “I think that solidified his belief that, OK, she really does want to do it.”

‘King Richard’ captures Oracene Williams’ ‘quiet’ strength

When Green met with the sisters’ mother, “one of the first things she said was, ‘Don’t make me a chump,’ and we hadn’t cast the role yet,” the director says. “Aunjunae Ellis ain’t no chump.”

Venus was “really proud” of Ellis’ performanc­e because even though Oracene is often in the background, “she’s the backbone and she’s the one that really gave us our values.

Of course, our dad, too, but (Ellis) really understood that quiet unshakable strength that my mom has and the authoritat­ive part of it as well.”

Richard Williams (probably) hasn’t seen the movie yet

Oracene Williams watched “King Richard” and “she didn’t complain,” Venus says. “We figured that was her vote of approval.” As far as their dad, Serena doesn’t think he’s seen it (“At least he tells us he hasn’t seen it yet”), but her sister figures he will.

Smith hopes so, even after making the “mistake” of watching “Ali” as he sat right behind Muhammad Ali. “I’ll never do that again,” he says, laughing. “But when you do this, the people you’re portraying are the only audience . ... You can only think about, ‘Oh, my God, what if I put these people’s lives on film and they hate it?’ You want the people of the film to think you did a good job.”

 ?? JORDAN STRAUSS/INVISION/AP ?? From left, Demi Singleton, Serena Williams, Will Smith, Venus Williams, Saniyya Sidney, and Jon Bernthal arrive at the premiere of “King Richard” during the American Film Fest at the TCL Chinese Theatre on Nov. 14 in Los Angeles.
JORDAN STRAUSS/INVISION/AP From left, Demi Singleton, Serena Williams, Will Smith, Venus Williams, Saniyya Sidney, and Jon Bernthal arrive at the premiere of “King Richard” during the American Film Fest at the TCL Chinese Theatre on Nov. 14 in Los Angeles.

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