Los Angeles Times

TOUGH TALK WITH COOKIE

Taraji P. Henson bites into her biggest role yet as ‘Empire’s’ queen bee

- BY GREG BRAXTON

>>> To say that Lee Daniels and Taraji P. Henson didn’t see eye to eye when they first met about seven years ago would be putting it mildly. ¶ The filmmaker behind the Oscar-winning “Monster’s Ball” was prepping his new project, “Precious,” a raw tale about an obese, troubled teen girl named Precious who endured physical and psychologi­cal torture at the hands of her mother. He summoned Henson, a veteran actress who had delivered impressive performanc­es in several films including “Baby Boy” and “Hustle & Flow,” to audition for the role of Ms. Blu Rain, an alternativ­e school social worker who helps Precious to gain self-esteem and believe in herself. ¶ But when the actress, who at that time was in her late 30s, arrived for the audition, she had other plans. ¶ Said Daniels, “She didn’t want to audition for Ms. Rain. She wanted to audition for Precious! I thought she was a bit crazy. I said, ‘That is not going to happen,’ and the meeting was over. After that, we were friendly from afar. Still, I had mad respect for her. It took a lot of balls for her to say that.” ¶ The idea of playing someone much younger and much heavier did

not seem outrageous to Henson. The role of Precious spoke to her more. “I was just being creative,” she recalled with a smile. “At that point in my career, I just thought, ‘Why do I have to play this other character when Precious is the role that would challenge me?’ I’m always looking for the challenge.”

Flash-forward to 2015, when the two finally find themselves on the same wavelength. They have reunited on Fox’s “Empire,” winding up its freshman season Wednesday as TV’s hottest series. Since its launch in January, the drama about ailing music mogul Lucious Lyon (Terrence Howard) and his frantic struggle to determine which of his three sons should inherit the throne of his massive music empire has been a juggernaut, scoring at least eight straight weeks of ratings growth — an almost unheard-of accomplish­ment in the highly competitiv­e TV landscape. “Empire” rose to be the third-most-watched show overall for the week of March 1 and is Fox’s most solid dramatic hit since “24” first went off the air in 2010.

Created by Oscar nominee Daniels and fellow executive producer Danny Strong, “Empire” derives much of its groundbrea­king success through its mashup of fresh and familiar elements that have attracted a wide demographi­c base: the time-honored tradition of a prime-time soap opera revolving around a wealthy family, juiced with hip-hop, topical issues (homophobia, mental illness), humor (Lucious has President Obama on speed dial) and a predominan­tly African American cast featuring three Oscar nominees, including Gabourey Sidibe, who won the title role of “Precious.” The series has slick production values and more than its share of plot twists.

But in an ensemble that contains no shortage of colorful characters, it’s Henson’s larger-than-life portrayal of a tough Cookie that occupies the chaotic center ring: the brash Cookie Lyon, the former wife of Lucious who stakes her own claim in the company when she is released from a long prison stint for selling drugs (her $400,000 was the seed money for the company). Henson has attacked the role with a scene-stealing ferocity, igniting the character’s noholds-barred flame with noshe-did-not-just-say-that wisecracks, urban-bred bravado, smoldering sexuality and a flashy wardrobe of fulllength furs and fashionabl­y alluring outfits that embrace her curvy physique.

Henson pointed out that although Cookie has her share of flaws decidedly not political correct, she also has many positive attributes, particular­ly her unwavering devotion to her family.

“These characters are multilayer­ed and complex,” she said, noting that some people might get angry “because it’s not politicall­y correct. But as we know, being politicall­y correct is BS. That’s why people like it, because we’re not afraid to push the envelope on network prime time.”

And she obviously feels a deep connection with the character that has brought her into the limelight. “She has a fight in her. When she believes something, she’s totally uncompromi­sing. That is a characteri­stic of myself. I identify in her passion.”

Cookie’s bite

Passion in abundance. “For a queen, you sure keep a messy place!,” she declares when she visits the loft of her gay son, Jamal (Jussie Smollett). She has shoe-throwing tantrums in the office, and when Lucious tries to get her to leave, she warns, “Be glad I don’t feel like no scene today, because I’ll shut it down!” Her chief adversary is Anika (Grace Gealey), Lucious’ younger and lighterski­nned squeeze, whom she calls “Boo Boo Kitty” and “Halle Berry.”

When her younger son Hakeem (Bryshere Gray) insults her, she beats him with a broomstick. During a business meeting that she thought might be a rendezvous with Lucious, she takes off her coat to reveal a corset, turns her back to Anika, slaps her rear end and says “Anika, this is an ass!” Even young toughs working in ghetto studios think twice about going toe-to-toe with her: Patting her purse containing a gun, she says, “I’m holding. The name’s Cookie. Ask about me.”

Fan frenzy over “Empire” and Cookie — along with her starring turn in the thriller “No Good Deed” with Idris Elba, which topped the box office in its opening last September — has propelled the 44-year-old actress into Hollywood’s “it” circle, along with African American TV actresses such as Kerry Washington (“Scandal”) and Viola Davis (“How to Get Away With Murder”).

At last month’s NAACP Image Award, call-in viewers named Henson Entertaine­r of the Year over such A-listers as Davis, Beyoncé and producer Shonda Rhimes.

The hoopla is a bit surreal for the actress, who also impressed on the big screen last year with “Think Like a Man 2.” “Empire” has become the defining touchstone eclipsing her other accomplish­ments in a career spanning more than a decade that includes starring or featured roles in “Baby Boy,” “Larry Crowne,” “The Karate Kid” and the CBS drama, “Person of Interest.”

She provided the melodic hook for the Oscar-winning song “It’s Hard Out Here for a Pimp” for 2005’s “Hustle & Flow” (her first project with Howard, who starred and scored an Oscar nod for lead actor). And she was nominated for a supporting actress Oscar in 2008’s “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” where she played Brad Pitt’s adoptive mother, Queenie. But none of those projects jump-started her career.

“Before ‘Empire,’ I was just that girl from ‘Baby Boy’ or ‘The Karate Kid,’ ” she said as she sat in her publicist’s Hollywood office. “I’ve been doing this for a long time, and in my opinion I’ve been doing very good work. But now people are discoverin­g me.... I’ve always been that utility worker, that utility actor, but now all of a sudden the world is seeing me on a platform they’ve never seen me on before. This show is so big, everybody knows my name now.”

The real Henson

In person, Henson, who was born and raised in Washington, D. C., is noticeably lower-key than what she calls her “alter ego.” She exudes confidence without seeming cocky, and she can be playful and warm. When making a humorous point, she laughed loudly, her voice echoing through the twostory building.

While Henson is thrilled with the attention that “Empire” has brought her, she added that she has never craved fame or celebrity. A single mother of a grown son, her off-camera life has been off the grid. And though Cookie does behave outrageous­ly, Henson said it has been more important to make sure the character is grounded in truth.

“Yes, this is something I’ve worked my entire career for. But I always do it for the craft. It’s never been for the money or for everyone to know who I am. It’s not for anything but the work — did I move you? Did you have a cathartic moment? Those are the things I care about.”

Since its premiere to 10 million viewers, “Empire” has received largely positive reviews. Among the elements coming in for high praise is the story line about Jamal, who is denounced by his father for being gay.

Still, “Empire” also has its detractors. The series has a specific African American viewpoint and features characters who could not be called the most positive role models: Lucious and Cookie sold drugs, Cookie is determined­ly non-PC, Lucious murders a blackmaili­ng colleague (one of Cookie’s relatives) in the first episode.

“While the show’s sexy glossiness is alluring, it is also filled with badly written dialogue and ham-fisted racial and sexual stereotype­s,” wrote Laina Dawes of the independen­t online journalism magazine AlterNet.But Darnell Hunt, head of the Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA, said that Henson’s portrayal of the take-noprisoner­s Cookie, with her ’hood cred and tough talk, transcends what could have easily have been a stereotypi­cal presentati­on. “How she plays this role is much more complex. She makes Cookie more palpable and more poignant. She’s very good.”

Referencin­g Cookie’s outspokenn­ess, Henson said, “I think everybody has a little bit of Cookie in them — if they were not afraid to speak their truth.”

Daniels said Cookie was the easiest character to write. “I could do it with my eyes closed,” he said. “She’s my grandmothe­r, my mom, my sister, my aunt, the one girl I slept with, my nextdoor neighbor, my best friend. She’s the epitome of what I grew up with.” He does not label her as outrageous. “America loves truth. When you keep it real, that’s what they want.”

But Henson said there are clear difference­s between her and Cookie: “There’s the fashion — she’s a little bolder than me, though I love dressing up. And I have to be careful about what I do because of who I am. I could never be a Cookie — I have to be careful about my read.” Her laugh filled the room.

Daniels said one of his greatest joys about the success of “Empire” is the hoopla surroundin­g Henson. “The most exciting thing for me about all of this is that we now get a chance to celebrate Taraji, who has been so under-celebrated.”

The two still have their creative back-and-forths: When she first auditioned for Cookie, Henson demanded that Howard be cast as Lucious. “This was before she was cast, and she’s already making demands,” he said with a laugh. “But she was right.”

He’s looking forward to next season, where he plans to delve more deeply in the character, probing “her pain and poignancie­s.”

As for Henson, she is also looking forward to furthering the popularity of “Empire,” particular­ly overseas. Already it’s showing in a few markets and is the subject of a bidding war in Britain. Now that her son is getting ready to move into his own place, she has another goal. “I want love — that’s the only thing missing,” she said with a wistful smile. “I want someone to share this all with.” She concluded with a very un-Cookie like comment, “I’m a simple girl.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi
Los Angeles Times ?? “THIS SHOW
is so big, everybody knows my name now,” says Taraji P. Henson of Fox’s new hit drama “Empire,” on which she plays scene-stealing matriarch Cookie.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times “THIS SHOW is so big, everybody knows my name now,” says Taraji P. Henson of Fox’s new hit drama “Empire,” on which she plays scene-stealing matriarch Cookie.
 ?? Chuck Hodes Fo x ?? FORMER SPOUSES Cookie (Taraji P. Henson) and Lucious Lyon (Terrence Howard) battle for musical control and more in “Empire.”
Chuck Hodes Fo x FORMER SPOUSES Cookie (Taraji P. Henson) and Lucious Lyon (Terrence Howard) battle for musical control and more in “Empire.”

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