Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fishburne helps create ‘Malcom X’ audiobook.

- LAUREN CHRISTENSE­N

Published in 1965, “The Autobiogra­phy of Malcolm X” was not, originally, Malcolm X’s idea.

But in 1963, Alex Haley, a writer who would later win the Pulitzer Prize for “Roots,” convinced his skeptical subject to share the story of his life. During all-night interviews in Haley’s cramped Greenwich Village studio, Malcolm X recalled his upbringing in Omaha, Neb., by parents who decried racism and supported Marcus Garvey’s Black nationalis­m; his turn to hustling and crime as a young man in New York City; and how he found, was transforme­d by and eventually departed from the Nation of Islam.

The resulting memoir has become a foundation­al document in the history of American civil rights and in 20th-century thought. Asked to narrate its first-ever unabridged audiobook recording, which Audible releases Thursday, Laurence Fishburne — an Oscar-nominated actor whose roles have included Nelson Mandela and Justice Thurgood Marshall — knew he had a tall order ahead of him.

“I don’t think Malcolm was all that trusting of Alex Haley in the beginning,” he said in a phone interview. “He had to earn his trust.”

This narrative is a testament to the intimacy they developed. “If I’ve done my job well,” Fishburne said, “the listener will come away feeling as if they’re Alex Haley, and Malcolm is speaking directly to them.”

This interview has been edited and condensed.

Q: In your 50 years as an actor, this is your first audiobook role. How did it compare to performing on the screen or the stage?

A: It’s great. Once upon a time in this country, there was this thing called radio. I liken Audible to radio theater. It’s the reader and the listener engaged in this experience together.

Q: What did you see as your greatest challenge?

A: Trying to capture the essence of a personage like el-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz [the name Malcolm X adopted in 1964 when he left the Nation of Islam] is very, very big. He was a larger-than-life figure. As he was greatly loved, he was also greatly misunderst­ood. The responsibi­lity I felt was to try and illuminate his humanity as much as possible.

What a gift he gave all of us in the way in which he lived his life. To have the foresight to record his experience­s here on Earth with the clarity that he had, after growing up the way he did, in that time and place and under those circumstan­ces;

after his experience­s as a criminal living outside of the law, being incarcerat­ed; being inspired and enlightene­d and liberated by the honorable Elijah Muhammad and Islam; and then having a change of mind about the world and the way in which he could be a part of

changing it for the better. He was really an extraordin­ary individual. With every chapter of the book he becomes more and more human.

Q: You began recording it before George Floyd was killed, before this year’s Black Lives Matter protests. What was it like to perform Malcolm X’s words in the new context of the civil rights movement today?

A: The timing doesn’t change my perspectiv­e so much as it amplifies it, and brings it into clearer focus. This has been the major theme of my life’s work: the struggle of African American people to be treated as first-class citizens in this country. When I started doing “Blackish,” the question I’d often get would be, “Why is it now that people are ready for this kind of show?” And I used to say, “Well, you know, I’ve been Black all my life.”

I was asked to read his book almost 30 years ago, and for reasons beyond my understand­ing that didn’t happen. Evidently the time is right. I just feel doubly blessed to have been asked to read his book at this moment.

Q: How did you tackle mirroring the escalation in Malcolm X’s tone, as a man and as a narrator, over the course of the book?

A: My job is just to use my instrument in the service of Malcolm, the brilliant thinker and political activist, and of this brilliant writer, the wordsmith Alex Haley.

The other secret weapon is Nicole Shelton, our director. She was my audience, and she was not just an avid listener, she was an active listener. She would stop me if even an inflection was a little wrong, and we would go back over it. We went back over things many times to get them right.

Q: Can you remember the first time you read this autobiogra­phy?

A: I remember reading this book when I was in my early 20s and feeling inspired by his journey. Someone who was so steeped in criminalit­y, to be incarcerat­ed as a result of a life of crime, and to use your incarcerat­ion to educate yourself? To come out a wiser, more well-spoken, thoughtful man — a full-grown man — with not just a fire in his belly but a real sense of mission to galvanize people, to open their eyes? That’s really, really inspiring.

Q: Do you think society has made progress since 1965?

A: We can say that the answer is really yes and no. We still live under systemic racism. That is a fact. That has not changed. Things have changed

within that system, but the system itself has not changed. And hopefully we are in a moment — and this is partly why this book is so important now, and why it may have the ability to [bring about] more change — where it seems that more people are aware of just how much change needs to happen, and are willing to do what is necessary to create it. And that’s where things have changed.

 ??  ?? Laurence Fishburne narrates “The Autobiogra­phy of Malcolm X” in an audiobook project he says “doesn’t change my perspectiv­e so much as it amplifies it.” (The New York Times/Emily Berl)
Laurence Fishburne narrates “The Autobiogra­phy of Malcolm X” in an audiobook project he says “doesn’t change my perspectiv­e so much as it amplifies it.” (The New York Times/Emily Berl)

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