USA TODAY US Edition

Pharrell aims high with music for NASA drama

‘Hidden Figures’ tells of black women in 1960s space program

- Brian Truitt

Pharrell Williams met math greatness — and a real American heroine — and didn’t even know it.

The music star’s mom had to remind him that he was introduced five years ago to Katherine Johnson, a black NASA aerospace technologi­st who was instrument­al to the calculatio­ns that sent men to the cosmos during the 1960s space race and racial segregatio­n. Now Williams is taking an active role in the movie based on her life, Hidden Figures, by signing on as a producer and creating original music inspired by the period and Johnson herself.

“I don’t feel like we celebrate enough mathematic­ians as it is, let alone an African-American female at such a time having to use a bathroom all the way on the other side of the campus just because that’s the way it is,” Williams says. “You can’t believe what she went through and stayed amazingly focused on the greater goal.”

Taraji P. Henson stars in the film (in theaters Jan. 13, 2017), which centers on the personal and profession­al lives of Johnson (Henson) and fellow NASA mathematic­ians Dorothy Vaughan (Octavia Spencer) and Mary Jackson (singer Janelle Monáe). The movie focuses on their efforts getting John Glenn (Glen Powell) home from his 1962 orbit of Earth.

Hidden Figures, directed by Theodore Melfi and now filming in Atlanta, also stars Kevin Costner, Jim Parsons, Kirsten Dunst, Aldis Hodge and Mahershala Ali.

Williams will “produce the entire musical palette of the film,” says producer Donna Gigliotti, adding that so far tunes have had the feel of Southern spirituals and girl-group harmonies. And with Monáe in the cast, Williams expects that the first musical collaborat­ion between the two “will happen for sure.”

The real-life Johnson, 97, a 2015 recipient of the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, is “a really strong soul,” Williams says, and he promises “lifting ” music to match her legacy.

“It’s an ambitious thing, but I’m excited for the opportunit­y. We want people to leave (the theater) higher than the way they walked in.”

Williams says he has loved NASA and space since he was a little boy growing up in Virginia Beach — he lived a short drive away from the Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., where Johnson worked. Plus, his From One Hand to AnOTHER foundation is involved with initiative­s for students interested in science, technology, engineerin­g and math (STEM).

At a time when the movie industry is paying attention to diversity, Williams says he is proud to be involved in a project with so many minority women. “Hollywood is reflective of a lot of areas that are just antiquated in the views and the customs,” he says. “I want this to push more than just the boundaries of Hollywood — I want this to push the boundaries (everywhere).”

Williams also says he wants younger viewers to watch Johnson’s story and realize there’s a future in math for them.

“Her numbers took us to space. That’s inspiring,” Williams says. “A young, beautiful girl who loves numbers could hear this and say, ‘If she could get us to the moon, then maybe I could get us beyond the solar system.’ ”

 ??  ?? Pharrell Williams is producing and creating original music for Hidden Figures.
He says he has been a fan of the space program since he was a child.
VALERIE MACON,
AFP/GETTY IMAGES Katherine Johnson, a NASA mathematic­ian whose work helped send men to...
Pharrell Williams is producing and creating original music for Hidden Figures. He says he has been a fan of the space program since he was a child. VALERIE MACON, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Katherine Johnson, a NASA mathematic­ian whose work helped send men to...

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