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Alfre Woodard Has Recipe For SuccessEmmy-Winning Actress Cooks Up Future Plans
With more than 40 speaking parts, the cast is stellar: Alfre Woodard, Joan Chen, Lainie Kazan, Mercedes Ruehl, Kyra Sedgwick and Julianna Margulies, to name a few. First up is Woodard, who stars as an uptight, upper-middle-class woman who is trying desperately to keep her family together and plan the perfect Thanksgiving dinner. Here's Woodard's character's special recipe: All About Alfre Not only is the multiple Emmy-winning star in full production for a new feature, she's also been traveling the country rallying the troops for presidential hopeful Al Gore. So it's no wonder that she's feeling a bit overwhelmed. But despite her self-proclaimed fatigue, Woodard is still eager to talk about the release of her latest film, "What's Cooking?" For a moment, my mind wanders back to 1986, the first time I saw the Academy Award-nominated ("Cross Creek") Woodard on screen. It was the first episode of "LA Law" and she was playing a chronically ill woman named Adrian Moore. Moore had been brutally raped, and the defense attorneys were dragging out the proceedings in hopes that she would die before the end of the trial. I was mesmerized. So was everyone else watching. Woodard won an Emmy Award for her performance. It was Woodard's second Emmy win. Her first came from a guest role on NBC's acclaimed series "Hill Street Blues" in 1984. Her third would come with perhaps her most celebrated role in the 1997 HBO original movie "Miss Evers' Boys." She would also win a Golden Globe, an ACE Award and a SAG Award for best actress for her role as Eunice Evers. Now she tackles yet another terrific role: Audrey Williams in Chadha's Trimark film "What's Cooking?" It's a role that she tells me she "jumped at the chance" to play. "This (script) was sent to me for a reason," she says. A ... My Name Is Audrey. "As an actor of color ... people don't see us as anything other than whatever makes them comfortable. And what makes people comfortable is to see black people struggling along the bottom of the rung." One struggle for Williams is her attempt to keep her world and her family together by incessant planning. Woodard says that she cherished that aspect of the character. "I loved being tightly wound, where everything depended on how the table was laid," she tells me. Is Woodard like her character in this respect? Not really. "I am an organizational expert. I can really take care of a situation," she says. And she says that she is more "practical" than Williams. "I have scooped up many cakes off the floor and then renamed it," she jokes. POV Over the years, Woodard has arguably created some of the most richly defined characters ever for an actress in either television or film. "Nobody believes they're a bad guy. Nobody says, 'I'm going to create mayhem.' Everybody is looking out from their eyes, thinking from their point of view. So you start from knowing that everybody is trying to do well, trying to do right." Woodard says this acting philosophy can also be found in director-writer Chadha's approach to "What's Cooking?" Thanksgiving Feast "I think what it does is that it shows L.A. as it really is." "What's Cooking?" profiles four families individually planning and celebrating Thanksgiving: Jewish, African-American, Asian and Latino. The story follows different storylines but eventually weaves the families tighter than they could ever imagine. "It's not just the sake of putting color there. It's seeing people there," she says. "(Hollywood) is constantly making movies that exclude and deny the fact of how we all see each other every day. It's like watching a color TV set with the tint off." Woodard also notes that, despite Los Angeles being the film's backdrop, the universal appeal is undeniable. "It's as much there as what people bring to it, what they're going to see in it," she tells me. "I think it will open a lot of people's eyes. It might open their eyes about their own communities." She says that one theme that will hit close to home is our shared experience of family holidays. Woodard says that although holidays are often joyous occasions, because we often see our families as places where we can be ourselves, "secrets and bombshells" also tend to emerge. "Why have holidays if you're not going to have some drama?" she asks. St. Nowhere? "I've never done a picture that was what I wanted to do. I have never done that. I didn't go into the business just to find work," she says But Woodard is not bitter. She understands the game and the stakes. "I have been blessed, I've had an incredible time as an actor, (but) I've never had carte blanche, some money, to do an idea. I'm always dressing up other people's ideas," she tells me. "I've made it a point to decide and to choose, but I'm choosing out of what has come to me. "Until I've done that, I can say that I have not given to the public what I have intended to give as an actor. But I also realize I may never get to do that. Just as some people will never get to do what I've done." Woodard's voice is steady when she says, "You play the hand you're dealt in a way that doesn't dishonor who you are."
The Big Scoop![]()
About 10 years ago, Allen visited the KCBS-TV (formerly KNXT) studios in Los Angeles to tape a public-service announcement. The PSA called for him to play the piano. The only piano that the studio had sounded fine, but looked terrible. It was so beaten up, the crew had used electric tape to keep it together. On air, however, it looked fine. The crew apologized to Allen for the condition of the piano when he arrived. Instead of being upset, Allen's eyes lit up and he asked if he could have the piano after they were finished using it for the day. Turns out that Allen got famous on that very piano decades earlier when he had his radio show at KNX Radio, which is in the same Columbia Square building. The general manager of the television station gave it away willingly. It's rumored that Allen had that piano fine-tuned, restored, and even had a special addition in his home to house it.
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