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Thread started 05/17/15 10:38am

free2bfreeda

Queen Latifah: 'Bessie Smith's story needed to be told'

: http://www.telegraph.co.u...-told.html

Queen Latifah, left, and Mo’Nique as Ma Rainey in the HBO film Bessie

excerpt:

Queen Latifah said the experience of playing blues singer Bessie Smithwas like driving with the seat belt off.

Queen Latifah, 45, the singer, rapper, actress and comedian and talk show host, plays the celebrated blues singer in Bessie, an HBO biopic that has been 22 years in the making.

Latifah, who first auditioned for the part in 1992, told the New York Times that the turbulent life of Smith was “hard to watch” on screen but said the experience of playing her was unparallelled. “You have to take the seat belt off,” she said. “With this role, I have to be free. It was every emotion I probably could have asked for. She was a very busy woman and it's always been important to play strong female characters."

>

also:

Queen Latifah doesn’t play Smith with the superhuman brashness that you might expect. Even as she conquers the vaudeville circuit and crushes social conventions, Smith comes off as somewhat reserved, with a vein of vulnerability.

i watched the moive twice on HBO. 1 for the storyline itself and the other for the costume design.

IMO Queen Latifah chose to be unreserved in her portrayl of Bessie Smith. i give her

4 Clapping SmileyClapping SmileyClapping SmileyClapping SmileyClapping Smiley

as far as costume design:

this man made the clothes look good:

Michael Kenneth Williams Picture

michael kenneth williams as 'jack gee' imo Mr Michael K Williams is very fine. nod he plays his roles well. remember him in 'boardwalkempire'? imo he and queen latifah shared some very convincing and intense chemistry.

tge tunes were raw. soft and sensitive words to always seem to mix in when traveling through and gauntlet of rejections. yet in spite of the hurdles 'jack gee' never doubted his self.



"

"

here's Mr Williams suited down for his role in boardwalk empire as chalky white:

nod yup, in my opinion the man is fine and did a superb job portrayin his character 'jack gee'.

>

>

as far as the acting goes:

Queen Latifah did her homework to play blues singer Bessie Smith in HBO's movie 'Bessie'

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Sunday, May 10, 2015, 2:00 AM

While she was recording Smith’s music, Latifah says, she found she started to jot down little notes to herself.

“I had to sing differently,” she says. “Bessie had a different vibrato and she pronounced certain words in a distinct way.

“When I got to the word ‘here,’ I wrote it down as ‘hyeah,’ because that’s how I needed to sing it.

“It’s the way some folks spoke in her generation. I remember hearing a little of that in my grandfather’s voice when I was very young.”

Pronunciation, however, is where the similarity ends between Latifah’s grandfather and Bessie Smith.

In fact, Latifah says, that’s where the similarity would end between almost anybody and “The Empress of the Blues.”

The most popular and arguably most important blues singer of the 1920s, Smith has become the same kind of popular music touchstone as her contemporaries Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington.

While she was only 43 when she died in a car accident in 1937, she remains a standard against which singers still can measure themselves.

“Her voice is one of the most amazing things I ever heard,” says Latifah. “And that’s from recording on the equipment of 100 years ago. If she had ever recorded on modern equipment, people would be astonished by the power of her voice.”

Latifah was first approached about playing Smith 22 years ago, when she was known as a rapper who was just starting to act.

Over the years the project took different shapes. By the time it was made, Latifah was also an executive producer who had banked several years singing jazz and soul music on her own.

That background is evident on the movie soundtrack “Bessie,” on which Latifah sings six of Smith’s most popular songs and “joins” her for a remastered duet of Smith’s classic “Gimme a Pigfoot and a Bottle of Beer.'

The soundtrack also features vintage recordin

The soundtrack also features vintage recordings by the likes of Armstrong and Sippie Wallace, plus two instrumentals by Vince Giordano and the Nighthawks.

as far as the acting goes.

Queen Latifah reigned in morphing into a believable bessie smith


; http://www.npr.org/2015/0...-the-blues


note: in 1970 Bessie Smith's grave in Philadelphia

.

: http://wcbsfm.cbslocal.co...-joplin-4/

Janis Joplin funded part of the cost of the gravestone. It's interesting that both Joplin and The Band were managed by Albert Grossman, indicating a common interest in Bessie Smith in the late 60s. Thanks to Paul B. Bech for the picture and information.

[Edited 5/17/15 10:48am]

“Transracial is a term that has long since been defined as the adoption of a child that is of a different race than the adoptive parents,” : https://thinkprogress.org...fb6e18544a
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Reply #1 posted 05/17/15 10:43am

wildgoldenhone
y

I was wondering if Queen Latifah was singing those notes. Wow, loved her singing and portrayal of Bessie!

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Reply #2 posted 05/17/15 11:42am

missfee

avatar

The movie overall wasn't bad...the acting was good but the storyline could've used a bit more work. For instance, they could've gone a little more into her childhood and I was surprised it ended the way it did and especially that they didn't showcase the fatal accident which ended Bessie's life. Latifah did an excellent job with her portrayal as Bessie as did Monique with her portrayal as Ma Rainey but the breakthrough performance was by my man Michael K. Williams. He's an excellent actor anyway yet very underrated. The man has been in numerous TV shows as well as mainstream movies in supporting roles and there hasn't been one performance that I've seen from him where he didn't bring it. Not to mention, he cleans up very well when it comes to suits and accessories drool nod
[Edited 5/17/15 11:46am]
I will forever love and miss you...my sweet Prince.
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Reply #3 posted 05/18/15 11:29am

free2bfreeda

some of the reviews on 'Bessie"

: http://allhiphop.com/2015...ic-bessie/

Queen Latifah & Mo’Nique Receive Rave Reviews For HBO Biopic “Bessie”

The New York Times:

Mo’Nique plays the role with verve, and the early scenes she shares with Queen Latifah leave you wanting more, just as audiences must have felt when Rainey and Smith shared a stage back in the 1920s. Their strong performances aren’t matched by the script.

The Boston Globe:

Oscar winner Mo’Nique (“Precious”) electrifies the early part of the film as Rainey…

Latifah, who does her own vocals, gives with her whole body, leaning in to the physicality of a woman unafraid to throw a punch or knock back a few too many, and then sing the blues like someone who does both. There are moments when she summons shivers.

USA Today:

The first test any such biopic must pass is whether you’re convinced the person on screen could be a star, and it’s one Latifah passes so well and so quickly, you sometimes wonder what’s taking Bessie so long. She’s radiant, from the first moment she appears — bathed in an eerie blue glow — to her very last scene, drenched in sunshine and false hope…

Bessie has raw talent, but what she needs is a mentor and model, and she finds one in the great Ma Rainey (a suitably great Mo’Nique).

i took advantage of my HBO station and watched this movie multi-times. i must say it was pretty well done.

cool

i'm glad the writier/director and producers decided not to show how Ms Bessie Smith died. there is a myth about her being turned away by a white hospital after her receiving a massive injury to her arm in an auto accident.

truth is the nearest hospital was very far away from the accident site. by the time bessie was transported to the hospital she was in severe shock and had lost a lot of blood. it was too late for her to receive all the medical attention necessary to save her life.

“Transracial is a term that has long since been defined as the adoption of a child that is of a different race than the adoptive parents,” : https://thinkprogress.org...fb6e18544a
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Reply #4 posted 05/18/15 5:02pm

starbelly

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I enjoyed it! It was quite funny at times too.

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Reply #5 posted 05/19/15 9:20am

Identity

Downloading the torrent file...

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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Queen Latifah: 'Bessie Smith's story needed to be told'