Taraji P. Henson stars in Tyler Perry’s Acrimony. (Photo: Chip Bergmann/Lionsgate /Courtesy Everett Collection If you’re a man in the entertainment industry — or, for that matter, any industry
— trying to figure out how you can best contribute to the #MeToo
movement, Taraji P. Henson has two simple words of advice. “Speak up,”
the star of Tyler Perry’s Acrimony tells Yahoo Entertainment.
“Ask what your counterpart is making, or request women on the sets where
you work. It takes us all, you know?”Certainly,
women have been leading the way since previously suppressed stories of
sexual harassment and abuse have spilled over into the public view,
whether it’s been through coordinated red carpet campaigns or moving testimonials
that resonate with righteous fury. “I hope it’s not a fad,” Henson says
of Hollywood’s still-ongoing round of truth-telling. “What I’m seeing
is great, so let’s just continue to keep it this way. We’ve been in good
ways in this country before, and then find ourselves going backwards.
I’m like, ‘Hollywood can keep moving forward.’”
Henson and Brad Pitt star in The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, a movie that the actress says paid her “sofa change.” (Photo: Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection)As
Henson tells it, it was a man speaking up that, in part, helped change
her own career. Ten years ago, she landed a key role in the David
Fincher-directed drama The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
opposite Brad Pitt as the title character — a man aging in reverse. It
was one of her most high-profile roles… and the lowest-paying. In her
2016 memoir, Around the Way Girl, Henson called her take-home salary “the
equivalent of sofa change,” although she stresses that she didn’t
expect to be making the same amount as Pitt. “I just wanted it to be
fair,” she says now. “I asked for what I honestly thought I deserved at
that moment. I wasn’t being greedy, and I didn’t ask for a million
dollars. But sometimes you’re rewarded in other ways — it didn’t come
with a paycheck, it came with an Oscar nomination!” (Henson was
nominated for Best Supporting Actress at the 81st Academy Awards, but
Penelope Cruz took home the statue that year for Vicky Cristina Barcelona.)While
the actress took solace in her Oscar nod, writer-director Tyler Perry
didn’t let her slide backward on her conviction to request a salary
commensurate with her skills. Henson first worked with the filmmaker on The Family that Preys, which opened three months before Benjamin Button. When Perry reunited with her the following year for I Can Do Bad All By Myself,
he ensured she got more — much more — than sofa change. “He told me
exactly what to ask for,” Henson remembers. “What’s so crazy is that
this is a man who writes checks! He’s a studio executive; he knew I deserved that.”Henson’s star, and salary, has only grown larger since 2009, thanks to appearances in hit movies like The Karate Kid remake and Hidden Figures, as well as the TV blockbuster Empire.
So there’s little question that Perry happily wrote his star a big
check for their third collaboration, which opens in theaters on March
30. Acrimony casts Henson as Melinda, whose decadeslong
marriage to amateur inventor Robert (Lyriq Bent) is on the rocks due to
his various betrayals and single-minded focus on his own success. But
Melinda isn’t without her own issues: She’s surrounded by family members
who enable her to make bad decisions, and also possesses an inner rage
that can boil over in spectacular ways.Knowing
that it would be all too easy for viewers to casually dismiss Melinda
as an angry black woman, the film makes a point of explicitly addressing
that stereotype early on in a scene between her and the therapist she’s
been mandated by the court to visit. As she tells her story, we come to
understand the roots of her anger, and why it’s a natural response to
her specific circumstances. “Just because I’m passionate, you can’t call
me an angry black woman,” Henson says. “Women are deemed as whining,
but if a man’s not satisfied, he’s going to complain. If you’re quiet,
it won’t get fixed you know? You don’t get to judge what I’m passionate
about and how I express myself. I don’t know where that came from — some
insecure man, somewhere!”
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