
Talk about busy
and Oscar buzz, Terrence Howard has been in four films this
year CRASH,
HUSTLE
& FLOW, FOUR
BROTHERS and now GET
RICH OR DIE TRYIN'. Howard was recently crowned
the new “Indie Film King” by Entertainment Weekly,
after his strong lead performance in the John Singleton production
“Hustle
& Flow,” which I believe he should
receive a nomination for his awesome performance. Funny enough
in Hustle & Flow Terrence played a street-wise Detroit hustler
who has one last shot at realizing his dreams of wanting to
be a rapper, and in the upcoming film “Get
Rich or Die Tryin'” he plays Bama, Marcus’
(played by Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson) friend, manager
and protector for an upcoming rapper. Recently Latino Review
had the chance to sit down with the Howard to talk about the
film and how this year seems to be the year
of Terrence Howard.
How
was your first scene with 50 Cent?
Terrence Howard: It was intense, because I
felt him before I saw him. I was rehearsing with Jim and something
kept distracting me to another room. And I didn’t know
50 was in there. So, after a half hour, Jim said, ‘You
seem distracted. And I was like, ‘Yeah, sorry. I just
can’t concentrate right now.’ He said, ‘I
think I know why. You’re sensitive aren’t you?’
And I said, ‘What do you mean?’ And he took me over
to two doors down and there was my kindred spirit sitting there
writing.
And what did he say to you?
Terrence Howard: We didn’t say nothing
we just looked at each other from across the room. We could
have been sitting there for a half hour.
Did you pick this outfit out on your own?
Terrence Howard: Who me? Yeah, it was the
only thing that wasn’t wrinkled. I just came back from
London and everything was kind of – got in so late last
night, didn’t have time to send it down to get it put
together. But, I always liked flowers and I think men need to
start wearing flowers again.
This year seems to be “the year” that we
have been talking about for a long time. How does it feel to
you?
Terrence Howard: I still just hear, those beautiful
sounds to any person is the sound of their own heart. Their
own heartbeat, the rhythm of their breathing. And as much people
may say, ‘Wow, we love what you’re doing. You’re
doing so great.’ Da, da, da. There will come a time when
people won’t say that. So, I will never drown out the
praise of my own heart by saying, ‘You did the very best
you could.’ Like ‘Animal.’ I did ‘Animal.’
I didn’t succeed in doing that, but I tried something
new. And I feel the applause myself for my effort in that. And
I like the fact that other people are taking notice and looking
my way, but that’s temporary.
Are you interested in being a star? Or a thespian?
Terrence
Howard: A thespian. A better thespian. Back to the
whole thought of being a star. Our son is made up of hydrogen
and helium, you know? And what makes up 90% of our bodies? Hydrogen
with Oxygen. H2o. So, the very atoms that make me up once existed
inside the sun. So, I was born a star. So was every other person
on this problem.
But
you know what I mean.
Terrence Howard: Yeah, no, no. But, I want
to be a thespian. Do I want a better magician? I would love
to understand how to move people’s emotions even more
so than I have learned to this point. I feel like the young
man trying to become the alchemist and I’ve had some success,
but I’m still trying to master the alchemy of what we
do. What Jim has mastered. And I’m sure you guys after
finishing talking to him, each and everyone of you has to be
as enchanted as I was by him and working with him for six months.
I want to understand that more.
How was it like to work with Jim Sheridan who would
allow you to improvise?
Terrence Howard: Well, it’s strange.
He’s a bit of an abstract painter. He has an idea and
he’ll bring the canvas and a number of different colors,
but he will actually throw the paint on the canvas and let it
run where it runs. And not one time, very rarely will you see
him pick up a brush and move it over here. He’ll pick
his painting by the paints that he throws together at the same
time and throw a little heat on it. The freedom to run free
even if you’re dripping places? That’s amazing,
because everything happens organically. He’ll turn to
an extra and say, ‘So, what do you think. It’s about
your craft mate.’ And the extra will say, ‘Well,
you know. You could do it like this.’ ‘Oh, O.K.
Dechli, come here.’ And he will incorporate ideas of what
someone else as an extra and atmosphere, this human being, this
artist-in-training, this apprentice, he will treat them on an
equal base with him. And so, with me as an actor he treated
me the same way.
First I thought your character was just going to be
one of those crazy guys you see in the movies.
Terrence Howard: He was.
He was, but you find out later that he really sees the
talent in Marcus. Do you feel like he wanted to exploit him
or he just wanted to be a part of that world?
Terrence
Howard: Sometimes you are drawn to people and you don’t
even know that it’s your job to protect them. ‘Why
did I get thrown into prison? I may have committed this crime
100 times, why did I get caught this time? Why did I have to
be in the shower right now. Why is that Young Cesar and Bama
were drawn to each other inside the shower. What was that all
about? Why did Bama try and save his life? For some reason,
in the real life, Country and 50, for some reason they had been
brought together. And 50 explained to me that he thought Bama’s
charater, a guy named Country, was always an angel, because
he would just show up right when he needed him. Like showing
up right out of prison when he got out of jail when he was never
supposed to see him again. In comparison to when he could have
gone in that car and just gone back to selling drugs. You know
what I mean?
The shower scene was that spontaneous. Any trepidation
doing it?
Terrence Howard: I was trepidatious about Jim
not getting the shot that he wanted. I saw my friend, I saw
the person, I saw the magician loose faith in his abilities
because he was limited by his contract. So, he wanted to ask
us. We shot the scene for two hours and he was not happy with
it. And I saw him sitting at the monitor just stroking his head.
And Declan was saying we have to move on because they have to
do lighting for the next scene. And I asked Declan, I said,
‘Can we do one more? Do we have time to do one more?’
And Jim said, ‘I dunno if it’s going to make a difference.’
And I went and talked to 50. And I said, ‘Look man. I
think we should just do the whole damn thing naked. Just one
time and see how that works.’ And I took my drawers and
he was like, ‘Go ahead, do it, do it, do it.’ And
so I took my draws off and 50 was like, ‘shoot the camera
at him’ (Laughs.) And Jim came over and he was like, ‘You
sure you want to do this?’ So, Jim was trying to work
it around so to where you just see me in that naked sense and
I looked at 50 and was like, ‘C’mon man. We’re
in this together.’ And he was like, ‘Fuck it.’
I was shy more so, because 50, it doesn’t even cross his
mind. And in the moment it was introduced to him it was like,
‘O.K., whatever.’ And then the other three actors
did it and we and now the scene, the set was alive again.
How
was it working with 50 Cent since it was his first time acting?
Terrence Howard: I was just blown away by his
willingness to try new things. Was he nervous at the start and
a little stiff? Yeah, but Jim somehow found a way to coach him
out of that nervous area. That’s what I’m talking
about. The leprechaun in him, the magician in him had 50 believing,
he allowed 50 to see the transition, the common frame of reference
between what he’s done on stage a thousand times and being
on the set that one day. Or being on the set for the next 74
days. Jim allowed him to see the connection and then from then
on 50 was cool.
The studio decided against a set visit for journalists.
Why do you think they made that decision?
Terrence Howard: Yeah, well when you are being
watched it’s very hard to feel free. Here we’d been
naked with everybody on the set with nobody judging anybody.
There was no judging about it, but to have journalists on the
set, when it is your responsibility to judge the creative source.
To sift through it and say, ‘Where is the artistry at?’
Not as if journalists are bad or the evil people of the world.
No, you guys actually give credence to what’s happened.
You give the credibility and the authenticity and you compare
it to history of what we’re supposed to be trying to reach
.And Jim wanted to make sure that that was right. That was right
before he could present it to the world.
In a recent interview that was posted on the web, you
said you are not friends with John Singleton.
Terrence Howard: No, we’re not friends,
because we’re different people and different artists.
We are artists from different sides of the galaxy. But, we all
fit inside the same galaxy. He’s passionate from his perspective
and I’m passionate from mine. And you need those objecting
forces to keep the balance of justice in our eyes. There are
times when we will pass by each other and there is great kinetic
energy created as a result of it, but will we ever be friends?
No.
It’s about the work, it’s not about being
friends.
Terrence Howard: Yeah, it’s a great thing.
I still respect him. He still put $3 million out of his pocket
when everybody else did a whole lot of this. But, I didn’t
like him before we started working together. None of that changed,
but I still respect him and am forever thankful to him, but
we come from different worlds.
Why are you so close to 50?
Terrence Howard: For some reason we share similar
spirits, because the moment we laid eyes on each other from
across the room, there was just silence. There was this moment
of silence that could have been two seconds, it could have been
a half hour. All I know is that from that point on every time
we saw each other…like they say, we see ourselves in the
people we are talking to based on how they respond to us. We
look at how their eyes smile or the face they make. And you
say, ‘What would make me make that face if I was talking
to somebody?’ And then when they respond to that I’ve
always felt good about myself after being around him.
Your character seems like another one of these scene-stealing
characters that you have…
Terrence Howard: Did he steal some scenes?
Yeah, I think so. Do you think now that your profile
is getting bigger you’re not going to be offered as many
of these parts and you’ll get more leading roles?
Terrence Howard: I have always been offered
leading roles, but I didn’t think I was ready to take
them. I took on ‘Hustle & Flow’ because I had
three and a half years to work on the character. I wanted to
make sure my go around, my first time leading would end up being
successful. With this film I wanted to work with Jim Sheridan
because I needed to learn from him. I needed to learn from George
Wolfe. I need to learn from Steven Spielberg. So, if I get an
opportunity to work with Steven Spielberg in a supporting role
because I want to be a director one day, you’re damn right
I’m gonna jump there and do it. But, when the time comes,
like ‘The Crusaders’ with Thurgood Marshall, you’re
damn right I’m gonna play the lead in that because I’ve
been working on him for three years. Reading about him. Joe
Louis. Would I let someone else play Joe Louis? Hell no, because
I’ve been working on him. But, I will not take the lead
of something that I don’t know anything about it.
You’re
not willing to make the compromise, just for the sake of being
the lead.
Terrence Howard: You can either lead by example
or lead by barring down. Or you can have a greater weight and
say, ‘Well, I’m gonna make more money than other
people, so I should be the lead in this.’ And people will
follow it. Supporting. Or, you can lead by example. The character
I played in ‘Crash’ wasn’t the lead in that,
but the example my character shows stands in a leading way or
‘Lackwanna’ because of Tyler and George Wolfe.
George is a very well known stage director. How was
he like as a movie director?
Terrence Howard: Flawless. Flawless. He was
the first one to really challenge me. The first director to
ever challenge me. He told me, ‘This is not going to be
a Terrence Howard impersonation day. Sorry honey, it’s
not going to happen. You’re going to act today. Okay?’
Has the type of scripts you’re getting changed
in the past year? Is your stature in the industry changing?
Terrence Howard: I get a lot more respect from
individuals when I talk to other actors they ask questions of
how did I come about. What did I learn? Yeah, I’m respected
now, but the truth of the matter is I’ve always respected
me more. And as much as you guys like me or dislike me, my daddy
told me when I was six-years-old, he put me in front of the
mirror and he said, ‘You see this little red head motherf-er?’
He says, ‘You gotta love him, because no matter what he’s
the only person that is going to be there through the rest of
your life through the highs and the lows.’ I am a narcissist?
You’re damn right. I love Terrence Howard and I’m
going to look after him and believe in him even when nobody
else believes in me. Because that one little sperm that made
it to that egg out of a half a billion, that was me. It wasn’t
the other ones. It was me and that’s the person I look
up to.
Are you still in Philly or have you gone Hollywood?
Terrence Howard: I’m still in Philly.