Jada Pinkett Smith The HawthoRNe Interview

Maryland Native Jada Pinkett Smith studied dance and acting at the
Baltimore School for the Arts and the North Carolina School of the Arts
before getting her big break when she landed a role on the long-running
NBC-series, A Different World. The multi-talented actress, producer,
director and philanthropist continually challenges herself in a variety
of ways.
Now, not only is she playing her first lead role in a TV-series on
HawthoRNe, but she is also the show’s executive producer. Ms. Pinkett
Smith’s recent work includes lending her voice to the role of Gloria in
Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa. She previously co-starred in the remake of
The Women, and is perhaps best known for her portrayal of Niobe in the
The Matrix: Reloaded and The Matrix: Revolutions.
Choosing her roles carefully, Jada appeared opposite Adam Sandler and
Don Cheadle in Reign Over Me for Columbia Pictures, as well as playing a
pivotal role opposite Tom Cruise and
Jamie Foxx in Collateral. Some of
her other credits include Menace II Society, Jason’s Lyric, A Low Down
Dirty Shame, The Nutty Professor, Set It Off and Scream 2, as well as
voice work for Princess Mononoke.
Just as she does in front of the camera, Jada continually challenges
herself off-screen with new and exciting projects. For example, her eye
for excellence helped her, as executive producer, to turn the
best-selling novel
The Secret Life of Bees into a hit movie that earned
itself the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Motion Picture earlier this
year. Here, she shares her thoughts about her new show, HawthoRNe, where
she’ll be playing the title character, a recently-widowed, single-mom
who works as the compassionate chief nurse at mythical Richmond Trinity
Hospital. This new dramatic series premieres on TNT on Tuesday, June 16
at 9:00 PM (ET/PT).
Jada Pinkett Smith The HawthoRNe Interview
with
Kam Williams
KW: Hi, Jada. Thanks for the time.
JPS: Thank you.
KW: My favorite film of yours is
Bamboozled. Which
is your favorite?
JPS: Oh, man, I don't think I've made it yet, to be honest with you. I
don't think
I've made my favorite film yet. But I loved Bamboozled. Bamboozled to me
is off the chain. It's definitely in the ranking. I loved Bamboozled.
KW: What interested you in returning to TV to do HawthoRNe?
JPS: I was not looking to do television at all. I got a phone call
from my manager, Miguel Melendez, and he says, "Listen, I really – I
want you to read this script. I would never send this to you if I didn't
think it was fantastic.” I read it and then I let my husband read it. I
was really interested in the project, and after a bit of back-and-forth
I decided, you know what, I'm just going to go for it. I had vowed I’d
never television again. But I decided to take it because I needed
something different.
KW: Was the fact that you’d be going to TNT important?
JPS: Well, I would say going to TNT was what closed the deal for
me. Once I met everybody there, I really loved the group at TNT, and I
liked what their expectations were for the show. So, I just felt this
really could be a beautiful marriage.
KW: Since you started playing a nurse, has your family started expecting
you to
cure their ailments?
JPS: Well, my mother is a nurse. So she is pretty much the nurse of the
family.
She has gotten that kind of locked down. So no, I'd have to say my
family pretty
much knows that in real life any type of physical traumas like cuts and
bruises
and anything like that, you've got to call – that you've got to call
gammy for that.
KW: Does it mean anything to you that other than
Jill Scott,
you’re now the only black female lead on a drama on television right
now?
JPS: I hadn't really thought about that. I'm really grateful for
the opportunity– but I just want to make a great show. I'm hoping that
people can just see a great show, whether it's an African-American, an
Asian, or a Native American that's standing at the forefront.
History-wise, there was probably a point in time when I wouldn't have
had this opportunity. So, to have this opportunity is a big deal for me.
I'm very grateful for it.
KW: Are there any plans for any of your children to appear on the
series?
JPS: As of right now, no.
KW: Judging by your mother-in-law on the show, Joanna Cassidy, I assume
that
your late husband was white or at least half-white. Will your daughter’s
character
being mixed be explored at all on the show?
JPS: There definitely probably will be some exploring of it later on in
the season.
KW: Given
Will's success with the Fresh Prince, has he given you any
tips ondoing a series?
JPS: Sure, my husband has a plethora of information to share. He is
here with me, and he has really offered me an extraordinary amount of
help on this particular project. I'm grateful for him.
KW: How have you been handling all the blood in the medical scenes?
JPS: There won’t be much gore on the show. There was one scene
where somebody had an open gash on their leg and that kind of caught me
off-guard. I'm really not one for a lot of physical gore like that,
which is why my mother is very surprised about that I'm playing nurse.
But on this show, we really are dealing more with how people are being
affected by their ailment s versus focusing on the ailments themselves.
KW: Diahann Carroll, as Julia, played the first black nurse in a title
role on TV
back in the Sixties. Do you feel any type of connection to that
history?
JPS:
I do, I do feel connection to that history,
absolutely –
because she’s the only prominent black female nurse that I can think of
who’s been on television. I feel both for that character and for Diahann
Carroll as an
actress, and I appreciate the road that she and paved for me to even
have the
possibility of being an actress in Hollywood.
KW: I know your mother’s a nurse. What does your dad do for a
living?
JPS: My father has been in construction for pretty much all his
working years.
KW: How old were you when you knew you wanted to be an
actress?
JPS: I was about three when I wanted to be an actress. I knew that
I would definitely be participating in Hollywood in some way. I didn't
know the amount of success I would enjoy, but I knew I would be here at
some capacity.
KW: Tell me a little about your friendship with
Tupac while in
performing arts school.
JPS: Tupac and I were just close friends because we had such an
insatiable drive and passion for acting and entertainment. It was
inevitable as far as we were both concerned.
KW: Thanks again for the interview, Jada, and best of luck to you
with the new show.
JPS: Thank you.