Born in Panorama City,
California to Tyra Doyle and Leon
Good on August 18, 1981, Meagan Monique Good was raised
along with her three siblings mostly by her mom. The precocious
tot got her early start in showbiz at the age of four with the
help of her mother who served as her agent.
After
appearing in countless TV commercials, the photogenic cutie pie
started landing bit roles on TV series like Gabriel’s Fire and
On Our Own until she made her screen debut in Friday in 1995. A
couple of years later, her big break arrived when she got to
play Cisely Baptiste in
Eve’s Bayou with
Samuel L. Jackson,
Jurnee Smollett and Debbi Morgan.
Since
then, her familiar face has become a staple of television on
such shows as Cousin Skeeter, Touched by an Angel, My Wife and
Kids and Moesha, to name a few. Meanwhile, in film, she made
Roll Bounce and Waist Deep before enjoying a starring role as a
romantic lead opposite her childhood friend,
Columbus Short, in Stomp the Yard.
In
2008 alone, the versatile thespian appeared in the horror flick,
One Missed Call; the Mike Myers comedy, The Love Guru; and the
slasher flick, Saw V. And this year promises to keep Meagan just
as busy, since she’s slated for three more releases, Sundays in
Fort
Greene, Sweet Flame and The
Unborn, which is already in theaters.
Here,
the striking actress shares her thoughts about everything from
the election of
Barack Obama to how she has successfully avoided the
pitfalls of early fame which so many former child stars seem to
fall prey to.
Meagan Good
The Unborn Interview with
Kam Williams
KW: Thanks so much for the time, Meagan.
MG: Thank you.
KW: Since you’ve been friends with
Columbus Short for years, I
think I ought to start by asking you the Columbus Short question
which is: Are you happy?
MG: I’m very happy! It’s an important question which I don’t think
people ask enough in the midst of the glitz and the glamour and
all the other things that go on.
KW: How did you and Columbus meet?
MG: We’ve known each other since we were 10. He lived right across
the street from my baby cousin’s. So, we used to play together,
and we also went to school together around that age. We actually
hadn’t seen each other for several years when we ran into each
other when we were like 18 or 19. We became friends again then
and we’ve stayed close ever since, and we got to make Stomp the
Yard together.
KW: What interested you in making
The
Unborn?
MG: First of all, when I was a kid, what really got me wanting to
act was Halloween 4 and 5. I wanted to be the little girl in
those movies so badly. Ever since then, I always wanted to make
a scary movie that’s really like a classic thriller. I don’t
think we’ve had a great one since Scream 1. So, to me, it seemed
like a great opportunity to do everything that I had wanted to
do as a little girl.
KW: But this wasn’t your first horror flick, was it?
MG: No, I also did Venom, One Missed Call and Saw V.

KW: What did you think of the storyline of
The
Unborn?
MG: I believe in ghosts and spirits, and I believe that they can
possess you.
KW: What I found a little strange was the idea of a rabbi
performing an exorcism.
MG: Spiritually, if something like that needed to be performed, I
don’t think it would matter if you weren’t Catholic. I think
it’s about believing in God and that you can be saved and
healed.
KW: Because of the demonic subject-matter and the physical
intensity, this looks like it could have been a very
emotionally-challenging film to make.
MG: Oh, yeah! Because of the content, I had to do a lot of praying
even before I accepted the role. Then, once I got on set, I
prayed every single morning before we started shooting. And I’d
pray again in the afternoons.
KW: Why so much?
MG: Even though it’s just a movie, you really are opening yourself
up to a lot of things spiritually. People still talk about how
the little girl in Poltergeist [Heather O’Rourke] passed away at
the age of 12 of some mysterious disease and the actress who
played the eldest daughter [Dominique Dunne] in the same movie
was murdered a few months after the film opened. So, it was
intense for me and I pretty much prayed for everyone on set. You
definitely have to take it seriously, spiritually.
KW: I first recall seeing you in a very spiritual film, Eve’s
Bayou, a masterpiece directed by
Kasi Lemmons.
MG: Oh, thank you.
KW: What are you memories of making that movie?
MG: I remember being very nervous, because it was my first leading
role as a child. More so than anything I was nervous about
having to kiss Samuel L. Jackson, since I was only 14. I also
remember being excited and enjoying myself, even in that
situation. Although I was young, I prayed while in
Louisiana, too, because as you know
there’s a lot of voodoo down there and you always need to be
covered and protected and aware. Even if it’s just a film, it’s
still real life while you’re there shooting it.
KW: What TV commercials did you do when you were a kid?
MG: Everything from Barbie to AT&T to Pringles to Burger King to
Cheerios to J.C. Penney’s to Macys. Everything you could think
of commercial-wise, I’ve probably done.
KW: What were some of the first sitcoms you appeared on?
MG: Doogie Howser and Amen, and from that I graduated to speaking
lines.
KW: Is your dad still a police officer?
MG: Yes, I think he’s retiring this year, but he’s still with the
LAPD.
KW: And is your mom still your manager?
MG: No, she stopped managing me when I was a teenager, but she
still helps me out a lot. But I try not to have her work for me
anymore, because she raised us on her own and pretty much gave
up everything so my sister [actress/singer La’Myia Good] and I
could have our careers. On top of that, my 36 year-old brother
has disabilities, and she’s been caring for him since she was
very young. So, I try to make it as easy for her as possible.
KW: What type of disabilities does he have?
MG: I don’t know exactly how it would be classified, but he has
some brain damage. He stopped breathing when he was 8, and some
medication they gave him left him with a learning disability.
KW: I’m sorry to hear that. I suppose he helped keep you grounded.
MG: Yeah.
KW: What else helped you avoid the pitfalls
of
early fame which so many former child stars seem to fall prey
to?
MG: For one thing, my mom wasn’t a stage-mom. She isn’t very
aggressive, and she never tried to force me to do anything I
didn’t want to do. She’s just a very laidback person who was
very protective of her kids. And she had no interest in taking
our money, controlling the situation, or living vicariously
through us. She’s really been a great mom who I’ve always had a
lot of respect for even as teenagers because she always
respected us and treated us like young adults. Some people got
on her for being too permissive, but we never rebelled. We never
got into drugs and we were the last ones to lose our virginity.
We never ran around with the bad boys or hid anything from our
parents.
KW: That’s admirable.
The
Tasha Smith
question: Are you ever afraid?
MG: Oh, I love Tasha. She’s an amazing person. Am I ever afraid?
Yes, you have times when you work so hard and put so much into
it, and things feel… I don’t want to go so far as to say
hopeless… but you’re trying hard not to lose your faith. Moments
like that are where I get afraid and I really need to pray and
put everything back into perspective. I have to realize it’s not
me, it’s God, and I just have to be confident in my ability and
focus on the positive regardless of people who say negative
things and don’t want me to succeed, or who won’t give me an
opportunity. Those are the times when I get a little afraid,
because your faith may waver a little bit. But I think now that
I’m a little bit older, my mindset is that being afraid is a
waste of energy because there are some things that are out of
you control that you may just have to accept. So, I put all my
energy into making the things I can control go the way I know in
my heart they should. My attitude is to keep fighting and try
not to be afraid.
KW: Bookworm
Troy Johnson was wondering: What was the last book you read?
MG: The Bible.
KW:
“Realtor to the Stars” Jimmy Bayan asks: Where in
L.A.
do you live?
MG: In Studio
City.
KW:
Rudy
Lewis asks: Who’s at the top of your hero list?
MG: First, Jesus; then, my mom; then Barack.
KW: How do you feel about Obama’s becoming president?
MG: I’m ecstatic! It’s amazing! Gosh, I don’t even know what to
say. I’m just happy that Bush is over, and that the way things
have been is over. Now the troops can come home and that we can
work towards putting ourselves back together. I’m glad for what
it represents, and I hope that people don’t make it into a
racial thing, because it’s really not about that. It’s about
creating unity, and if we needed to use a different colored face
to achieve that, so be it. But let’s not make it a racial thing,
but a people thing, because we come in all sorts of shapes,
sizes and shades. Let’s unify and be happy!
KW: Speaking of shapes, sizes and shades, you have a very exotic
look. What’s your background?
MG: My mother’s mother is Jewish and African, so I guess that would
be considered Creole. My mother’s father was Cherokee Indian and
something else. My dad’s mother’s Puerto Rican and black, and
his father was from
Barbados.
KW: My father was from
Barbados?
MG: Oh really?
KW: Yep. While you are obviously very mature and intelligent, I’m
still curious about why you didn’t you go to college?
MG: I always knew I wanted to be an actress, and I had the attitude
that I would learn more under people like Samuel L. Jackson,
Laurence Fishburne or Mike Myers than from someone who had never
starred in a movie. I just didn’t think that someone who had
never been in a movie could teach me how to act in one.
KW: Do you at all regret not going to college?
MG: I do wish that I had gone to college, just for the simple fact
that knowing more than one approach makes you more well-rounded.
But I still can’t say knowing what I know now, that I would have
done it any differently.
KW:
The
music maven
Heather Covington question: What’s music are you
listening to nowadays?
MG: I’m a late Eighties, early Nineties baby. I will always be
listening to Journey, Foreigner, Pat Benatar, Aerosmith and Guns
& Roses. I love R&B without a doubt, but I’m a Rock & Roll girl.
And I like a little bit of Pop. You can’t forget about Prince
and Madonna.
KW:
Is there a question no one ever asks you, that you wish someone
would?
MG: Yeah, what would you like to leave behind?
KW: What would you like to leave behind?
MG: Something that’s more than a memory. I’d like to be a part of
the new movement, some of which is in film. I’d like to see more
different colored faces playing leads in movies and doing art
house films. I’d like to be remembered as someone who was on the
front line of a movement changing the world and people and how
they were perceived. And as someone who used whatever God put
her in to offer a positive outlook and to make a positive
influence and to change some of the things that are in boxes
they shouldn’t be in.
KW: Well, Meagan, I’ve been very impressed with your work thus far
and expect even bigger things from you in the future.
MG: Thank you, I’m looking to follow in Julia Roberts’ and Meryl
Streep’s footsteps.
KW: Thanks again for the interview, and best of luck .
MG: Thank you and God bless you!
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