Singer, actress and former talk show host Queen Latifah is on the cover of Uptown magazine’s latest issue
and inside the 45-year-old talks about her first nude scene,
homosexuality in the black community and what she would have asked Bill Cosby.
Read excerpts from her interview below
On her nude scene in HBO’s Bessie: “I’ve
never done that before. It was a little odd but it was also a quiet,
relaxing thing. Sometimes she was so alone, and it was a moment for
Bessie to acknowledge her vulnerability, which I can completely relate
to … I don’t find [this nude scene] any more uncomfortable than kissing a
girl in Set It Off and sticking to the script. You have to take your
mind off of yourself and honor that character. Respect Cleo, respect
Bessie.”
On marriage equality: “Who
you choose to marry is really up to you and it’s not something you
should be judged on. I don’t find being gay or lesbian to be a character
flaw. Couples should be protected under the laws of this country
period. It actually angers me.”
On her talk show, The Queen Latifah Show, being canceled: “Obviously
it was disappointing but I don’t look at these things as catastrophic
failures. We have a lot going on in our company alone, so I’m not
worried about my next job opportunity.”
On Bill Cosby amid the rape allegations: “It’s
unfortunate because he has done so much in terms of entertainment,
culture and black folks. But right is right and wrong is wrong. All
these women, all these stories, it’s just – what a big stain on such an
amazing career.”
On homosexuality: “People’s
ideas in general are antiquated when it comes to who you love. We
haven’t moved as quickly as we probably should. And the reality is that
there’s always been gay people in the black community, so it’s not
foreign to us. And not just as a black community but just a society as a
whole.”
No comments:
Post a Comment