Queen Latifah: The Last Holiday Interview
Queen Latifah Interviewed by Kam Williams

Born Dana Elaine Owens, but better known as Queen Latifah, the First Lady of Hip-Hop was also the first rapper to land an Oscar nomination (for Chicago). She’s already made another ten movies since, including Bringing Down the House, Barbershop 2, Beauty Shop, Taxi, and The Cookout.

In March of this year, she’ll play Ray Romano’s "mammoth" love interest as the voice of Ellie, the woolly mammoth in Ice Age 2. And in November she’ll appear in Stranger than Fiction, a romantic comedy co-starring Will Ferrell and Dustin Hoffman.

She recently added another to the string of firsts found on her resume’ when she became the first hip-hop artist to get a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Here, she reflects on her latest movie, a remake of Last Holiday, a bittersweet comedy from 1950 about a salesman (Sir Alec Guinness) who decides to spend every penny he’s saved when he learns he’s suffering from a terminal illness.
 

The Last Holiday Interview with Kam Williams

Kam Williams (KW): The character you play in this movie’s name is Georgia Bird. When the film was originally made, the character’s name was George Bird and played by Sir Alec Guinness. Do you feel funny about taking a role that was really written for a man?

Queen Latifah (QL): I reserve the right to be creative and to re-conceptualize a lot of these movies that need to be switched for someone like me. They need to be opened up and changed to add a little flava’ to them, or just a new twist on them that wasn’t there before. A lot of the studios are open to it. Talent drives a lot of the scripts that you see. So, if a studio wants to work with me, and the writers figure out a way to make it happen, and they’re into the idea, then it’s really not that difficult. But I never limit myself to supposedly typical female roles, let alone African-American female ones.

Neither does my agent or my partner slash manager. So, when they’re out there looking for stuff, they’re looking for good pieces of work. Good ideas, not just a role for a black female.

KW: What was it like having a rapper, LL Cool J, play your love interest?

QL: [Whispers] Well, there’s no love interest like LL Cool J. [Chuckles] No, it was interesting, ’cause we used to work together. His wife is cool as hell, always has been. So, I have to act, when I’m allowing myself to think that way about him. But working with him was really fun because, although we do come from music backgrounds, and have made this transition into film, we still have our roots in rap. We could sit around and rhyme. He’d start rhyming one of Eric B. and Rakim’s records, and we’d rhyme the whole song, or we’d start talking about this event in hip-hop history. Or about that whole era of hip-hop when we were around. He’d start rhyming one of my records, or I’d start rhyming one of his. There was just more of a relatability because we come from the world of hip-hop music, and because of the respect we have for each other’s having made that crossover, as being one of the few rappers to have their own sitcom, go into films and then wind up working together. It was the same kind of feeling with Ice Cube, and the same kind of feeling with Will [Smith], who’s been like a brother all these years.

KW: Why did you settle on LL as your co-star?

QL: I thought it would particularly good for him, because you don’t usually see him play this kind of character. I thought it would show more of his range, and make him more empathetic to people. It’s a beautiful character that he plays in this film. He’s still that strong guy, but without the cockiness, the brashness or the physicality that you see with many of his roles. This isn’t based on his body. He’s really just an emotional, sensitive guy who has a crush on a girl. It’s a classic sort of love story with an innocence about it that’s just beautiful.

KW: Tell me a little about your character.

QL: She’s shy, meek, humble, always bending over backwards for everyone else. And she’s afraid of a lot of things. She has all this money in the bank, but won’t spend it for fear of needing it. Won’t approach this guy she’s in love with, for fear of being rejected. So, she’s a woman who lives in fear. But it comes to a point where she must choose her desires and goals over the fears, because she only has three weeks to live.

KW: Have you ever had to overcome fears in real-life?

QL: To be honest with you, all my life I’ve been in a battle to overcome my fears. I’ve had to take that chance with everything I’ve done, from riding my bike down that driveway, to skateboarding, to soccer, to every sport I every tried out for. I tried out for the kick ball team in the projects when I was little. I didn’t make the team, but I tried. So, I learned rejection at an early age, too. But it doesn’t kill you. Like the talent show, for the first ten seconds, I was as nervous as I don’t know what. And then I found that one face in the crowd that was with me, and I’d focus on them, and it all would start just coming out, and I’d do well. So, everything I tried to do in my life has been scary, to a degree. But I’d just do it anyway.

KW: You’ve accomplished so much already. Are there any mountains left for you to climb?

QL: There’s still plenty to do. I think I’ll never run out of things to accomplish, as long as I’m alive, ’cause there’s so much to learn, and so much to do. I always feel like I have so much further to go, personally, spiritually, emotionally, mentally, and physically. So, I guess I’ll be hanging around till God says, "you’re good, come on back."

KW: As someone who made it out of the projects of Newark, what words of advice do you have for kids coming up in the inner city today?

QL: I would tell some of them that I went through my follower period, too, because you want to be accepted and feel like a part of something. A lot of these gangs are facing that with gangs or with clubs. It could be a positive or a negative sort of thing. At the end of the day, though, you have to be your own leader and make your own choices. All those decisions come with consequences. If you hang out with kids who want to get high smoking weed and sniffing coke, then you’re going to do nothing with your life but smoke weed and sniff coke. If you want to be a doctor, then you need to hang out with people who want to be doctors. Often, it’s the company that you keep.

If you’re going to run with a crew, decide what crew you’re going to run with. A crew that’s beating up people to get into a gang that ain’t making any money does not make sense. Don’t be a dummy. You don’t want to be a follower; you want to be a leader. Anything you could possibly dream of is now possible. So, what’re you gonna do? I could rattle on and on, but kids are going to face those challenges, and at some point any true leader has to have the guts to stand alone and make a stand.

KW: Do you have any feelings about your governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s ordering the execution of Tookie Williams?

QL: First of all, my governor’s in New Jersey, Corzine. I’m a New Jersey resident. I do split my time and damn near live in California, too, but Jersey will always be my home. I was totally against it, and if I ever wind up becoming a resident while he’s governor, I’ll have to vote him just because of that. I feel like it just shows a lack of compassion. And it’s not about what Tookie Williams did or didn’t do. I’m just against the death penalty. We don’t honor ourselves as human beings to literally murder another human. I feel like there are too many people who have already died that were innocent. The whole system is flawed. Look at how many people are being freed based on DNA. God knows what other types of scientific evidence will come up in the future that will free other people.

KW: What do you think of Lil’ Kim’s being in prison/

QL: Well, I been wanting to see the girl. I done wrote a thousand letters for them to put us on this damn list. It’s a Catch-22 with Kim. I feel really bad for her, because she really didn’t do anything. She just didn’t tell. And in the circles that we move in, there’s something to be said for that. But I think that people could have acted on her behalf in a wiser way so that she wouldn’t have ended up in this situation.

KW: Does being a star and always in the public eye have a negative impact on your relationships?

QL: There’s negative effects when you’re trying to sit down and have a damn argument and people come up to you and say, ’Aren’t you Queen Latifah?’ You want to say, ’Yeah, and get the hell out of my face. Don’t you see me arguing? Go ahead on!’ But you can’t, because then somebody gets their feeling hurt, and you feel worse. It’s a pain in the butt, though, when you’re just trying to have a conversation. It’s a compliment to you, but at the same time, it’s very hard sometimes for the people around you. And everybody who loves you and cares about you has got to ride this thing with you, good times and bad. It has its ups and downs, like any other profession. The only problem is that you have your mistakes in front of the world, and other people kind of get to have theirs behind closed doors.

Guess I gots to go. Always good talking to you.

KW: Same here. Thanks for the time.