The Great Young Stars in The Great Debaters
In The
Great Debaters, Jurnee Smollett and
Denzel
Whitaker more than hold their own opposite a couple of Academy
Award-winners in
Denzel
Washington and
Forest
Whitaker. These accomplished young stars deliver powerful
performances portraying members of all-black Wiley College's 1935 debate
team which won the national championship.
Born into a family filled with talented thespians, Jurnee's siblings,
Jazz, Jake, Jocqui, Jussie and Jojo, are also professional actors. Only
21, she already has won a couple of NAACP Image Awards, both for her
work on the TV series Cosby.
Jurnee got her start at the age of five on TV, enjoying recurring roles,
in turn, on such shows as Hanging with Mr. Cooper, Full House and On Our
Own. By the age of 10, she had landed her first title role on the big
screen, as Eve in the critically-acclaimed Eve's Bayou.
17 year-old Denzel's resume’ is practically as impressive, as he made
his auspicious acting debut at 11 opposite Denzel Washington in Training
Day. Since then, he's appeared on numerous television programs,
including One on One, ER, All That, The War at Home, Teachers, and The
Suite Life of Zack and Cody.
Here, the gifted pair share their thoughts about their latest outing as
James Farmer, Jr. and Samantha Booke.
Jurnee Smollett (JS) & Denzel Whitaker (DW)
The Great Debaters Interview with Kam Williams (KW)
DW:
Hey, Kam!
KW: Thanks for the time.
DW: Not a problem. How’re you doing?
KW: Great. How intimidating was it for you working with Oscar-winners
Denzel Washington and Forest Whitaker?
JS: It wasn't intimidating’
DW: Because right when you step into the audition room, Denzel
demands a certain level of professionalism. Also, he sets a professional
tone, and a collaborative tone among everybody. Nobody's bigger than the
rest. It's one of those situations where you can't be intimidated
otherwise we wouldn’t have made it past the first audition. It's all
about being a professional and performing, although at the end of the
day you might sit back and realize, ’Wow, I just did a scene with Denzel
Washington.’ I'd be standing at the snack line saying, ’Did I really
just do that?’ But, at the same time, when you step back onto the set,
and hop back into character, you're ready to shine a light onto a story
that not many people have heard of. And so many little things are
playing in your mind that you don't even think about the fact that
you're doing so-called acting in front of Denzel and Forest.
KW: Did you have a sense, as you were making the movie, of the
significance of the story, historically?
DW: No, I only really got a sense of its importance after the
film. But I have to say that during the lynching scene you could feel
the importance of the film, of what it meant to grow up during that era.
And to feel what our ancestors felt.
JS: Yeah, once I saw the film, I was really blown away by how
impactful it was even on me, and I'd been there for the entire process.
But while you're doing it, you're so focused on being present that you
have to forget all the external stuff in order to make it honest, to
make it natural.
KW: Denzel, given your name, did you feel predestined to act as a child?
DW: No, not at all. Acting didn't occur to me till about seven
years ago. I knew who Denzel Washington was, but never did it occur to
me that I had the same name as an Academy Award-winner. It didn't drive
me to acting, but it's definitely a compliment when someone says
something like, ’Hey, you're little Denzel.’
KW: What do you hope this picture will impress upon young kids?
JS: The film has so many messages. One is the power of the spoken
word. We see it today in poets and hip-hop artists. The power of our
tongues' The power of having an opinion and using your mind as a weapon
versus using something like a gun or a knife’ Using the tools that God
has given you as your biggest strength. That was the ticket out. That
was how we got to where we are now, because there were so many people
who decided to pick up a book, and fed their minds with that kind of
fuel.
KW: Next is what I call the Jimmy Bayan question. Where in L.A. do you
live?
DW: I live in the South Bay area.
JS: And I live in the Valley.
KW: Is there a question that nobody ever asks you that you wish somebody
would ask?
JS: Yeah, what's your favorite cereal? [Laughs]
KW: Okay, what's your favorite cereal?
DW: Jurnee, what's your favorite cereal?
JS: [Hesitates] Ummmmm, see, I go back and forth between oatmeal
and Wheatena.
DW: And I go back and forth between Cinnamon Toast Crunch and
Fruit Loops [Laughs]
JS: [Laughs heartily]
KW: I like natural oatmeal, the grain that you actually cook.
JS: Yeah, definitely! Old-fashioned, not that quick stuff either.
Kam, what do you put in your oatmeal?
KW: Soy milk, honey, cinnamon, nutmeg, a dash of vanilla and a dollop of
butter.
JS: Ooh, you do it up! I put cinnamon, bananas, raisins and
coconut oil.
KW: Wow! That sounds delicious! I'm going to try that.
JS: And I've also tried it with some walnuts.
KW: Denzel, how about you? Is there a question that nobody ever asks you
that you wish somebody would ask?
JS: Ask him what's his favorite song?
KW: Why, is there a song he plays all the time? I heard that he likes
Rapper's Delight.
DW: Oh, that's something from my past that my cast members don't
know anything about.
JS: Rapper's Delight?
KW: Old school. I heard that you can rap the whole song.
DW: Not the whole thing, just the first segment of it. It was
before the Kids' Choice Awards, the first one I ever attended. I was on
Nickelodeon's All That at the time. They were like, ’Okay, now we're
going to bring someone up from the audience to sing Rapper's Delight. If
you know this song, raise your hand.’ Everything was new and exciting,
and I started waving my hand, because and I'd heard it once or twice on
my mom's radio. Then all of a sudden they call on me and I'm just
standing there with a dumb look on my face. So, I run up on stage and
grab the microphone, and the next thing you know I'm rapping and shaking
people's hands in the slime pool pit. It was cool!
KW: The Columbus Short question. Are you happy?
JS: You know what? I'm immensely happy. I walk in a space of
gratitude. I'm so grateful to God for blessing me with an amazing family
and the opportunity to do what I love. I love what I do, and I'm so
proud of this film.
DW: I'm very happy. I'm proud to be doing the work that I'm
doing. And I'm anxious and hopeful that my next body of work will be as
significant as this film.
KW: Do you know what picture's up next for you?
DW: No, sir. But having Denzel and Oprah put their hands on you,
so to speak, is something special. After this, I'm just trying to see
what scripts are out there. I'd really like to find more roles that are
meaningful.
KW: Jurnee, you were Eve in Eve's Bayou.
JS: Yes, sir.
KW: So, you landed a title role pretty young.
JS: Yeah, I was 10.
KW: How does it feel to have been a part of such an important film at
such a young age?
JS: Thank you. I'm really, really proud of Eve's Bayou because we
made it 11 years ago, and still people come up to me and tell me how
much it touched them and how much they loved that film. It was also
important to my development because I learned a lot on that set. I
gained an immense amount of confidence from that film, and learned a lot
about my craft. I'm very grateful to have been able to work with so many
talented filmmakers and actors during my career. I've learned so much
from them. It's been my college, in a way.
KW: Eve's Bayou was filmed at several locations around Louisiana's Gulf
Region. Do you have anything to say about the handling of Hurricane
Katrina?
JS: Oh God! You can't shut me up about it. My mom is from New
Orleans. And all of my maternal relatives were there during Katrina. We
couldn't even find my uncle for four months. We literally didn't know
where he was. I had been there just four days before the storm hit.
KW: Have you been back?
JS: Yes, the first time I went back was two months after. I
went with the Children's Defense Fund. We went all around’ to the Lower
Ninth Ward’ and to some of the freedom schools that the Children's
Defense Fund is building. While there are a lot of people down there who
are working hard, we're not giving them enough help. I can't tell you
how many people I know whose lives have been turned upside-down. All of
my maternal relatives have left, with the exception of my uncle.
Everyone else is either in Houston or Dallas or Atlanta. They've been
able to rebuild their lives, but not everyone is as fortunate. I could
tell you stories about children who were supposed to be on medication
whose mothers couldn't get their prescriptions filled for months,
because of all the red tape they had to go through. I was like, ’This is
America? They did nothing wrong to deserve this.’ This was a national
disaster, and yet so many children had to pay such a heavy price.
KW: Despite being young, you are very active with many charities and
social causes. I know you were over in Africa working with AIDS
patients, too.
JS: Yeah, I was fortunate enough to go to South Africa with
Artists for a New South Africa. That trip changed my life, man. The
stuff you see’ and the stories you hear firsthand’ I mean, that country
has such beauty, and yet such pain. The spirit of the people is amazing,
but there's still a lot of work that's just got to be done. It's so easy
to take the things we have for granted. Little things like electricity,
running water and a roof over our heads. They have to work so hard to
get things we feel entitled to. There's hunger for an education over
there. Being there made me realize what's important in life, and made me
reevaluate a lot of things in my own life.
KW: Well, thank you both for the interview. I'm expecting even bigger
things from both of you down the line and hope to speak to you again
when you're working on new projects.
DW: Oh, we’d love to.
JS: Yes, thank you. Happy New Year!
elated Links
Read our March 2013 Interview with Jurnee Smollett-Bell on her role in Tyler Perry's film Temptation