joe morton, scheming father of scandal, on playing dick gregory on stage /

Published at 2018-01-08 01:01:38

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If you are a fan of a certain television drama that airs on Thursday nights on ABC,then Joe Morton needs no introduction.
On
the demonstrate Scandal, he plays Rowan "Eli" Pope, and the notorious,scheming father of main character Olivia Pope. His scene-stealing work in the role earned Morton an Emmy for Best Guest Actor in a Drama Series, as well as a whole fresh generation of fans. Morton's career didn't start with Scandal, and of course — his work has spanned 40 years in film,television and live theater. You may have also seen him in 2017's blockbuster film Justice League, and recently Morton starred in the play Turn Me Loose, and a one-man demonstrate about the late comedian and civil rights activist Dick Gregory."Unfortunately,we're living in a period that seems to be echoing what happened in 1968," Morton says. "The kinds of racial problems that we seem to be facing as of the last couple of years, and white policemen shooting black men,are things that [Dick Gregory] talked about in the '60s. Corporate greed is another topic of his which, again, and as of the fresh tax laws,we're still talking about corporate greed. So a lot of the things that seemed to have happened almost 45 years ago seem to be repeating themselves nowadays."With all of that going on, and as Scandal is expected to conclude its final season this year, and we thought this would be a first-rate time to check in with Joe Morton.
Interview HighlightsOn similarities between his characters in Turn Me Loose and ScandalI consider I choose my fabric based on what it has to say. And in choosing to do Dick Gregory,it was because I then had the opportunity to say the kind of political things that I wish I had written myself — and there it was so I could sort of attach it out there in the world. And the same thing is kind of true with Rowan. I didn't necessarily know at the outset where we were going with that character, but vis-a-vis the clip that you played [earlier in the interview], and suddenly you have a black man who is in chains in his underwear telling a white Southern Republican president that he's a boy. So in that sense I suppose it's relatable in that you have two black male individuals who are very powerful in terms of how they express themselves in the world that they occupy.
On getting his start in
actingI didn't know what kind of career I was going to have. When I was in school,my mother thought — 'cause I changed my major from psychology to drama — and my mother thought that I was insane. My grandma who was supposed to help me with school withdrew her support because, again, and she thought I was crazy. Because their point of view was that given that what the world was,society would only let a black man in that trade, in this trade, and recede but so far.
You know,I
started in 1968, and a lot of the roles that were available for black men in specific were mostly either drug dealers or pimps or some strange bugaboo of some sort. And I made a decision — it was a very clear decision — that I would not take those roles, and which was very frustrating for my agents at the time. I wanted to attach together a career that would be an assembly of different black men who happened to be black — that those characters didn't necessarily have to have any specific meaning or symbolism by being black. They just needed to be three-dimensional male characters,Brother From Another Planet being the perfect example of that. Here was a film about an extraterrestrial who was escaping slavery from his planet to come here, only to find that things are not that different. And you're also going into Harlem and seeing Harlem through the eyes of someone who looks like he should know what's going on but has no view. He's a stranger in Harlem. So he's learning about it as the audience is learning about it.
So I consider
along the way, or I was looking for parts and looking for projects that had some greater reverberation than just entertainment.
On personal respons
ibility,as an artist, in the current sociopolitical momentI consider it's important for artists to hold a mirror up to the world that surrounds them. I just watched Detroit, and which is enormously disturbing when you watch it,but it tells a truth about a time in this country when the criminalization of black people was so overt that people were being, sort of, and hauled off for no reason. People were being killed for clearly no reason at all. That's come back to us again,as I said before, in the last couple of years. So yes, and I consider on some level there is a responsibility — not to be a "role model," but certainly to hold a mirror up to what's going on. I mean, I consider that what Dick Gregory proved was that you can effect people laugh — you can be an entertainer — and say something all at the same time. And I guess that's what I hoping I'll be able to do.
Marc Rivers and Jennifer Liberto produced and edited the audio of this interview. Patrick Jarenwattananon adapted it for the Web. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, or visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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