Kat Graham On Playing Jada Pinkett Smith in Tupac Movie “All Eyez On Me” @katgraham

Photo by Bradford Rogne


Peep  Kat’s interview plus an exclusive peek at Kat in “All Eyez On Me” below:

 

“I’m a Black girl. My mom even said to me when I was younger, ‘You need to take projects that make your race proud. You need to be a positive representative.’ It’s not just – ‘Oh I’m going to play a strong African American woman on a television show.’  It’s also what you do when you’re not shooting, in your free time. Are you going to be walking red carpets to get fashion press, or are you going to be actually dedicating your time to helping people? Maybe visit refugee camps, or go profile people, work for the U.N. refugee agency, you know – take some damn responsibility for the fact that people are watching you.”

 

“I think when I first started in the industry, I was very bright-eyed and bushy-tailed. I thought that Hollywood was fair and once they saw me dance and act and sing, that if I was just a very nice person, everything would come to me quickly.  Then as I started to get into thirteen or fourteen years old, things got a little dark, really. Living in one bedroom apartments in Hollywood with your mom, having no money – a little darkness started to set in. My views on Hollywood changed a little then.
I did Parent Trap when I was a little girl. I saw the rise and fall of Lindsay Lohan. I was seeing a lot of drugs and all this stuff. And it was at about that time that I had to really look at myself and say, “What kind of person do you want to be?” Because at that time there weren’t a lot of roles for women who looked like me. And if there were, no one cared about the little black girl who had a little part in this or that, unless it was Raven Simone or someone from the Cosby Show. That’s when I started to  write my own little short films. And I started producing my own music. That’s when I started to develop as an artist. I didn’t like what Hollywood was doing, and I wanted to create something different.”

On the Future and Helping to Create a World She Hopes to One Day See:

“I’m hoping that I can live in a world where it’s okay to challenge the mold, where we are all different shapes and sizes and we come from different places. I’m hoping that I can live in a world where there are black-owned businesses, and African Americans support other African Americans, and we don’t tear each other down. That we do more than just tweet a hash-tag about something, that we get out there with picket signs, that we challenge an unfair system, that we speak on things that maybe people would rather not talk about.
I’m hoping that I can live in a world where the men and women are strong and opinionated and still graceful and poignant in how they express themselves. I hope that I can live in a world where that takes precedence over looking pretty at an awards show.”

 On Playing Jada Pinkett and theBigger Picture

It’s so important to me, the work I’m doing on this project. Because Tupac and Jada saw something different for themselves when they were growing up. They wanted to be
Left: Kat & Demetrius Shipp Jr Right: Jada & Tupac
more than what the industry tried to peg them as.
All this development with T.V. and film. Having a Black president and having Black directors. All this stuff, from my perspective, has really only blossomed in the past few years. Where the audience is seeing more than the slave movie or the drug addict or the funny best friend. It’s still an issue. You want me to not talk about it? I’m going to talk about it. It’s still an issue. I’m going to challenge it. But I can’t challenge it by just creating the way that we’ve been programmed to create. Because so often we’re not in the room with a Black writer or a Black director.”

 

 

On Tamir Rice, Police Slayings and the System Needing Work

“It’s cool to talk about what you’re wearing and who you’re dating. And nobody really wants to hear about this young boy – 12 years old and the cops (Tamir Rice) thought he was 18, you know? These are realities about today, and people just have to wake up.
No one is perfect. No system is perfect. There are things in our government that we could definitely work on.”



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