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Alfre Woodard is one of the most successful actors in Hollywood, but you might not recognize her if you saw her on the street.
During her nearly 50-year career, encompassing well over 100 roles, she’s won a Golden Globe and four Emmys, and she’s been nominated for an Oscar. She’s played a U.S. president, a crime boss, an anti-apartheid activist and more. Yet, “for a period of time, everyone between the ages of 30 and 50 was convinced they’d gone to high school with me,” says Woodard, fresh off an Amtrak train ride marked by Don’t-I-know-you? double takes from fellow passengers.
In an industry whose stars often cannot separate their own personalities from the roles they play, she is an actor’s actor, as one critic put it — “chameleonic, idiosyncratic, true.” At the same time, for a major star she has a somewhat unusual passion: teamwork. “Alfre never feels it’s a solo enterprise,” says filmmaker Lawrence Kasdan (The Big Chill), who directed her in two movies from the 1990s, Grand Canyon and Mumford.
Describing the set of her new Netflix series, The Boroughs, in which a group of retirement community residents battle an otherworldly threat, Woodard, a former high school athlete (track and basketball), likens her fellow septuagenarian castmates — including Alfred Molina, Geena Davis and Bill Pullman — to a seasoned relay team. “It was like we’d been running together since junior high and now you’re at the Olympics,” she says. “You put your hand out, bam, you know the baton is there.”
Still, up close, the star power is there. Sitting in a dimly lit booth in a Manhattan eatery, Woodard, 73, somehow manages to sparkle. Sipping a cup of mint tea, she opens up about a life and career of trust, faith and storytelling. Her joyful intensity draws you in.
Loving Family, No Limits
Woodard was born and raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Her parents—father Marion, or “MH,” an interior decorator and entrepreneur, and mother Constance, a homemaker — came from enslaved-people-turned-landowners on her father’s side and sharecroppers on her mother’s.
From a young age, performing was not only encouraged but required for Woodard. “My mom was from a family of 12,” says Woodard, the youngest of three. “Whenever we were all together with her family, all they did was laugh and talk over each other. If you were little and said, ‘I want to say something,’ they didn’t go, ‘What do you want to say, little one?’ They’d go, ‘It better be funny! What? What?’ ”
Even in the era of segregation — Tulsa high schools were not desegregated until 1973 — she never doubted she could say and do what she wanted. “From the time I can remember, my father would say, ‘Nobody, no man in this world, I don’t care who it is, is better than you are,’ ” she says, slapping her hand against our table, rattling her cup on its saucer. “What I got from my family is a strong sense of self, a sense of value.”
And a clear sense of the tumultuous world beyond her doorstep. At age 5, “my father made us watch the news every night,” she recalls. “I was watching the Civil Rights Movement.” By age 10, she was helping her parents register voters.
One day in middle school, two teachers “pulled down the shades and passed out mimeograph sheets and said, ‘These sheets are not to leave the room,’ ” Woodard recalls. They told the story of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, when white mobs destroyed the prosperous Black neighborhood of Greenwood, killing dozens and leaving thousands homeless. Although the event wasn’t in the school’s official curriculum, the teachers wanted their students to know the truth, she says.
From the passed-along stories of those Black Tulsans who survived the violence and endured, she says, “I learned what resilience looked like.” She also learned the importance of protesting and taking action. “Whether it was African American, Indigenous, women, LGBTQ — which we didn’t have, it was just gay rights — when they called for people to come stand with them, you went,” she says.
Her life changed forever the day a teacher took the students on a field trip to a movie theater, where they saw an Oscar-winning French drama, Sundays and Cybèle, about a neglected girl who befriends a middle-aged war veteran. Sitting there, Woodard had a revelation: This is powerful. This is what I want to do. This is how we change the world.
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