She plays the wife of bounty hunter and former slave Django (Jamie
Foxx), who sets off to rescue her from plantation owner Calvin Candie (Leonardo
DiCaprio) in Diango Unchained,
Quentin Tarantino's second rollicking, shoot-'em-up revenge fantasy involving a
historical atrocity (see Inglourious
Basterds). But
please don't tell Kerry Washington the movie looks like "fun." It is
about "total fear, and emotional and spiritual imprisonment," says
the feisty 35-year-old. At one point during the filming, Washington was so
spent that "Jamie leaned over and said, 'It's going to be O.K.,
Olivia.'" By which he meant Olivia Pope, the sashaying, often ruthless
Washington, D.C., fixer the actress plays in Scandal (now in its second season
on ABC). "I was going from running barefoot in the forest to wearing
platform Gucci pumps," she says. Fabulous footwear aside, the program is
the first hour-long network drama to star an African-American woman since
Teresa Graves in Gel Christie
Love!, almost 40 years ago. "I didn't feel pressure for myself. I felt
pressure for this country," she says of the milestone. "Were we all
ready to have a black woman be the center of an hour-long drama?" Detect a
streak of social consciousness? Washington serves on President Obama's
Committee on the Arts and the Humanities and has long lobbied Congress to
protect funding for the National Endowment for the Arts. When she was "a
latchkey kid growing up in the Bronx, the N.E.A. was my third parent," she
says. Thanks to the N.E.A., "I was able to go to ballet class and have piano
lessons and be in the children's theater company." The image of crack
vials on the sidewalk on her way to dance class in the early 80s still makes
her shudder for the girl she could have become. If not for the N.E.A.,
"where would I have been going and what would I have been doing?"
by Evgenia
Peretz, Vanity Fair, February 2013
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