Denzel Washington: Falling Forward (2025) Movie Script
1
(dramatic music)
What is more important
to you, receiving this
acclaim from this group of critics in
New York and L.A., or from the audience
that goes to see or
that follows your work?
It has to be the audience.
But the most important thing to me
is making sure that I've done all I can
do to make the part come to life.
That's what's most important.
That's what I do.
I mean, I don't, you
know, that's what I do.
Denzel Washington redefined what an
African-American actor can do in Hollywood.
He's not there to make the white American
audience feel better about themselves.
He plays strong, powerful,
at times aggressive and
moral, morally upstanding
African-American roles.
Well, one of the scenes that had to
be the toughest to do or maybe went
through your mind would be
a scene where you're whipped.
(dramatic music)
Not the toughest, the simplest scene.
The toughest for everyone
else that day except me,
because I knew exactly what I
was doing and I had the spirits of all
of those people who had
been whipped for real with me.
And I think that's the biggest part of
his legacy, the way in which he changed
what African-American
actors can do in Hollywood.
It's not serendipity.
God is real.
He's real in my life.
It's all and everything
that I want to do.
And that's it.
(dramatic music)
High hopes.
(laughter)
I'm just, you know, here for the party.
Denzel Hayes Washington
Jr. entered the world on
December 28, 1954, in
Mount Vernon, a suburban
enclave just north of New
York City's frenetic energy.
Raised in a devout, hardworking
household, Denzel was
shaped by the values
of faith and discipline.
His father, Reverend Denzel Washington Sr.,
was a Pentecostal minister whose
impassioned sermons filled their church
each Sunday.
(upbeat music)
But if you could choose your future, where
do you see yourself being in 20
years and what kind of work do you think
you'll have accomplished by then?
Oh, 20 years from now, I think I would
like to see myself making films
as a director, possibly,
as a producer, possibly, but
having more control over the
product that I'm involved with.
Who is Denzel Washington?
Denzel Washington is
the leading actor of the
21st century, according
to the New York Times,
leading Hollywood
actor of the 21st century.
Denzel's mother, Lennis, a
beautician and choir singer,
ran a chain of beauty salons.
Her blend of strict
guidance and nurturing love
instilled in her children a strong work
ethic and a deep sense of purpose.
My father was a minister in the church.
I grew up in the church.
We weren't allowed to go to the movies.
We saw King of Kings, Ten Commandments.
That might have been about it.
So I didn't grow up
really watching westerns.
We had a television
show in America, Bonanza.
I got to see that, but I
never went to the movies.
His mother was a woman of the
city and his father was a man of the
country, was much more
innocent than she was.
I think what they had in common
was they were both very religious.
So his father was a Pentecostal minister
and his mother was religious as well.
And he grew up going to church every
Sunday, at least every
Sunday, and has carried
through his religious
belief throughout his life.
And I think it accounts for some of
his moral sense as an actor and his
sense that in most of the films he
plays, he plays someone who is on the
side of good.
And he said that this was his career
goal, to play characters who
brought something good to the world.
As the middle of three
siblings, Denzel grew
up immersed in the rhythms
of church life and community.
The Boys and Girls Club of Mount Vernon
became a sanctuary,
offering a space for sports,
friendship, and structure
amid the temptations of city life.
By age 11, Denzel was sweeping floors and
running errands at local
barbershops and his mother's
salons, a humorous twist
given his own infrequent haircuts.
These early jobs kept him grounded and out
of trouble, but his teenage
years brought challenges.
He ended up attending
a military school, which
was quite a different
environment, I think, from
how a lot of actors spend their early
years, but also, I think,
probably helped instill
this real discipline within him that we
see throughout his career as an actor.
When Denzel was 14, his
parents' marriage dissolved
and his father relocated to Virginia.
The absence of his
father's presence left Denzel
unmoored, leading to rebellious
behavior, including street fights
and defiance that worried his mother.
Determined to steer her son back on course,
Lennis made a bold choice.
She enrolled Denzel in
Oakland Military Academy,
a prestigious boarding
school in upstate New York.
Far from Mount Vernon's
familiar streets, Denzel navigated
a predominantly white environment
where his academic performance
faltered, but his
athletic talent flourished.
He dreamed of a future
in professional sports,
while his quick wit and charisma led
friends to predict a career in comedy.
Beneath his outgoing
demeanor, however, lay a reserved
young man grappling with
the uncertainties of youth.
At Oakland, a quiet
resolve began to take shape,
a determination that would later
fuel his ascent to global stardom.
You know, that's the thing I'm proud
of, most proud of about this film, is that
it made young people, black and white and
other colors too, think
about their history in
this country and what has happened,
how they've been miseducated,
and to go and learn
things for themselves.
I'm real proud of that fact.
Each summer, Denzel returned
to Mount Vernon, volunteering
at the Boys and Girls Club
that had once been his refuge.
As a counselor, he
mentored young boys, passing
on the guidance that had shaped him.
These experiences reinforced
his commitment to community, a
value that would remain
a cornerstone of his life.
Mount Vernon in the 1950s and 1960s was
a diverse, working-class community
with a strong sense of identity.
Its proximity to New York City
exposed residents to urban challenges,
yet it retained a suburban charm
that fostered tight-knit neighborhoods.
The Boys and Girls Club, founded in 1906
as a national organization, played
a pivotal role in Denzel's upbringing.
According to the Boys and Girls Clubs of
America, the organization
had served millions of youths,
providing mentorship and opportunities
in under-deserved communities.
Denzel's lifelong connection
to the Mount Vernon chapter,
where he later became a prominent
supporter, underscores its impact.
In 1972, Denzel enrolled
at Fordham University in
the Bronx, initially pursuing pre-med
to fulfill his mother's expectations.
Science, however,
failed to ignite his passion,
and he soon switched to journalism,
only to find it equally uninspiring.
Denzel's career began at
Fordham University, where initially
he wasn't studying acting, he had got in
with the intention of doing
something completely different,
and he ended up taking some classes and
becoming involved in the
drama department and developing
this real passion and interest for it,
and he decided to change his degree.
A turning point came during a summer
job at a YMCA camp, where he performed in
a theater production.
The experience was
electric, awakening a sense of
purpose he hadn't felt before.
Returning to Fordham, Denzel
shifted his focus to acting,
transferring to the university's
Lincoln Center campus
to study theater arts in his senior year.
From then on, it was kind
of off to the races for him.
I think that once he decided that was
something that he
wanted to pursue, he really
took to it in a very strong manner.
His talent shone brightly in a
university production of Othello,
where he played the titular role
with a commanding intensity
that caught the eye of talent agents.
This performance led to
his professional debut in
1977, playing Robert
Eldridge in the television movie
Wilma, a biopic about
Olympic sprinter Wilma Rudolph.
(gentle music)
No, I never wanted to
go out with no other girls.
Not steady.
That's OK.
You know why?
No.
Because I think we're something special.
On set, Denzel met Pauletta Pearson,
a young actress and musician
whose small role belied the
profound impact she would have on his life.
Their friendship, sparked
during filming, laid the foundation
for a lifelong partnership.
Huh?
Oh, yeah.
It's a great show, the Oscars, huh?
Does it ever get old
coming to an award show?
Does it ever get old?
No, it doesn't get old because
everything is new all the time.
You never know.
After graduating from
Fordham with a double major
in journalism and drama,
Denzel earned a scholarship
to the American Conservatory
Theatre in San Francisco.
The prestigious program
offered rigorous training,
but Denzels hunger for the stage drew
him back to acting after just one year.
With only $30 to his name, he moved
to Los Angeles, staying with
relatives while seeking auditions.
Despite landing a job
teaching acting through the
Urban League, Denzel's
heart was set on performing.
Frustrated by Hollywood's limited
opportunities, he returned to New York,
where the vibrant black theater
scene offered richer prospects.
There, he reconnected with
Pauletta, whose talents as
a pianist, singer and actress
complemented his ambitions.
Her steadfast support
became a cornerstone of his
journey, as their relationship
deepened into love.
Yeah, well, even before I wanted to be
an actor, I think something like this
was in the back of my mind, you know,
playing cops and robbers,
cowboys and Indians or whatever.
I kind of started in theater, so I never
really looked this far ahead, I guess
you'd say.
I still do a lot of theater, but,
you know, I enjoy doing a lot of
different projects, a
lot of different, going a
lot of different directions, so.
The 1970s marked a
renaissance for black theater
in New York, driven
by institutions like the
Negro Ensemble Company, founded in 1967.
The NEC and similar
groups provided platforms for
African-American actors,
playwrights and directors at a
time when mainstream
opportunities were scarce.
Plays like A Soldier's
Play by Charles Fuller,
which later became a
defining moment in Denzel's
career, emerged from this scene.
According to a 2019 article
in the New York Times,
the NEC produced over 200 works,
nurturing talents like Felicia
Rashad and Samuel L.
Jackson.
The late 1970s were a
lean period for Denzel.
Auditions were scarce and
financial struggles loomed.
Pauletta, now his partner,
paused her own promising
career in music to support them, taking on
the role of breadwinner
while Denzel pursued acting.
On the verge of giving up, he accepted
a job with the Department
of Recreation, but
Pauletta's encouragement kept him focused.
Just days before starting the new job,
he landed the role of Malcolm X on the
off-Broadway play When the
Chickens Come Home to Roost.
Why did you have
to be so gabby with it?
It looks like the chickens
have come home to roost.
What is that?
A joke?
Humor?
Black humor?
For now, the nation of Islam is
associated with it through you.
You have any idea of
the possible recrimination?
There won't be any recrimination.
Now, what I said was morally straight
and sympathetic to them and to us.
Earning a modest $125 a week,
Denzel immersed himself into the role,
studying Malcolm X's speeches,
reading his writings,
and even dyeing his hair
red to capture the activist's likeness.
This meticulous preparation
became a hallmark of his career.
His performance in When
the Chickens Come Home
to Roost led to another stage role in
Charles Fuller's A Soldier's
Play, where he played
Private Peterson, a defiant soldier.
His searing portrayal
earned him an Obie Award,
the off-Broadway equivalent
of a Tony, signaling
his arrival as a formidable talent.
In 1981, Denzel made his feature film debut
in the comedy Carbon Copy, playing
the long -lost son of a white businessman.
My, what a fine-looking boy.
You were right, Walter.
I was worried over nothing.
You're just in time for dinner.
Walter, will you tell Marianne
that we're expecting her?
Roger?
We're having chicken for dinner.
I just love chicken, ma'am.
I know you do.
I had Bianca prepare especially for you.
The role provided financial stability,
and the studios decision
to pay for Denzel work to fix
his signature gap-tooth smile
introduced him to Hollywood star treatment.
Denzel's breakout came
with the television drama St.
Elsewhere, where he
played Dr. Philip Chandler.
Initially hesitant, he accepted
the role for its steady paycheck.
The show, praised for its bold tackling of
social issues, became a
critical darling, earning 12
Emmy Awards over six seasons.
Denzel's salary of $30,000
per episode provided
financial security, allowing
him to marry Pauletta in 1983.
So St. Elsewhere was a
popular American medical
comedy-drama, and it followed the lives of
doctors and nurses and
patients at this medical
facility, and that's where
Denzel got his big break.
The couple welcomed
their first child, John David,
in 1984, followed by
daughter Katia in 1987.
During a hiatus from St.
Elsewhere, Denzel reprised
his role in the film adaption of A
Soldier's Play, titled A Soldier's
Story, earning further acclaim.
Sorry, just joking P.
He don't mean no harm.
No, he does.
I mean, we're taking
her from them white boys.
(upbeat music)
He really was able to kind of show how
charismatic he was and how charming, and
bring a lot of gravitas to this medical
show, that I think really
developed a fondness
between audiences and him, and set him up
as someone that was developing a
real sort of following within the industry.
You heard it here live,
I should stick to acting.
News at 11.
(laughter)
(gentle music)
In 1987, Denzel landed
a transformative role as
South African activist
Steve Biko in Cry Freedom,
directed by Richard Attenborough.
Being involved in a film like Cry Freedom
will make the public very aware of the
terrible inequities that
still exist in South Africa.
What about the inequities that
still exist in the United States?
Do you sense that this sort of takes
the spotlight off of problems
that are still within our society?
- You mean racial problems?
- Yeah.
No, I think it'll only shine
more light on it, the similarities.
To embody Biko, he gained
weight, grew a goatee,
and studied the
activist's life extensively,
filming in Zimbabwe
and Tanzania.
Cry Freedom was filmed by
Richard Attenborough, who
is regarded as one of the great filmmakers
of his generation, and it wasn't that long
after the death of Martin Luther King, and
this was something that would become
a kind of hallmark of Denzel's career.
Despite disappointment over cut
scenes, his performance earned
the Best Supporting Actor
Oscar nomination in 1988
and an NAACP Image Award.
One of Denzel Washington's
really early key roles
was playing Steve Biko,
the anti-apartheid activist
in South Africa, and he is, of course,
killed within the story, and so it sets
up his career in a direction that it
will go for many, many years, in which
he is the kind of moral
center of the story.
His death stands for all of the crimes
and injustice of
apartheid, so it's a really
important role in
establishing his star persona.
I think the problems here are more subtle,
more advanced.
You know, it's not as obvious a problem
as in South Africa, but, you know, you
can change laws, but you
can't necessarily change
people's hearts and minds,
and that only comes through time
and constant pressure and struggle.
Cry Freedom was a pivotal
film in Denzel's career,
but it faced criticism for focusing more
on the white journalist
Donald Woods than on Biko.
According to a 1987 review
in The Washington Post,
some critics argued the
film diluted Biko's story,
a sentiment Denzel reportedly
shared regarding cut scenes.
His Oscar nomination was a milestone as he
became one of the few
African-American actors
recognized in the supporting actor
category at the time, per Academy Records.
That same year, he made his Broadway debut
in Checkmates, a comedy
that enjoyed a successful run.
Denzel's ability to navigate
stage, television, and film
showcased his versatility,
but roles for African-American
actors remained limited.
He proactively sought
parts in films like For
Queen and Country and The Mighty Quinn.
By 1989, at age 24, Denzel Washington was
a rising star with an Oscar nomination, an
Obie Award, and a growing reputation.
His next role in the Civil War
drama Glory marked a turning point.
In Glory, he plays a former slave in
the United States in the 1860s who goes
over to fight for the Union, to fight
for the northern side against slavery.
And it is a very intense film that
shows his transformation
from being a rebel slave
to being someone who is fighting
for the higher cause of the Union.
And he once again is the moral center
of the story because he begins as a
rebel and he has to find a way of
bringing himself within the power and the
hierarchy of the Northern Army.
At one point, he goes AWOL, and he
is brought back by the Army police and
he is whipped as a punishment.
You may commence.
(dramatic music)
Apparently the standard
punishment for going AWOL, but
when they take off his shirt to
whip him, you can see that his back is
already covered in scars from
many whippings as a slave.
And so as he's being whipped, he stares
at his commanding officer,
played by Matthew Broderick,
with a kind of intensity and vehemence that
is really his trademark as an actor.
Well, one of the scenes that had to
be the toughest to do, or maybe went
through your mind, would be
the scene where you're whipped.
Not the toughest.
The simplest scene.
The toughest for everyone
else that day except me
because I knew exactly what I
was doing and I had the spirits of all
of those people who had been whipped
for real with me, and I was prepared.
It wasn't tough for me at all.
As a matter of fact, everyone else was
crying and people couldn't deal
with it because they felt guilty.
I was in the part.
I felt strong.
As a matter of fact, the contact between
Matthew and myself, it had nothing
to do with the guy whipping me.
It was like, well, let's see
who's going to break here.
It was almost like that kind of energy.
It was tough preparing
for that, I might say.
That day it was easier, but reading all
the history, reading books
like Bullwhip Days and
Slave Narratives and
things like that to find
out what actually happened
to my great-grandfathers
and grandmothers, that was the tough part.
One tear falls down his cheek to convey
the pain of the whipping,
but otherwise there's
just this amazing intensity
that he brings to the role.
Filming in Georgia with his family by his
side, he described the
experience as deeply fulfilling.
His portrayal earned him a Golden Globe for
Best Supporting Actor
and, on March 26, 1990,
the Academy Award for
Best Supporting Actor, beating
out heavyweights like Marlon
Brando and Martin Landau.
He also won his second
NAACP Image Award for the role.
So Denzel won his first Oscar for Glory
for Best Supporting Actor,
which was his second nomination.
He also beat out some pretty
incredible performers to win the award.
He beat Marlon Brando
and he beat Danny Aiello,
who had starred in Do the Right Thing.
I started acting, what, 1975.
I was in college, my first acting class.
The teacher went around
and asked everyone what
they want to do, why
they want to be an actor.
And I said, I want to be
the best actor in the world.
And everybody went, really?
Who the hell does he think he is?
But not only to be
the best in the world.
Who's the best?
Who's the best supporting actor?
Who knows? But to
be the best that I can be.
And this feels like not
a confirmation of that,
but I know that I've been working
the right way and trying to do the
right things and growing as an actor.
I want to continue to grow.
I'm going to play Richard III this summer
in the park, and that's going to
stretch the heck out of me, but it's going
to teach me some lessons.
And I may fall on my face,
but I'm going to go for it.
But I think that the reason that that
performance won the
Oscar is because it felt
like he'd put so much of himself and
so much kind of spirit and
power into the performance.
And I think that it really did feel
like a win, that despite how young he
was when he made the film, he
was only kind of in his late 20s, early
30s, it was something that truly kind of
resonated with audiences
and felt like something new
was coming through on screen.
That year, Denzel and Pauletta
welcomed twins, Malcolm
and Olivia, completing
their family of four children.
The 1990s saw Denzel cement
his status as a leading man.
He starred in diverse
films, including More Better
Blues, Mississippi Masala,
Malcolm X, Much Ado About Nothing,
Philadelphia, Devil in a
Blue Dress, and Crimson Tide.
His collaborations with
directors Spike Lee and Tony
Scott showcased his range from
romantic leads to intense action roles.
In Mo' Better Blues, he clashed with Lee
over a nude scene,
prioritizing his children's comfort.
So Mo' Better Blues is one
of Spike Lee's earlier films.
It came just after Do the Right Thing,
which was his big breakthrough,
which kind of launched him to the world.
And this was his first
collaboration with Denzel.
And it was something a little bit different
after Do the Right Thing, which is a
very angry, very powder keg type film.
And Mo' Better Blues
was something different that
I think proved not only
Spike Lee's versatility
as a filmmaker, but Denzel's
versatility as an actor.
Big.
I don't like no static.
You know, I'm a peaceful person.
And even though you fire
my ass, you're still my boy.
I look out your best interest.
When was the last time you seen Clark?
I don't know.
What's up?
He plays this jazz musician
who is incredibly talented,
but also has kind of personal
demons that he suffers with.
And it's really a love story, but it's
also about artistic integrity,
which is something that
I think Denzel and Spike have both
spoken about a lot, and trying to kind of
maintain your artistic
freedom in an industry where
that oftentimes is
compromised and it was the
beginning of this really
enduring, very loving friendship
and work relationship between Denzel
and Spike, which continues to this day.
- What was that?
- I got your ticket.
OK.
You know that's what I
was coming to check on.
I got your ticket.
- OK. All right.
- I'll talk to you later, man.
Say, side by side.
- OK.
- In the house.
His role in Malcolm X was
a career-defining moment,
building on his earlier stage performance,
Denzel prepared rigorously,
training with the Nation of
Islam, abstaining from alcohol
and pork and losing 20 pounds.
He drew inspiration from
his father's preaching style,
despite their distant relationship.
His father's death from a stroke in 1991,
before the film's release, added a
personal layer to the performance.
So Malcolm X is widely regarded as one
of the best biopics ever made and maybe
one of the longest, but I think it's
definitely one of the most rewarding
films you can sit down and watch.
These are the questions
you and I have to ask.
How did we get this mind?
You're not an American.
You're an African who
happens to be an American.
You have to understand the difference.
We didn't come over on the Nina,
the Penta and the whatchamacallit.
We didn't land on Plymouth Rock.
Plymouth Rock landed on
us, landed right on top of us.
Spike Lee fought incredibly
hard to make the film.
Originally, a white director had been
chosen by the studio and Spike kind of
did a bit of a protest,
rightfully claiming that a
black filmmaker should get
the opportunity to make the film,
and he was instated eventually, and
Denzel stayed on board the project.
He'd been cast before
Spike Lee became involved,
and Spike Lee said the only person he
ever wanted to play Malcolm X was Denzel.
He'd played him before on Broadway when he
was younger and did
just a phenomenal amount
of research into who he was as a man,
and the result was this incredible epic
film spanning the entire
course of Malcolm X's life.
It really was this attempt to capture
an incredibly important figure in
American culture, in Islamic culture,
in the liberation of African
Americans in America.
The way Spike does it is with such
energy and such reverence, but also he is
critical at times of Malcolm X, and he
doesn't shy away from
the more difficult parts
of his life, and I think that Denzel brings
such a sense of personality to the role.
It doesn't feel like you're watching
him doing an impression of Malcolm X.
It really does feel like you are watching
a film with the man himself, and it
still is regarded to this day as one
of the greatest biopics of all time, and
I think it is that combination of Denzel's
performance and Spike's
direction that means people still
love the film and resonate
with the film to this day.
You can't even get drugs in Harlem
without the white man's permission.
You can't get prostitution in Harlem
without the white man's permission.
You can't get gambling in Harlem
without the white man's permission.
Every time you break the seal on that
liquor bottle, that's a
government seal you're breaking.
The film, though controversial
and over budget, earned
Denzel a third Oscar nomination
and a fourth NAACP Image Award.
They flew from L.A. to New York
just to convince me to change and to
take out the opening sequence of the film.
So why do you think it ought to be
directed by an African-American?
Well, the same reason
that with Francis Ford
Coppola being an
Italian-American, the nuances of
flavor he brought to
the Godfather trilogy, him
being an Italian-American,
he knew all that.
He was of that background.
I've gotten tons and tons and tons of
mail from young people who didn't know much
about Malcolm X, were walking around with X
hats on, who've taken
the initiative to learn
more about their history and their culture.
You know, that's the thing I'm proud
of, most proud of about this film, is that
it made young people, black and white and
other colors too, think
about their history in
this country and what has happened,
how they've been miseducated,
and to go and learn
things for themselves.
I'm real proud of that fact,
as I know Spike is as well.
(gentle music)
Denzel's selective approach
to roles defined his career.
He turned down parts
in films like Terminator
2 and Amos & Andrew,
prioritizing quality over quantity.
His casting in The Pelican Brief, a role
written for a white actor, was
championed by co-star Julia Roberts.
The film's omission of a love scene sparked
debate about racial bias,
but director Alan Pecula
insisted it was a creative choice.
Two films, one is the
longest post-production
I've ever been involved in on a film,
Philadelphia, because it took him a year to
put it together, and the other
one is the shortest, Pelican Brief.
I mean, we were still shooting last week.
Philadelphia, a groundbreaking
film about AIDS, saw Denzel
play a homophobic lawyer
defending a gay man.
Philadelphia was a really
important film in the early 1990s.
It was the time of the AIDS crisis.
The AIDS crisis was at its height, so
not only were many people dying of AIDS
and were ill with AIDS, but there was a
huge public panic around AIDS and how
contagious it was and how
people with AIDS should be treated.
There was a huge amount
of homophobia around
AIDS, really outspoken homophobia
in a way that's difficult to imagine today.
We've moved away from that a lot.
The role challenged him
to portray an unsympathetic
character, and the film's
$200 million box office
success further elevated his status.
The Pelican Brief and
Philadelphia were landmark films
for their commercial
success and social impact.
So Jonathan Demme
made Philadelphia as a way
of countering prejudice
against people with AIDS and
raising awareness of AIDS as a disease that
was causing a lot of discrimination.
Tom Hanks plays a young lawyer who
develops AIDS and is sacked from his job by
his very prejudiced bosses at the law firm.
If this was 1962 and Rock Hudson had
to pretend to be married to his publicist
secretary and Luella Parsons
was still stabbing people
in the back with her newspaper column,
maybe it would be a tough role to take
on.
But believe me, in the United
States and in the U.K., there is stuff on
free TV day in and day out that make
me playing a homosexual small potatoes in
comparison.
Mr. Beckett, come in.
It's good to see you again, Counselor.
Judge Tate, Kennel Construction.
Inoculate.
How are you?
What happened to your face?
I have AIDS.
Denzel Washington
comes into it as the lawyer
who is initially very reluctant
to engage with Hanks.
He doesn't want to take on the case
because he is prejudiced
against people with AIDS.
He has all sorts of
assumptions about people
with AIDS and how contagious AIDS is.
And so he becomes the kind of conscience
of the film, the public conscience of the
film, who's gradually
won over and takes the
case and learns what AIDS is and that
it's not that contagious
in terms of everyday
contact and develops a huge
amount of sympathy for Tom Hanks.
They are quite close
by the end of the film.
And so it's really the story of Denzel
Washington's awakening to
the crisis and to homophobia.
And that all sounds very worthy, but of
course he plays it with a huge amount
of charisma, with humor, with frankness.
It's a really, really important role in the
film and an important
film, I think, in his career.
Denzel Washington undoubtedly
brought a lot of people
to see the film who would
not have otherwise seen it.
Philadelphia was the
first major studio film to
address AIDS, a topic
stigmatized in the early 1990s.
A 1994 article in the Los Angeles Times
noted that Denzel's casting
in Philadelphia was significant
as it showcased his ability to carry
complex, morally ambiguous roles.
They're looking at Mr. Wheeler,
Ms. Coneen, even you, Your Honor.
They're wondering about it.
Trust me, I know that they are
looking at me and thinking about it.
So let's just get
it out in the open.
Let's get it out of the closet.
Because this case is
not just about AIDS, is it?
So let's talk about what this case is
really all about, the general
public's hatred, our loathing, our fear.
Our fear of homosexuals.
Denzel's hot streak continued
with Crimson Tide, where
he played a naval officer opposite Gene
Hackman, grossing nearly $100 million.
A misstep came with
Virtuosity, an action film
that underperformed
due to its lack of depth,
reinforcing Denzel's
preference for substantive roles.
He rebounded with The Preacher's Wife,
a family-friendly remake produced
by his company, Mundy Lane
Entertainment, starring Whitney Houston.
You ever had your palm read?
(gentle music)
The film earned $48 million
and resonated with audiences.
In Courage Under Fire, Denzel commanded
a record-breaking $10 million salary
for an African-American actor
in a dramatic role, per Variety.
By the late 1990s, Denzel was a Hollywood
titan, often compared to Sidney Poitier.
He rejected the comparison,
wary of industry biases,
and focused on forging his own path.
His third collaboration with
Spike Lee, He Got Game,
saw him play a convicted criminal,
a departure from his heroic roles.
So by the end of the 90s, Denzel
had really developed an
incredible reputation as one
of the best actors
working of his generation.
He had made Malcolm X,
he'd made The Hurricane,
he was kind of on top of the
world in a lot of aspects and
was fast becoming really someone
that audiences loved to watch.
I can remember being up on Fordham
Road in the Bronx to see Rocky and people
cheering and wondering where
those steps were in Philadelphia.
Warm feelings from a
movie like Field of Dreams.
People will have good
feelings from this film as well.
Do you think this will
be at the top of the list?
When you think back when
we were kings or Rocky?
It's not for me to make categories.
It's not about categories.
It's about enjoying a very, very good film.
Who cares?
In 2001, Training Day redefined his career.
As the corrupt detective
Alonzo Harris, Denzel delivered
a chilling performance, earning
his second Oscar for Best Actor,
making him only the
second African-American
to win in that
category after Poitier.
In Training Day, we see Denzel playing
a pretty different character for him.
Up until the point of Training Day, he'd
really made this reputation
for himself, almost of
playing nice guys or, if not nice guys,
very authoritative figures
who were very noble and just.
And now he was playing this corrupt
cop and not even a little bit corrupt,
a very corrupt cop who is
the antagonist of the film.
And I think this surprised a lot of
people, not because they
didn't think that Denzel
was capable of playing
such a difficult role,
but because he was so
believable and so commanding.
And the film really, to this day, is
considered one of his best performances.
Just throw that in the glove box.
This car is not from the motor pool.
No, it's not.
Sexy, though, isn't it?
So where's the office back at Division?
You're in the office, baby.
I'm going out.
[Still D.R.E. by Dr. Dre ft. Snoop Dogg]
Denzel's versatility extended
to the stage with acclaimed
performances in Julius Caesar and Fences,
the latter earning him a Tony Award.
He directed and starred
in the film adaption
of Fences with Viola Davis,
earning another Oscar nomination.
Fences is a play about a former baseball
player who has become a sanitation worker,
and it's a story that
Denzel was very familiar
with because he had
played the role previously
on Broadway and
had worked with Viola
Davis, who played
his wife, in the play.
And it's something that I think he felt
very strongly needed to be moved to big
screen or deserved to be
moved to the big screen.
And it's quite a tough watch at times.
I think that Viola Davis and Denzel are
such a compelling
presence together on screen,
and it confronts a lot
of difficult truths about
living as a black couple
in 1950s Pittsburgh
and the kind of harshness of that life.
- We're not talking about no baseball.
- Rose.
You're not listening to me.
I'm trying to explain it to
you the best way I know how.
It's not easy for me to admit that I've
been standing in the same place for
18 years.
Well, I've been standing with you.
I've been right here with you, Troy.
I got a life too.
I gave 18 years of my life to
stand in the same spot as you.
Don't you think I ever wanted other things?
Don't you think I had dreams and hopes?
What about my life?
What about me?
It really felt like you were watching these
2 kind of powerhouse actors
giving their all to the source material.
And I think that directing theater on the
big screen is always
quite difficult, but Denzel,
I think because he has
such experience as an actor,
on screen, on stage, behind the
camera, I think he really was the best
person to realize this dream
of bringing the film together.
Some critics have said that
Denzel Washington transcends race,
and I get what they mean, that
he's an actor who is popular and can
take on any kind of role regardless
of the race of the character.
I also think it's important that he is
African-American and
he has the stature that
he has in Hollywood,
because there's really, there
aren't that many other actors like him.
There aren't that many
leading African-American male
actors who don't play comedy and
who have the kind of gravitas that he has.
So I think he's a really
important presence in Hollywood.
His filmography spans
genres, from action-packed
The Equalizer series to
Shakespearean The Tragedy of Macbeth.
As a director, he helmed
Antoine Fisher, The
Great Debaters, and A
Journal for Geordie, showcasing
his commitment to diverse storytelling.
In The Equalizer, he plays a man of
extraordinary humility, quietness,
moral centeredness, all the things
that we might expect from
any Washington character.
But we're always aware
that behind that tranquil
surface there is a man who is
capable of extraordinary violence.
There's a lot of mystery with him.
I think he's a very humble person.
I think that's people like that.
He's very introverted.
He's got a vulnerability.
And he's an avenging
angel, that sort of thing.
And he's complex.
I think people like that kind of character.
And of course, there's
Mr. Washington playing him.
First of all, it's first
about the audience.
Do they want one?
They said yes, writer
went off, and away we go.
A lot of rehearsal, a lot of
choreography, and, you know, a lot of that.
And we're working with
expert fighters and all that,
so they keep it
safe for us actors.
There's no corner that he is backed
into that he can't work his way out of.
It's really quite an extraordinary role.
And I think as the film goes by, you just
accept that, that he will always survive.
No matter what is thrown
at him, he will overcome it.
And there's a kind of clarity to the
character that makes that believable.
I knew my son was
going to be a good actor.
He is one.
He's growing as an actor.
It's something he really wanted.
And, you know, I'm his dad.
I'm not like him, you know, proud papa.
I'm so happy for him.
And we were watching him last night
do one of the big talk shows in America,
and it's like slapping my wife five.
We were sitting there
just, it's unbelievable.
Is that a Hekla cock?
This?
Yeah.
My name's Yarrow Rook.
Book is nice.
- What is he saying?
- I don't fucking know.
Can I see it?
Oh, you want to see my gun?
Uh, yes and no.
No.
No, fuck!
All right, all right, all right!
He's constantly evolving
and searching even for himself.
You know, he's, I have a friend who
wakes up in the middle of the night
who was a real guy who lived a
certain life, and he wakes up in a
cold sweat looking for his wallet because
he has to try to remember who he is.
Denzel's awards are well-documented.
He won Oscars for Glory and Training
Day, per the Academy's official records.
His Tony Award for Fences is
confirmed by the American Theatre Wing.
One of the really
remarkable things about his
later career is that he keeps returning
to Broadway to work as a stage actor.
So he's an actor who believes
in acting in that traditional sense.
It's clearly a way of kind of
proving your chops as an actor.
You know, what he could do now
as an actor in his 60s is, you know,
sit back and take the best film roles.
But he's clearly more ambitious
and more driven than that.
Denzel Washington's story is
one of triumph over adversity,
driven by an unyielding
passion for his craft.
But in a way, was it freeing
to play a character like this?
Because there's so many
dimensions, and there's just
a sense of sort of
unhinged ruthlessness, right?
Sign of the times.
He's a product of his environment.
It was ruthless.
I mean, you know, if you didn't
do well, they'd cut your head off.
You know, fed you to the lions or
sharks or whatever else
they had floating around.
So it was just, you know, putting the
putting the gear on, putting the rings on.
That was the icing on the cake.
You know, the script is the ingredients.
Beyond his on-screen
achievements, he remains a
pillar of his community,
supporting his church and
the Boys & Girls Club
with significant donations,
including $2.5 million in 1997, and ongoing
advocacy, per the organization's records.
Denzel has become one
of the most well-known
and well-liked
figures in Hollywood.
I think it's very hard to find anyone
with a bad word to say against him
because he's such a hard-working man and
so committed to
storytelling and to craft, but
also to helping other actors
and to championing other actors.
Speaking of actors, did anything
surprise you about Denzel or him?
Um, no.
I mean, I know his talent.
I knew his caliber of talent.
I've been watching him forever.
So I wasn't really surprised at anything.
I was happy at how generous he was
and how accessible he was, you know, as
an actor in the scenes.
It just raised everything
to the next level.
He's been married to his wife
for a very long time in Hollywood.
That is incredibly impressive,
and now we're seeing
his kids kind of come through the
system as well with a love for acting and
filmmaking.
I think that that proves that Denzel
has done a lot right to kind of show
them that there's a place in this world
for their stories and for them to
kind of have the same love for the craft
as he does.
This one is important in its own right
because it's celebrating
the fact that we are now,
we are all free to express ourselves,
you know, and that's what the film
celebrates, is the power of the talent.
And it represents the whole, you
know, the collective of what we did.
You know, so many people put their blood,
sweat, and tears into this film for
us to be recognized in this manner.
It's great.
I wish I was as smart as them.
You know, when I finally do grow
up, I'm going to be as smart as them.
Obviously, you've alluded to
maybe slowing down, retiring.
I really want to get behind the camera.
That's really what it is.
I have some great challenges.
I need challenges.
I just can't keep going like it is.
And seeing guys like Paul and Fred and
my sons, and that generation, it's there.
You know, at some point, you've
got to hand the baton off, let them run.
Now, I may trickle along behind
them for a while, but I'm not going all the
way around the bend.
I'm surely not coming
all the way back home.
You know, and I'm really
excited about my future.
I have great opportunities.
I'm excited about getting
behind the camera, and
I have one of the greatest playwrights
in the history of the world in my hands
that they've asked me to
take care of, and that's enough.
Denzel Washington is an actor and a star
who has no scandal
attached to him whatsoever.
He lives a very wholesome life,
especially by Hollywood standards.
He's a family man.
He's a churchgoer.
People who know him talk about his,
the strength of his faith, and the kind of
fiasco at the Oscars when
Will Smith hit Chris Rock,
it was Denzel Washington that Will
Smith then turned to and took solace from,
and Denzel Washington
not only consoled him, but
gave him a kind of spiritual advice about
what had happened, that is, when you are
at your most powerful, the devil comes for
you and undermines you, and I think that's
how Will Smith felt
about what had happened,
and having Denzel Washington's advice
helped him come through that moment.
His marriage to Pauletta,
now over four decades strong,
was renewed in 1993 in a ceremony
officiated by Desmond Tutu, a
moment of personal significance.
He's also known for supporting a range of
charities such as the
Fisher House Foundation and
the Nelson Mandela Fund, and he really is
someone who cares
about using his platform, but
in a kind of behind-the-scenes way.
He doesn't want a ton of credit or
glory, he just wants to use the money
and success that he's
had to help other people.
(gentle music)
From Mount Vernon to the global stage,
Denzel has navigated fame with
integrity, balancing artistry with
social responsibility.
His ability to inhabit diverse
roles, soldiers, activists,
criminals, and kings,
has inspired generations.
As a director, producer, and
philanthropist, he continues
to push boundaries, leaving a
legacy that transcends Hollywood.
For a preacher's son
from Mount Vernon, Denzel
Washington's journey is a
testament to the power of purpose,
resilience, and a commitment to giving
back, a legacy that will
endure for generations.
(gentle music)
His name is Noah.
It's not serendipity.
God is real.
He's real in my life.
It's all and everything
that I want to do.
And that's it.
(gentle music)
(dramatic music)
What is more important
to you, receiving this
acclaim from this group of critics in
New York and L.A., or from the audience
that goes to see or
that follows your work?
It has to be the audience.
But the most important thing to me
is making sure that I've done all I can
do to make the part come to life.
That's what's most important.
That's what I do.
I mean, I don't, you
know, that's what I do.
Denzel Washington redefined what an
African-American actor can do in Hollywood.
He's not there to make the white American
audience feel better about themselves.
He plays strong, powerful,
at times aggressive and
moral, morally upstanding
African-American roles.
Well, one of the scenes that had to
be the toughest to do or maybe went
through your mind would be
a scene where you're whipped.
(dramatic music)
Not the toughest, the simplest scene.
The toughest for everyone
else that day except me,
because I knew exactly what I
was doing and I had the spirits of all
of those people who had
been whipped for real with me.
And I think that's the biggest part of
his legacy, the way in which he changed
what African-American
actors can do in Hollywood.
It's not serendipity.
God is real.
He's real in my life.
It's all and everything
that I want to do.
And that's it.
(dramatic music)
High hopes.
(laughter)
I'm just, you know, here for the party.
Denzel Hayes Washington
Jr. entered the world on
December 28, 1954, in
Mount Vernon, a suburban
enclave just north of New
York City's frenetic energy.
Raised in a devout, hardworking
household, Denzel was
shaped by the values
of faith and discipline.
His father, Reverend Denzel Washington Sr.,
was a Pentecostal minister whose
impassioned sermons filled their church
each Sunday.
(upbeat music)
But if you could choose your future, where
do you see yourself being in 20
years and what kind of work do you think
you'll have accomplished by then?
Oh, 20 years from now, I think I would
like to see myself making films
as a director, possibly,
as a producer, possibly, but
having more control over the
product that I'm involved with.
Who is Denzel Washington?
Denzel Washington is
the leading actor of the
21st century, according
to the New York Times,
leading Hollywood
actor of the 21st century.
Denzel's mother, Lennis, a
beautician and choir singer,
ran a chain of beauty salons.
Her blend of strict
guidance and nurturing love
instilled in her children a strong work
ethic and a deep sense of purpose.
My father was a minister in the church.
I grew up in the church.
We weren't allowed to go to the movies.
We saw King of Kings, Ten Commandments.
That might have been about it.
So I didn't grow up
really watching westerns.
We had a television
show in America, Bonanza.
I got to see that, but I
never went to the movies.
His mother was a woman of the
city and his father was a man of the
country, was much more
innocent than she was.
I think what they had in common
was they were both very religious.
So his father was a Pentecostal minister
and his mother was religious as well.
And he grew up going to church every
Sunday, at least every
Sunday, and has carried
through his religious
belief throughout his life.
And I think it accounts for some of
his moral sense as an actor and his
sense that in most of the films he
plays, he plays someone who is on the
side of good.
And he said that this was his career
goal, to play characters who
brought something good to the world.
As the middle of three
siblings, Denzel grew
up immersed in the rhythms
of church life and community.
The Boys and Girls Club of Mount Vernon
became a sanctuary,
offering a space for sports,
friendship, and structure
amid the temptations of city life.
By age 11, Denzel was sweeping floors and
running errands at local
barbershops and his mother's
salons, a humorous twist
given his own infrequent haircuts.
These early jobs kept him grounded and out
of trouble, but his teenage
years brought challenges.
He ended up attending
a military school, which
was quite a different
environment, I think, from
how a lot of actors spend their early
years, but also, I think,
probably helped instill
this real discipline within him that we
see throughout his career as an actor.
When Denzel was 14, his
parents' marriage dissolved
and his father relocated to Virginia.
The absence of his
father's presence left Denzel
unmoored, leading to rebellious
behavior, including street fights
and defiance that worried his mother.
Determined to steer her son back on course,
Lennis made a bold choice.
She enrolled Denzel in
Oakland Military Academy,
a prestigious boarding
school in upstate New York.
Far from Mount Vernon's
familiar streets, Denzel navigated
a predominantly white environment
where his academic performance
faltered, but his
athletic talent flourished.
He dreamed of a future
in professional sports,
while his quick wit and charisma led
friends to predict a career in comedy.
Beneath his outgoing
demeanor, however, lay a reserved
young man grappling with
the uncertainties of youth.
At Oakland, a quiet
resolve began to take shape,
a determination that would later
fuel his ascent to global stardom.
You know, that's the thing I'm proud
of, most proud of about this film, is that
it made young people, black and white and
other colors too, think
about their history in
this country and what has happened,
how they've been miseducated,
and to go and learn
things for themselves.
I'm real proud of that fact.
Each summer, Denzel returned
to Mount Vernon, volunteering
at the Boys and Girls Club
that had once been his refuge.
As a counselor, he
mentored young boys, passing
on the guidance that had shaped him.
These experiences reinforced
his commitment to community, a
value that would remain
a cornerstone of his life.
Mount Vernon in the 1950s and 1960s was
a diverse, working-class community
with a strong sense of identity.
Its proximity to New York City
exposed residents to urban challenges,
yet it retained a suburban charm
that fostered tight-knit neighborhoods.
The Boys and Girls Club, founded in 1906
as a national organization, played
a pivotal role in Denzel's upbringing.
According to the Boys and Girls Clubs of
America, the organization
had served millions of youths,
providing mentorship and opportunities
in under-deserved communities.
Denzel's lifelong connection
to the Mount Vernon chapter,
where he later became a prominent
supporter, underscores its impact.
In 1972, Denzel enrolled
at Fordham University in
the Bronx, initially pursuing pre-med
to fulfill his mother's expectations.
Science, however,
failed to ignite his passion,
and he soon switched to journalism,
only to find it equally uninspiring.
Denzel's career began at
Fordham University, where initially
he wasn't studying acting, he had got in
with the intention of doing
something completely different,
and he ended up taking some classes and
becoming involved in the
drama department and developing
this real passion and interest for it,
and he decided to change his degree.
A turning point came during a summer
job at a YMCA camp, where he performed in
a theater production.
The experience was
electric, awakening a sense of
purpose he hadn't felt before.
Returning to Fordham, Denzel
shifted his focus to acting,
transferring to the university's
Lincoln Center campus
to study theater arts in his senior year.
From then on, it was kind
of off to the races for him.
I think that once he decided that was
something that he
wanted to pursue, he really
took to it in a very strong manner.
His talent shone brightly in a
university production of Othello,
where he played the titular role
with a commanding intensity
that caught the eye of talent agents.
This performance led to
his professional debut in
1977, playing Robert
Eldridge in the television movie
Wilma, a biopic about
Olympic sprinter Wilma Rudolph.
(gentle music)
No, I never wanted to
go out with no other girls.
Not steady.
That's OK.
You know why?
No.
Because I think we're something special.
On set, Denzel met Pauletta Pearson,
a young actress and musician
whose small role belied the
profound impact she would have on his life.
Their friendship, sparked
during filming, laid the foundation
for a lifelong partnership.
Huh?
Oh, yeah.
It's a great show, the Oscars, huh?
Does it ever get old
coming to an award show?
Does it ever get old?
No, it doesn't get old because
everything is new all the time.
You never know.
After graduating from
Fordham with a double major
in journalism and drama,
Denzel earned a scholarship
to the American Conservatory
Theatre in San Francisco.
The prestigious program
offered rigorous training,
but Denzels hunger for the stage drew
him back to acting after just one year.
With only $30 to his name, he moved
to Los Angeles, staying with
relatives while seeking auditions.
Despite landing a job
teaching acting through the
Urban League, Denzel's
heart was set on performing.
Frustrated by Hollywood's limited
opportunities, he returned to New York,
where the vibrant black theater
scene offered richer prospects.
There, he reconnected with
Pauletta, whose talents as
a pianist, singer and actress
complemented his ambitions.
Her steadfast support
became a cornerstone of his
journey, as their relationship
deepened into love.
Yeah, well, even before I wanted to be
an actor, I think something like this
was in the back of my mind, you know,
playing cops and robbers,
cowboys and Indians or whatever.
I kind of started in theater, so I never
really looked this far ahead, I guess
you'd say.
I still do a lot of theater, but,
you know, I enjoy doing a lot of
different projects, a
lot of different, going a
lot of different directions, so.
The 1970s marked a
renaissance for black theater
in New York, driven
by institutions like the
Negro Ensemble Company, founded in 1967.
The NEC and similar
groups provided platforms for
African-American actors,
playwrights and directors at a
time when mainstream
opportunities were scarce.
Plays like A Soldier's
Play by Charles Fuller,
which later became a
defining moment in Denzel's
career, emerged from this scene.
According to a 2019 article
in the New York Times,
the NEC produced over 200 works,
nurturing talents like Felicia
Rashad and Samuel L.
Jackson.
The late 1970s were a
lean period for Denzel.
Auditions were scarce and
financial struggles loomed.
Pauletta, now his partner,
paused her own promising
career in music to support them, taking on
the role of breadwinner
while Denzel pursued acting.
On the verge of giving up, he accepted
a job with the Department
of Recreation, but
Pauletta's encouragement kept him focused.
Just days before starting the new job,
he landed the role of Malcolm X on the
off-Broadway play When the
Chickens Come Home to Roost.
Why did you have
to be so gabby with it?
It looks like the chickens
have come home to roost.
What is that?
A joke?
Humor?
Black humor?
For now, the nation of Islam is
associated with it through you.
You have any idea of
the possible recrimination?
There won't be any recrimination.
Now, what I said was morally straight
and sympathetic to them and to us.
Earning a modest $125 a week,
Denzel immersed himself into the role,
studying Malcolm X's speeches,
reading his writings,
and even dyeing his hair
red to capture the activist's likeness.
This meticulous preparation
became a hallmark of his career.
His performance in When
the Chickens Come Home
to Roost led to another stage role in
Charles Fuller's A Soldier's
Play, where he played
Private Peterson, a defiant soldier.
His searing portrayal
earned him an Obie Award,
the off-Broadway equivalent
of a Tony, signaling
his arrival as a formidable talent.
In 1981, Denzel made his feature film debut
in the comedy Carbon Copy, playing
the long -lost son of a white businessman.
My, what a fine-looking boy.
You were right, Walter.
I was worried over nothing.
You're just in time for dinner.
Walter, will you tell Marianne
that we're expecting her?
Roger?
We're having chicken for dinner.
I just love chicken, ma'am.
I know you do.
I had Bianca prepare especially for you.
The role provided financial stability,
and the studios decision
to pay for Denzel work to fix
his signature gap-tooth smile
introduced him to Hollywood star treatment.
Denzel's breakout came
with the television drama St.
Elsewhere, where he
played Dr. Philip Chandler.
Initially hesitant, he accepted
the role for its steady paycheck.
The show, praised for its bold tackling of
social issues, became a
critical darling, earning 12
Emmy Awards over six seasons.
Denzel's salary of $30,000
per episode provided
financial security, allowing
him to marry Pauletta in 1983.
So St. Elsewhere was a
popular American medical
comedy-drama, and it followed the lives of
doctors and nurses and
patients at this medical
facility, and that's where
Denzel got his big break.
The couple welcomed
their first child, John David,
in 1984, followed by
daughter Katia in 1987.
During a hiatus from St.
Elsewhere, Denzel reprised
his role in the film adaption of A
Soldier's Play, titled A Soldier's
Story, earning further acclaim.
Sorry, just joking P.
He don't mean no harm.
No, he does.
I mean, we're taking
her from them white boys.
(upbeat music)
He really was able to kind of show how
charismatic he was and how charming, and
bring a lot of gravitas to this medical
show, that I think really
developed a fondness
between audiences and him, and set him up
as someone that was developing a
real sort of following within the industry.
You heard it here live,
I should stick to acting.
News at 11.
(laughter)
(gentle music)
In 1987, Denzel landed
a transformative role as
South African activist
Steve Biko in Cry Freedom,
directed by Richard Attenborough.
Being involved in a film like Cry Freedom
will make the public very aware of the
terrible inequities that
still exist in South Africa.
What about the inequities that
still exist in the United States?
Do you sense that this sort of takes
the spotlight off of problems
that are still within our society?
- You mean racial problems?
- Yeah.
No, I think it'll only shine
more light on it, the similarities.
To embody Biko, he gained
weight, grew a goatee,
and studied the
activist's life extensively,
filming in Zimbabwe
and Tanzania.
Cry Freedom was filmed by
Richard Attenborough, who
is regarded as one of the great filmmakers
of his generation, and it wasn't that long
after the death of Martin Luther King, and
this was something that would become
a kind of hallmark of Denzel's career.
Despite disappointment over cut
scenes, his performance earned
the Best Supporting Actor
Oscar nomination in 1988
and an NAACP Image Award.
One of Denzel Washington's
really early key roles
was playing Steve Biko,
the anti-apartheid activist
in South Africa, and he is, of course,
killed within the story, and so it sets
up his career in a direction that it
will go for many, many years, in which
he is the kind of moral
center of the story.
His death stands for all of the crimes
and injustice of
apartheid, so it's a really
important role in
establishing his star persona.
I think the problems here are more subtle,
more advanced.
You know, it's not as obvious a problem
as in South Africa, but, you know, you
can change laws, but you
can't necessarily change
people's hearts and minds,
and that only comes through time
and constant pressure and struggle.
Cry Freedom was a pivotal
film in Denzel's career,
but it faced criticism for focusing more
on the white journalist
Donald Woods than on Biko.
According to a 1987 review
in The Washington Post,
some critics argued the
film diluted Biko's story,
a sentiment Denzel reportedly
shared regarding cut scenes.
His Oscar nomination was a milestone as he
became one of the few
African-American actors
recognized in the supporting actor
category at the time, per Academy Records.
That same year, he made his Broadway debut
in Checkmates, a comedy
that enjoyed a successful run.
Denzel's ability to navigate
stage, television, and film
showcased his versatility,
but roles for African-American
actors remained limited.
He proactively sought
parts in films like For
Queen and Country and The Mighty Quinn.
By 1989, at age 24, Denzel Washington was
a rising star with an Oscar nomination, an
Obie Award, and a growing reputation.
His next role in the Civil War
drama Glory marked a turning point.
In Glory, he plays a former slave in
the United States in the 1860s who goes
over to fight for the Union, to fight
for the northern side against slavery.
And it is a very intense film that
shows his transformation
from being a rebel slave
to being someone who is fighting
for the higher cause of the Union.
And he once again is the moral center
of the story because he begins as a
rebel and he has to find a way of
bringing himself within the power and the
hierarchy of the Northern Army.
At one point, he goes AWOL, and he
is brought back by the Army police and
he is whipped as a punishment.
You may commence.
(dramatic music)
Apparently the standard
punishment for going AWOL, but
when they take off his shirt to
whip him, you can see that his back is
already covered in scars from
many whippings as a slave.
And so as he's being whipped, he stares
at his commanding officer,
played by Matthew Broderick,
with a kind of intensity and vehemence that
is really his trademark as an actor.
Well, one of the scenes that had to
be the toughest to do, or maybe went
through your mind, would be
the scene where you're whipped.
Not the toughest.
The simplest scene.
The toughest for everyone
else that day except me
because I knew exactly what I
was doing and I had the spirits of all
of those people who had been whipped
for real with me, and I was prepared.
It wasn't tough for me at all.
As a matter of fact, everyone else was
crying and people couldn't deal
with it because they felt guilty.
I was in the part.
I felt strong.
As a matter of fact, the contact between
Matthew and myself, it had nothing
to do with the guy whipping me.
It was like, well, let's see
who's going to break here.
It was almost like that kind of energy.
It was tough preparing
for that, I might say.
That day it was easier, but reading all
the history, reading books
like Bullwhip Days and
Slave Narratives and
things like that to find
out what actually happened
to my great-grandfathers
and grandmothers, that was the tough part.
One tear falls down his cheek to convey
the pain of the whipping,
but otherwise there's
just this amazing intensity
that he brings to the role.
Filming in Georgia with his family by his
side, he described the
experience as deeply fulfilling.
His portrayal earned him a Golden Globe for
Best Supporting Actor
and, on March 26, 1990,
the Academy Award for
Best Supporting Actor, beating
out heavyweights like Marlon
Brando and Martin Landau.
He also won his second
NAACP Image Award for the role.
So Denzel won his first Oscar for Glory
for Best Supporting Actor,
which was his second nomination.
He also beat out some pretty
incredible performers to win the award.
He beat Marlon Brando
and he beat Danny Aiello,
who had starred in Do the Right Thing.
I started acting, what, 1975.
I was in college, my first acting class.
The teacher went around
and asked everyone what
they want to do, why
they want to be an actor.
And I said, I want to be
the best actor in the world.
And everybody went, really?
Who the hell does he think he is?
But not only to be
the best in the world.
Who's the best?
Who's the best supporting actor?
Who knows? But to
be the best that I can be.
And this feels like not
a confirmation of that,
but I know that I've been working
the right way and trying to do the
right things and growing as an actor.
I want to continue to grow.
I'm going to play Richard III this summer
in the park, and that's going to
stretch the heck out of me, but it's going
to teach me some lessons.
And I may fall on my face,
but I'm going to go for it.
But I think that the reason that that
performance won the
Oscar is because it felt
like he'd put so much of himself and
so much kind of spirit and
power into the performance.
And I think that it really did feel
like a win, that despite how young he
was when he made the film, he
was only kind of in his late 20s, early
30s, it was something that truly kind of
resonated with audiences
and felt like something new
was coming through on screen.
That year, Denzel and Pauletta
welcomed twins, Malcolm
and Olivia, completing
their family of four children.
The 1990s saw Denzel cement
his status as a leading man.
He starred in diverse
films, including More Better
Blues, Mississippi Masala,
Malcolm X, Much Ado About Nothing,
Philadelphia, Devil in a
Blue Dress, and Crimson Tide.
His collaborations with
directors Spike Lee and Tony
Scott showcased his range from
romantic leads to intense action roles.
In Mo' Better Blues, he clashed with Lee
over a nude scene,
prioritizing his children's comfort.
So Mo' Better Blues is one
of Spike Lee's earlier films.
It came just after Do the Right Thing,
which was his big breakthrough,
which kind of launched him to the world.
And this was his first
collaboration with Denzel.
And it was something a little bit different
after Do the Right Thing, which is a
very angry, very powder keg type film.
And Mo' Better Blues
was something different that
I think proved not only
Spike Lee's versatility
as a filmmaker, but Denzel's
versatility as an actor.
Big.
I don't like no static.
You know, I'm a peaceful person.
And even though you fire
my ass, you're still my boy.
I look out your best interest.
When was the last time you seen Clark?
I don't know.
What's up?
He plays this jazz musician
who is incredibly talented,
but also has kind of personal
demons that he suffers with.
And it's really a love story, but it's
also about artistic integrity,
which is something that
I think Denzel and Spike have both
spoken about a lot, and trying to kind of
maintain your artistic
freedom in an industry where
that oftentimes is
compromised and it was the
beginning of this really
enduring, very loving friendship
and work relationship between Denzel
and Spike, which continues to this day.
- What was that?
- I got your ticket.
OK.
You know that's what I
was coming to check on.
I got your ticket.
- OK. All right.
- I'll talk to you later, man.
Say, side by side.
- OK.
- In the house.
His role in Malcolm X was
a career-defining moment,
building on his earlier stage performance,
Denzel prepared rigorously,
training with the Nation of
Islam, abstaining from alcohol
and pork and losing 20 pounds.
He drew inspiration from
his father's preaching style,
despite their distant relationship.
His father's death from a stroke in 1991,
before the film's release, added a
personal layer to the performance.
So Malcolm X is widely regarded as one
of the best biopics ever made and maybe
one of the longest, but I think it's
definitely one of the most rewarding
films you can sit down and watch.
These are the questions
you and I have to ask.
How did we get this mind?
You're not an American.
You're an African who
happens to be an American.
You have to understand the difference.
We didn't come over on the Nina,
the Penta and the whatchamacallit.
We didn't land on Plymouth Rock.
Plymouth Rock landed on
us, landed right on top of us.
Spike Lee fought incredibly
hard to make the film.
Originally, a white director had been
chosen by the studio and Spike kind of
did a bit of a protest,
rightfully claiming that a
black filmmaker should get
the opportunity to make the film,
and he was instated eventually, and
Denzel stayed on board the project.
He'd been cast before
Spike Lee became involved,
and Spike Lee said the only person he
ever wanted to play Malcolm X was Denzel.
He'd played him before on Broadway when he
was younger and did
just a phenomenal amount
of research into who he was as a man,
and the result was this incredible epic
film spanning the entire
course of Malcolm X's life.
It really was this attempt to capture
an incredibly important figure in
American culture, in Islamic culture,
in the liberation of African
Americans in America.
The way Spike does it is with such
energy and such reverence, but also he is
critical at times of Malcolm X, and he
doesn't shy away from
the more difficult parts
of his life, and I think that Denzel brings
such a sense of personality to the role.
It doesn't feel like you're watching
him doing an impression of Malcolm X.
It really does feel like you are watching
a film with the man himself, and it
still is regarded to this day as one
of the greatest biopics of all time, and
I think it is that combination of Denzel's
performance and Spike's
direction that means people still
love the film and resonate
with the film to this day.
You can't even get drugs in Harlem
without the white man's permission.
You can't get prostitution in Harlem
without the white man's permission.
You can't get gambling in Harlem
without the white man's permission.
Every time you break the seal on that
liquor bottle, that's a
government seal you're breaking.
The film, though controversial
and over budget, earned
Denzel a third Oscar nomination
and a fourth NAACP Image Award.
They flew from L.A. to New York
just to convince me to change and to
take out the opening sequence of the film.
So why do you think it ought to be
directed by an African-American?
Well, the same reason
that with Francis Ford
Coppola being an
Italian-American, the nuances of
flavor he brought to
the Godfather trilogy, him
being an Italian-American,
he knew all that.
He was of that background.
I've gotten tons and tons and tons of
mail from young people who didn't know much
about Malcolm X, were walking around with X
hats on, who've taken
the initiative to learn
more about their history and their culture.
You know, that's the thing I'm proud
of, most proud of about this film, is that
it made young people, black and white and
other colors too, think
about their history in
this country and what has happened,
how they've been miseducated,
and to go and learn
things for themselves.
I'm real proud of that fact,
as I know Spike is as well.
(gentle music)
Denzel's selective approach
to roles defined his career.
He turned down parts
in films like Terminator
2 and Amos & Andrew,
prioritizing quality over quantity.
His casting in The Pelican Brief, a role
written for a white actor, was
championed by co-star Julia Roberts.
The film's omission of a love scene sparked
debate about racial bias,
but director Alan Pecula
insisted it was a creative choice.
Two films, one is the
longest post-production
I've ever been involved in on a film,
Philadelphia, because it took him a year to
put it together, and the other
one is the shortest, Pelican Brief.
I mean, we were still shooting last week.
Philadelphia, a groundbreaking
film about AIDS, saw Denzel
play a homophobic lawyer
defending a gay man.
Philadelphia was a really
important film in the early 1990s.
It was the time of the AIDS crisis.
The AIDS crisis was at its height, so
not only were many people dying of AIDS
and were ill with AIDS, but there was a
huge public panic around AIDS and how
contagious it was and how
people with AIDS should be treated.
There was a huge amount
of homophobia around
AIDS, really outspoken homophobia
in a way that's difficult to imagine today.
We've moved away from that a lot.
The role challenged him
to portray an unsympathetic
character, and the film's
$200 million box office
success further elevated his status.
The Pelican Brief and
Philadelphia were landmark films
for their commercial
success and social impact.
So Jonathan Demme
made Philadelphia as a way
of countering prejudice
against people with AIDS and
raising awareness of AIDS as a disease that
was causing a lot of discrimination.
Tom Hanks plays a young lawyer who
develops AIDS and is sacked from his job by
his very prejudiced bosses at the law firm.
If this was 1962 and Rock Hudson had
to pretend to be married to his publicist
secretary and Luella Parsons
was still stabbing people
in the back with her newspaper column,
maybe it would be a tough role to take
on.
But believe me, in the United
States and in the U.K., there is stuff on
free TV day in and day out that make
me playing a homosexual small potatoes in
comparison.
Mr. Beckett, come in.
It's good to see you again, Counselor.
Judge Tate, Kennel Construction.
Inoculate.
How are you?
What happened to your face?
I have AIDS.
Denzel Washington
comes into it as the lawyer
who is initially very reluctant
to engage with Hanks.
He doesn't want to take on the case
because he is prejudiced
against people with AIDS.
He has all sorts of
assumptions about people
with AIDS and how contagious AIDS is.
And so he becomes the kind of conscience
of the film, the public conscience of the
film, who's gradually
won over and takes the
case and learns what AIDS is and that
it's not that contagious
in terms of everyday
contact and develops a huge
amount of sympathy for Tom Hanks.
They are quite close
by the end of the film.
And so it's really the story of Denzel
Washington's awakening to
the crisis and to homophobia.
And that all sounds very worthy, but of
course he plays it with a huge amount
of charisma, with humor, with frankness.
It's a really, really important role in the
film and an important
film, I think, in his career.
Denzel Washington undoubtedly
brought a lot of people
to see the film who would
not have otherwise seen it.
Philadelphia was the
first major studio film to
address AIDS, a topic
stigmatized in the early 1990s.
A 1994 article in the Los Angeles Times
noted that Denzel's casting
in Philadelphia was significant
as it showcased his ability to carry
complex, morally ambiguous roles.
They're looking at Mr. Wheeler,
Ms. Coneen, even you, Your Honor.
They're wondering about it.
Trust me, I know that they are
looking at me and thinking about it.
So let's just get
it out in the open.
Let's get it out of the closet.
Because this case is
not just about AIDS, is it?
So let's talk about what this case is
really all about, the general
public's hatred, our loathing, our fear.
Our fear of homosexuals.
Denzel's hot streak continued
with Crimson Tide, where
he played a naval officer opposite Gene
Hackman, grossing nearly $100 million.
A misstep came with
Virtuosity, an action film
that underperformed
due to its lack of depth,
reinforcing Denzel's
preference for substantive roles.
He rebounded with The Preacher's Wife,
a family-friendly remake produced
by his company, Mundy Lane
Entertainment, starring Whitney Houston.
You ever had your palm read?
(gentle music)
The film earned $48 million
and resonated with audiences.
In Courage Under Fire, Denzel commanded
a record-breaking $10 million salary
for an African-American actor
in a dramatic role, per Variety.
By the late 1990s, Denzel was a Hollywood
titan, often compared to Sidney Poitier.
He rejected the comparison,
wary of industry biases,
and focused on forging his own path.
His third collaboration with
Spike Lee, He Got Game,
saw him play a convicted criminal,
a departure from his heroic roles.
So by the end of the 90s, Denzel
had really developed an
incredible reputation as one
of the best actors
working of his generation.
He had made Malcolm X,
he'd made The Hurricane,
he was kind of on top of the
world in a lot of aspects and
was fast becoming really someone
that audiences loved to watch.
I can remember being up on Fordham
Road in the Bronx to see Rocky and people
cheering and wondering where
those steps were in Philadelphia.
Warm feelings from a
movie like Field of Dreams.
People will have good
feelings from this film as well.
Do you think this will
be at the top of the list?
When you think back when
we were kings or Rocky?
It's not for me to make categories.
It's not about categories.
It's about enjoying a very, very good film.
Who cares?
In 2001, Training Day redefined his career.
As the corrupt detective
Alonzo Harris, Denzel delivered
a chilling performance, earning
his second Oscar for Best Actor,
making him only the
second African-American
to win in that
category after Poitier.
In Training Day, we see Denzel playing
a pretty different character for him.
Up until the point of Training Day, he'd
really made this reputation
for himself, almost of
playing nice guys or, if not nice guys,
very authoritative figures
who were very noble and just.
And now he was playing this corrupt
cop and not even a little bit corrupt,
a very corrupt cop who is
the antagonist of the film.
And I think this surprised a lot of
people, not because they
didn't think that Denzel
was capable of playing
such a difficult role,
but because he was so
believable and so commanding.
And the film really, to this day, is
considered one of his best performances.
Just throw that in the glove box.
This car is not from the motor pool.
No, it's not.
Sexy, though, isn't it?
So where's the office back at Division?
You're in the office, baby.
I'm going out.
[Still D.R.E. by Dr. Dre ft. Snoop Dogg]
Denzel's versatility extended
to the stage with acclaimed
performances in Julius Caesar and Fences,
the latter earning him a Tony Award.
He directed and starred
in the film adaption
of Fences with Viola Davis,
earning another Oscar nomination.
Fences is a play about a former baseball
player who has become a sanitation worker,
and it's a story that
Denzel was very familiar
with because he had
played the role previously
on Broadway and
had worked with Viola
Davis, who played
his wife, in the play.
And it's something that I think he felt
very strongly needed to be moved to big
screen or deserved to be
moved to the big screen.
And it's quite a tough watch at times.
I think that Viola Davis and Denzel are
such a compelling
presence together on screen,
and it confronts a lot
of difficult truths about
living as a black couple
in 1950s Pittsburgh
and the kind of harshness of that life.
- We're not talking about no baseball.
- Rose.
You're not listening to me.
I'm trying to explain it to
you the best way I know how.
It's not easy for me to admit that I've
been standing in the same place for
18 years.
Well, I've been standing with you.
I've been right here with you, Troy.
I got a life too.
I gave 18 years of my life to
stand in the same spot as you.
Don't you think I ever wanted other things?
Don't you think I had dreams and hopes?
What about my life?
What about me?
It really felt like you were watching these
2 kind of powerhouse actors
giving their all to the source material.
And I think that directing theater on the
big screen is always
quite difficult, but Denzel,
I think because he has
such experience as an actor,
on screen, on stage, behind the
camera, I think he really was the best
person to realize this dream
of bringing the film together.
Some critics have said that
Denzel Washington transcends race,
and I get what they mean, that
he's an actor who is popular and can
take on any kind of role regardless
of the race of the character.
I also think it's important that he is
African-American and
he has the stature that
he has in Hollywood,
because there's really, there
aren't that many other actors like him.
There aren't that many
leading African-American male
actors who don't play comedy and
who have the kind of gravitas that he has.
So I think he's a really
important presence in Hollywood.
His filmography spans
genres, from action-packed
The Equalizer series to
Shakespearean The Tragedy of Macbeth.
As a director, he helmed
Antoine Fisher, The
Great Debaters, and A
Journal for Geordie, showcasing
his commitment to diverse storytelling.
In The Equalizer, he plays a man of
extraordinary humility, quietness,
moral centeredness, all the things
that we might expect from
any Washington character.
But we're always aware
that behind that tranquil
surface there is a man who is
capable of extraordinary violence.
There's a lot of mystery with him.
I think he's a very humble person.
I think that's people like that.
He's very introverted.
He's got a vulnerability.
And he's an avenging
angel, that sort of thing.
And he's complex.
I think people like that kind of character.
And of course, there's
Mr. Washington playing him.
First of all, it's first
about the audience.
Do they want one?
They said yes, writer
went off, and away we go.
A lot of rehearsal, a lot of
choreography, and, you know, a lot of that.
And we're working with
expert fighters and all that,
so they keep it
safe for us actors.
There's no corner that he is backed
into that he can't work his way out of.
It's really quite an extraordinary role.
And I think as the film goes by, you just
accept that, that he will always survive.
No matter what is thrown
at him, he will overcome it.
And there's a kind of clarity to the
character that makes that believable.
I knew my son was
going to be a good actor.
He is one.
He's growing as an actor.
It's something he really wanted.
And, you know, I'm his dad.
I'm not like him, you know, proud papa.
I'm so happy for him.
And we were watching him last night
do one of the big talk shows in America,
and it's like slapping my wife five.
We were sitting there
just, it's unbelievable.
Is that a Hekla cock?
This?
Yeah.
My name's Yarrow Rook.
Book is nice.
- What is he saying?
- I don't fucking know.
Can I see it?
Oh, you want to see my gun?
Uh, yes and no.
No.
No, fuck!
All right, all right, all right!
He's constantly evolving
and searching even for himself.
You know, he's, I have a friend who
wakes up in the middle of the night
who was a real guy who lived a
certain life, and he wakes up in a
cold sweat looking for his wallet because
he has to try to remember who he is.
Denzel's awards are well-documented.
He won Oscars for Glory and Training
Day, per the Academy's official records.
His Tony Award for Fences is
confirmed by the American Theatre Wing.
One of the really
remarkable things about his
later career is that he keeps returning
to Broadway to work as a stage actor.
So he's an actor who believes
in acting in that traditional sense.
It's clearly a way of kind of
proving your chops as an actor.
You know, what he could do now
as an actor in his 60s is, you know,
sit back and take the best film roles.
But he's clearly more ambitious
and more driven than that.
Denzel Washington's story is
one of triumph over adversity,
driven by an unyielding
passion for his craft.
But in a way, was it freeing
to play a character like this?
Because there's so many
dimensions, and there's just
a sense of sort of
unhinged ruthlessness, right?
Sign of the times.
He's a product of his environment.
It was ruthless.
I mean, you know, if you didn't
do well, they'd cut your head off.
You know, fed you to the lions or
sharks or whatever else
they had floating around.
So it was just, you know, putting the
putting the gear on, putting the rings on.
That was the icing on the cake.
You know, the script is the ingredients.
Beyond his on-screen
achievements, he remains a
pillar of his community,
supporting his church and
the Boys & Girls Club
with significant donations,
including $2.5 million in 1997, and ongoing
advocacy, per the organization's records.
Denzel has become one
of the most well-known
and well-liked
figures in Hollywood.
I think it's very hard to find anyone
with a bad word to say against him
because he's such a hard-working man and
so committed to
storytelling and to craft, but
also to helping other actors
and to championing other actors.
Speaking of actors, did anything
surprise you about Denzel or him?
Um, no.
I mean, I know his talent.
I knew his caliber of talent.
I've been watching him forever.
So I wasn't really surprised at anything.
I was happy at how generous he was
and how accessible he was, you know, as
an actor in the scenes.
It just raised everything
to the next level.
He's been married to his wife
for a very long time in Hollywood.
That is incredibly impressive,
and now we're seeing
his kids kind of come through the
system as well with a love for acting and
filmmaking.
I think that that proves that Denzel
has done a lot right to kind of show
them that there's a place in this world
for their stories and for them to
kind of have the same love for the craft
as he does.
This one is important in its own right
because it's celebrating
the fact that we are now,
we are all free to express ourselves,
you know, and that's what the film
celebrates, is the power of the talent.
And it represents the whole, you
know, the collective of what we did.
You know, so many people put their blood,
sweat, and tears into this film for
us to be recognized in this manner.
It's great.
I wish I was as smart as them.
You know, when I finally do grow
up, I'm going to be as smart as them.
Obviously, you've alluded to
maybe slowing down, retiring.
I really want to get behind the camera.
That's really what it is.
I have some great challenges.
I need challenges.
I just can't keep going like it is.
And seeing guys like Paul and Fred and
my sons, and that generation, it's there.
You know, at some point, you've
got to hand the baton off, let them run.
Now, I may trickle along behind
them for a while, but I'm not going all the
way around the bend.
I'm surely not coming
all the way back home.
You know, and I'm really
excited about my future.
I have great opportunities.
I'm excited about getting
behind the camera, and
I have one of the greatest playwrights
in the history of the world in my hands
that they've asked me to
take care of, and that's enough.
Denzel Washington is an actor and a star
who has no scandal
attached to him whatsoever.
He lives a very wholesome life,
especially by Hollywood standards.
He's a family man.
He's a churchgoer.
People who know him talk about his,
the strength of his faith, and the kind of
fiasco at the Oscars when
Will Smith hit Chris Rock,
it was Denzel Washington that Will
Smith then turned to and took solace from,
and Denzel Washington
not only consoled him, but
gave him a kind of spiritual advice about
what had happened, that is, when you are
at your most powerful, the devil comes for
you and undermines you, and I think that's
how Will Smith felt
about what had happened,
and having Denzel Washington's advice
helped him come through that moment.
His marriage to Pauletta,
now over four decades strong,
was renewed in 1993 in a ceremony
officiated by Desmond Tutu, a
moment of personal significance.
He's also known for supporting a range of
charities such as the
Fisher House Foundation and
the Nelson Mandela Fund, and he really is
someone who cares
about using his platform, but
in a kind of behind-the-scenes way.
He doesn't want a ton of credit or
glory, he just wants to use the money
and success that he's
had to help other people.
(gentle music)
From Mount Vernon to the global stage,
Denzel has navigated fame with
integrity, balancing artistry with
social responsibility.
His ability to inhabit diverse
roles, soldiers, activists,
criminals, and kings,
has inspired generations.
As a director, producer, and
philanthropist, he continues
to push boundaries, leaving a
legacy that transcends Hollywood.
For a preacher's son
from Mount Vernon, Denzel
Washington's journey is a
testament to the power of purpose,
resilience, and a commitment to giving
back, a legacy that will
endure for generations.
(gentle music)
His name is Noah.
It's not serendipity.
God is real.
He's real in my life.
It's all and everything
that I want to do.
And that's it.
(gentle music)