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"I
think back upon a childhood full of longing for belonging
and see my life now as what I have created out of my dreams.
An image comes to mind of Mrs. Brown at the orphanage in
Cleveland, me sitting at her side, telling her, `you'll
read about me someday." - Antwone Fisher
Questioning
the Story (Q&A with Antwone Fisher):
Is the character that Denzel Washington plays a real person,
or a conglomeration of a few different people?
He's a real person but I had to have him do some things
that a few other people had helped me do. He also serves
the purpose that he served in real life, and he also does
things that other people did for me - just like the girl.
Since you can't have that many characters, you combine people.
The story actually takes place from the late '50s thru
the mid '80s but the film's timeframe is more contemporary.
Why was that done?
I was born in 1959 but for the movie's sake, we decided
[to change it] so that children - kids - would find it contemporary.
If we did it like I grew up in the '60s and '70s, then some
kids might say, Well, that's an old story. And
people might say that a long time has passed since then.
But we wanted it to be current so that people would identify
with it more.
How accurate was the portrayal of your foster parents?
I was kind to them in the movie and the book. I was kind
to them. They are worse.
Do you think he (Derek Luke) was the right actor to play
you?
Certainly he was.
Was it easy for him to play you since you two had been friends
before filming began?
We knew each other for some years before that so he didn't
suddenly have to pay attention to me. He knew me. But the
thing was, it was most important for him to do a good job.
No one knows who I am so it doesn't matter whether he copied
my mannerisms or not, because no one knows me. For Will
Smith to play Muhammad Ali was different because everybody
knows Muhammad Ali. If he came in and acted like Will Smith,
then people would be disappointed because he's not being
Muhammad Ali. It's much harder to do famous people.
Antwone
Fisher Mini-Bio:
Antwone Fisher was born in prison to seventeen-year-old
Eva Mae Fisher and twenty-three-year-old Eddie Elkins. His
father, Eddie, was shot and killed before Antwone was even
born. Antwone was placed in foster care within the first
few weeks of his life, and for two years he lived with a
loving family. The state eventually put Antwone back in
the foster system, claiming that Antwone's attachment to
his foster mother could be problematic. He was subsequently
placed in the home of Reverend and Mrs. Pickett, where some
of his most traumatic childhood experiences unfolded. For
fourteen years with the Picketts, Antwone suffered both
emotional and physical abuse.
Antwone walked out the door of the Picketts without getting
so much as a good-bye. The road ahead for Antwone wasn't
easy. Upon graduating high school, he found himself staying
at the YMCA where he began life as an emancipated minor.
He fell in with a criminal named Butch to avoid the derelicts
and sexual predators at the YMCA. He ended up sleeping on
park benches and in alleys, and it was at that critical
moment in his life that he decided to join the Navy.
Antwone Fisher spent eleven years with the Navy where he
learned many lessons and befriended a Navy psychiatrist,
Commander Williams (portrayed by Denzel Washington in the
film), who helped him realize his potential. Upon leaving
the Navy, Antwone took a job as a security guard at Sony
Pictures Entertainment. It was then in 1992 that he decided
to look for his real family. He eventually found his aunt,
Annette Elkins, who lived in Cleveland, and within months
he met all of his kin, including his mother, Eva Mae. READ
THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY
ANTWONE
FISHER /****
Movie Review
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