#FlyWashington Magazine Winter 2017 | Page 8

She’s an award-winning actress, a budding film and television producer, a singer and a single mom — and a nomad. “I am always going,” chuckles Taraji P. Henson, the star of the hit television series “Empire” and Oscar- nominated films like “Hidden Figures,” “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” and “Hustle and Flow,” during our wide-ranging conversation. “It’s to the point where, you know how you find pennies in the bottom of your purse? I’m finding travel tickets, airline tickets in the bottom of my purse. Receipts. It’s out of my control. I used to be able to clock in my miles. Now I have to hire somebody to do that, because I just can’t keep track. It’s just too much.” Henson has called Los Angeles home since 1997, when she packed up her then two-year-old son Marcel (he’s 23 now) and left Washington, D.C.’s “I FEEL LIKE WHAT I DO IS BIGGER THAN ME, SO IT’S NEVER ABOUT ME” Southeast for the bright lights of Hollywood. She was 26 years old and ready to take on the world. She’d studied drama at Howard University and honed her skills working shifts on the Spirit of Washington, a dinner cruise ship that still roams the Potomac River offering three hours of entertainment, food, libations and views of the capital city. “Oh my God. Let me tell you, it paid the bills. That was a good gig there. I mean, I was working doubles, sometimes I would work a triple shift and those checks, man. I’d never seen that many zeroes on one check for me,” she recalls with a laugh. “It was buffet-style eating and we’d sing little corny songs. We danced and did the Conga line with them as they got very merry. I made my tips off my personality.” Her personality is certainly part of her charm — that and her lovely visage and strong physique led her to small parts right away. Remember her from “Felicity” FLYWASHINGTON.COM 6 WINTER 2017/18 or “E.R.”? Honestly, we don’t either, but soon enough she snagged her first film, in director John Singleton’s “Baby Boy” (2001) and then her first TV series, as Inspector Raina Washington on “The Division,” from 2002-2004. As she built her Hollywood credits, Henson was emulating her favorites — think Meryl Streep, Carol Burnett, Bette Davis, Lucille Ball, Richard Pryor, Tom Hanks — the actors and comedians she mentions as the ones she both studied and admired. “‘Baby Boy’ was my first motion picture and I got compared to two people that I had really looked up to and studied: Goldie Hawn and Diana Ross. They said I had the comedic timing of Goldie Hawn and the rawness of Diana Ross. That is one of the reviews that I will never, ever forget,” she says. Getting rave reviews has become the norm as the years have passed for the talented 47-year-old actress, who now owns a coveted Screen Actors Guild Award (for the “Hidden Figures” ensemble), a Golden Globe and a Critics Choice Award (both for Best Actress in a Television Drama Series for “Empire”), six BET Awards, seven Image Awards and one Academy Award nomination (for her performance in “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”) and three Emmy Award nominations for “Empire.” But Taraji Henson insists that, “I feel like what I do is bigger than me, so it’s never about me”; instead, it is about the art of inhabiting different characters and bringing them to life. “I’m an artist. I’m an artist to the bone. Some people paint, some people sing, I act. That’s how I get off my art. That’s how I do it. I’m really serious about it. It’s not about being cute and hitting the mark. It’s a craft and I take it very seriously.” She’s serious about taking control of her own destiny, too, by moving steadily into producing both films and television shows. Her most recent movie project is “Proud Mary,” an action thriller shot in Massachusetts that is due out in January 2018, in which she stars and acts as executive producer. “I