Want to know what made Aretha Franklin tick? Cynthia Erivo found a surprising source
As an actor and singer, Cynthia Erivo knows how to command a stage. But to do so as someone else â someone like Aretha Franklin, the Queen of Soul â can be a peculiar feeling.
âI know this may sound very, very strange and airy fairy, but it feels like they sort of step into the room for a second,â Erivo says in the latest episode of the L.A. Times podcast âThe Envelope.â
It made preparation all the more key for Erivo as she took on the role of the powerhouse singer in âGenius: Aretha,â the National Geographic series chronicling Franklinâs life and work. Erivo says she relied heavily on Franklinâs media interviews and appearances, including a 1976 conversation with Dick Clark on âAmerican Bandstandâ to promote her album âSparkle.â Erivo picked up the nuances of Franklinâs personality by paying close attention to how the singer would interact with a person she didnât know well.
âWhenever I watched interviews from like the late â60s into the â70s, she was really quiet in her interviews,â Erivo says. âAnd then towards the â80s and the â90s, she started having more fun. She would play jokes and sheâd laugh with the interviewer.â
After scoring raves for âThe Color Purpleâ and âHarriet,â Erivo takes on her most challenging assignment to date: playing Aretha Franklin in NatGeoâs âGenius.â
A 1974 appearance as the mystery guest on game show âWhatâs My Line?â proved particularly enlightening.
âThere is really cool footage of her being a guest on a game show. And all of her answers are like yes/no answers,â Erivo says. âBut itâs really about how she says a yes or a no. The interviewer asks her about whether or not she â it was a tongue-in-cheek, ironic question like, âAre you a star?â And she goes, âWell ... yes.â Thereâs just this demure, come-hither way of speaking to people that makes you come in because she doesnât have to project. She makes you come towards her.â
Such clips werenât the only resources Erivo found essential when it came to transforming into Franklin.
Erivo studied the 2018 concert film âAmazing Grace,â which features footage shot by Sydney Pollack of Franklin recording her 1972 live album of the same name. And of course she listened to Franklinâs music, finding particular resonance in âAretha Live at Fillmore West,â released in 1971, which featured a guest duet with Ray Charles; as well as Franklinâs 1972 album, âYoung, Gifted and Black.â
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Erivo didnât stop with the look and sound of Franklin. The actress has long made it part of her process to identify a scent that captures the essence of the character sheâs playing. And Tom Fordâs Noir was the perfume that helped her find a way into the legendary singer.
âIt was sweet and strong at the same time, which is kind of her, really,â Erivo says. âSheâs got this combination of strong and demure and graceful and sweet. She could be spiky if she wanted to. But she could also be really, really lovely.â
Starring Cynthia Erivo, the new season of National Geographicâs anthology doesnât quite âexplainâ Franklinâs genius. But it will remind you of it.
Listen to âThe Envelopeâ to hear the rest of our interview with Erivo, including how her work on âGeniusâ fueled her as she made her own record and her thoughts on why itâs not a problem that the the series doesnât feature one of Franklinâs most iconic songs, âRespect.â Plus: Hear reaction to the 2021 Academy Awards from L.A. Times columnists Glenn Whipp and Mary McNamara.
If you like learning more about what went into the making of the most talked-about movies and TV shows of the moment, check out our past conversations with âSmall Axeâsâ Steve McQueen and âPromising Young Womanâsâ Emerald Fennell. Upcoming interviews include Kate Winslet for âMare of Easttown,â Steven Canals for âPoseâ and more.
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