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Alicia Keys has dominated the music
for world and with her first film, Smokin' Aces, out this
week she looks to try her hand on the big screen. We caught up
with her to talk assassins, squibs and her future...
Q: What
a way for you to make your Hollywood movie debut - as a contract
killer.
AK:
I think there was no better way to do it.
Q:
What did you think when the director Joe Carnahan said 'Alicia,
we want you to play Georgia Sykes, an assassin?'
AK:
He
said 'Alicia, we don't want you to play one of those soft,
female roles where you are a love interest. Georgia will be
amazing, she's powerful, she's a badass.' I read the script and
really understood what the role of Georgia would be and was
onboard.
Q: Had
you seen Joe's breakthrough film, Narc, and did that also
influence your decision to take the role?
AK:
Definitely. I saw Narc and loved it. Visually, I just
knew Smokin' Aces would be insane. Personally, growing up
and witnessing the theatre and having great respect for the art
of acting, it was important for me not to play a character who
is a piano-playing singer. Or any type of singer. I really
wanted to be totally different and completely take myself out of
my comfort zone and go into a new head-space and new person.
Q:
And how about Georgia's costume, with the short shorts, boots
and fishnet stockings. We're not used to seeing you dressed like
that. Did you get to keep the costume and will we see you wear
it to the Brits or Grammys next year?
AK:
[Laughs.] No, I didn't get to keep it. I left it with
production. I think they'll have a better time with it.
Q: How
would you describe your character, Georgia Sykes?
AK:
Georgia is a very intelligent woman. She's actually quite
conservative. She doesn't like a lot of attention and is
meticulous. She wants to know everything will be smooth. The
only reason why she wore that outfit was she needed to fit in
and get close to the guy she's trying to kill, Buddy Israel, and
she did it well.
Q: Did
you have much of a say in the costume you wore?
AK:
Definitely did. Absolutely. They brought me a lot of skirts and
things and we went through it and talked about it and decided
shorts would be more comfortable and realistic with all of the
action I had to do. We even had to lengthen the vest because I
had to wear a holster underneath with an extra gun. I had to fit
ammunition in the boots.
Q: I
heard the outfit had to conceal something like five guns. Is
that right?
AK:
Yeah. There was a lot of stuff we needed in there.
Q: How
did you handle the special effects in the film? Is it right the
actors involved in the gun battles had things called "squibs"
attached to their bodies with fake blood in them that explode
when they are shot?
AK:
Yeah, the squibs. For me, I only needed one when I was shot in
the side. I didn't have a lot of them, but to see it and watch
it in the movie, it was insane. People would be pulled and
blown.
Q: What
was it like for you to be in your first movie and act in some
emotional, tough scenes with acting heavyweights like Ray Liotta
and Andy Garcia?
AK:
It was very exciting and thrilling. The whole cast was so rich
with people. To have the likes of Ray Liotta and Andy Garcia,
was just incredible.
Q: What
do you think your music fans will say when they see you playing
a hired assassin?
AK:
Hey, I'm sure some will be totally into it, and some might not
be so into it. That's the beauty of having your own opinion.
Q: You
have achieved so much with music, what is it like to step out of
your comfort zone and take on such a demanding acting role?
AK:
I love it. I've been so close to acting since I was a little
girl. It's always been a part of my life and I always knew it
would be. I was just waiting for the right time. It's exciting
for me to enter another world where you are completely not
yourself and you can dive 100 per cent into it and be totally
liberated by it. My role in Smokin' Aces is not what
people would expect, and I always want to do that.
Q: So
you don't plan on giving up music to concentrate solely on
acting?
AK:
No way. [Laughs.] Are you kidding me! I need music. I do music
out of a necessity. I love music and it's something that really
helps me as a person. I'm working on my new album now actually,
and that's going incredibly well and I'm excited to be bringing
some new music out.
Q: Why
haven't we seen you making movies before this? I bet you have
been offered a lot of scripts in the past?
AK:
Absolutely. The scripts I have been offered ranged from
everything from the most average, obvious singer roles to
incredible ones with really well-known directors, but it just
wasn't the right time. I was probably in the middle of making an
album and when I'm at that stage I concentrate 100 per cent on
the album. When I did Smokin' Aces, I concentrated 100
per cent on Smokin' Aces.
Q: What
was it about Smokin' Aces that enticed you that other
roles did not. You said Joe and his film Narc was an
influence, but what else? Did the fact you and your contract
killing partner, played by Taraji Henson, were two strong women?
AK:
Definitely. You rarely see a portrait or snapshot of two strong
women in the one film, especially in such a talented, large cast
of men. Smokin' Aces is a mind movie too. There's an
intellectual side to it. The audience has to think and uncover
things. That was intriguing to me.
Q: So
what did you think when you first sat down and watched the
completed version of Smokin' Aces in a theatre? Being
your first film, you must have been nervous to see it.
AK:
Oh yes. I saw it in a private screening room in LA with four
friends. It was crazy. We sat down and the curtains came back
and the big Universal logo came up. I was like 'It's real! It's
a real movie.'
Q: What
did your friends say?
AK:
They
loved it. It's one of those movies you can't stop talking about.
There are so many great characters in it that afterward you're
saying 'How about that character. Why do you think he said
that?' You get into it. It will become a cult classic.
Q: Well
I think that remains to be seen. You have just finished your
second movie, The Nanny Diaries, with Scarlett Johansson.
Do you have more films on the horizon?
AK:
There are a couple films on the horizon I'm really excited
about, but nothing is concrete. I want to take my time and each
role I do I want to be totally different. It's a long road and
I'm not any rush.
(Interview courtesy of
NBC Universal)
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