Maxine's Baby: The Tyler Perry Story (2023)

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Maxine's Baby: The Tyler Perry Story (2023)

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BYRON PITTS:

What filmmaker has had five movies

open number one at the box office

in the last four years?

Spielberg? Tarantino?

Scorsese?

No.

This record belongs to Tyler Perry.

MICHAEL PASEORNEK:

When people would come to me and say,

"I have the next Tyler Perry," I'd say,

"Does he tour 280 to 300 days a year,

getting to know his audience?"

If he doesn't, then you don't have

the next Tyler Perry.

OPRAH WINFREY:

Do not play him small.

Because he is not just

some lucky, rich n*gro...

...turned Black man.

LUCKY JOHONSON:

We grew up Uptown New Orleans, 3rd Ward.

Round the Magnolia Project.

People reverted to crime.

You know, burglary, robbery, dr*gs...

using 'em, selling 'em.

OPRAH:

Can you believe you were homeless

seven years ago?

- Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

- (AUDIENCE LAUGHS)

(CROWD APPLAUDS)

JAMES CORDEN: He is an actor,

writer, director, producer.

I'm gonna say it, entertainment mogul.

JIMMY FALLON:

Tyler Perry Studios.

You have the largest studios

in the United States.

- TYLER: That's what they told me, yeah.

- FALLON: The country. Yeah.

Give him a planet, come on.

KASIM REED:

You have no idea

what it is like to acquire an asset

from the United States Army.

HARVEY SCHWARTZ:

20 feature films, more than 20 plays,

nine TV shows, New York Times Best Seller.

- Unbelievable.

- (CROWD CHEERING)

(CHEERING FADES)

REPORTER: Known for producing movies

primarily for Black audiences,

but a growing number of critics

in the Black community

take issue with Perry's work.

WOMAN: You can't expect

that everyone is just going to

give him the thumbs-up because he's Black

and he, you know, scraped his way up

to Hollywood.

MAN 1:

The underlying stories and plots

that he uses and stereotypes,

I have a lot of problems with.

EBRO DARDEN:

Here's the biggest thing.

Tyler Perry didn't give a eff about

what nobody had to say

about what he was doing.

- He served his audience.

- (CHEERING)

MAN 2: I think just

when you're a pioneer in anything,

it's not gonna be easy.

It's a formula, again and again and again,

and he hits you over the head with it.

I don't know what he's trying

to work out on film.

Probably needs to work it out in therapy.

It's just a really horrible message.

It's like cinematic malt liquor

for the masses.

k*ller MIKE:

You know when you represent the culture...

...there's a responsibility

and sometimes almost a burden

that comes with that.

AMAN PERRY:

Why do you work so hard?

Why do I work so hard?

MAN 3: Few have done more to widen

the scope of television than Tyler Perry.

MAN 1: And in this latest film,

I think he's crossed the line.

REPORTER: Most successful

African American filmmaker in history.

MAN 4: But at the point

that it reaches Hollywood,

that's when it becomes a problem.

ARI EMANUEL:

He was definitely an outsider.

GAYLE KING:

There is no denying the talent...

MAN 5:

Tyler Perry has become a billionaire...

- ...and the power...

- ...and still likes to put on a dress.

...of Tyler Perry.

- You've accomplished a lot.

- (APPLAUSE)

What have you not done

that you want to do?





- (WIND BLOWING SOFTLY)

- (LEAVES RUSTLING)

LUCKY JOHNSON:

Hey, look, shouts out to you.

You're a billionaire's sister.

How about that?

(LAUGHS)

God is good, baby. Look out.

All right, baby.

All right, sweetie, talk to you soon.

Bye-bye.

My cousin Melva, Tyler's sister.

You know, we used to call him "Junior"

growing up.

"What's up, Junior?" "Junior. Junior."

But now it's Tyler, you know.

It's not Emmitt, and, um...

But that was his birth name:

Emmitt Perry Jr.

You know, he changed his name

to Tyler Perry, rightfully so,

because he had an estranged relationship

with his dad.

You know, for freaking many years.

So he didn't want to be known

as Emmitt Jr.

Let me tell you this.

And this is just me. This how I feel.

The trauma too deep.

The wound is cut too deep.

You cut a person, and it start healing,

and then you...

then you rupture the-the wound.

So, every time he was wounded,

he kept rupturing the wound.

Now the wound never heals.

(ECHOING):

And it never will.

REPORTER:

It was a star-studded night Saturday

as celebrities flooded Atlanta

to celebrate

the grand opening of Tyler Perry Studios.

(BIRDS CHIRPING)

The studio... 330 acres...

sits on the grounds

of the former Fort McPherson army base

in southwest Atlanta.

Tyler also dedicated 12 soundstages,

each named after

a groundbreaking Black artist,

including Oprah Winfrey,

Will Smith and Halle Berry,

just to name a few.

(HUMMING A TUNE)

PRODUCER:

How do you feel right now, sir?

TYLER:

I feel...

excited.

And calm.

And, um, ready and grateful

and thankful and hopeful and...

Yeah.

Ready to go.

I'm really trying to calm my nerves,

'cause you know how I am about time.

- It's like... (STAMMERS, SIGHS)

- (SNAPPING FINGERS)

I'm just trying to be like,

"Just go with the flow, TP.

Just go with the flow. Be in the moment."

PRODUCER:

That kid underneath your porch,

did he ever think

you'll have all of this right now?

TYLER: Are you really trying that

with me right now?

- Yeah.

- You really trying that with me right now?

- It ain't gonna happen, bud.

- I didn't... I just mean...

It ain't gonna happen. You better...

You better call Gayle King

or Oprah Winfrey or somebody.

You ain't... (STAMMERS)

Ain't gonna happen.

I'm not going there.

- All right.

- Mm-mm.

- I'm-a try it all weekend.

- I've got to just get through this moment.

I have to try not to float above.

You see, that's-that's my thing, though.

My problem with a lot of things in life is

I float above it.

And, uh...

That's just from childhood.

That's from abuse, where it's pain.

You just try to get through it.

But I found out that

I have that with everything.

When it's even joy and happiness,

I just...

(STAMMERS) Gets my s...

Senses get too heightened.

I just want to be above it.

So, tonight, and every day

and every moment, just like,

"Calm down, calm down, calm down.

"You're okay. Calm down. You're safe.

"It's just emotion. It's just feeling.

"It's just... It's good. You're all right.

It's love. It's joy, so..."

(BANGING ON DOOR)

(AUDIENCE CHEERING AND APPLAUDING

IN DISTANCE)

MELLODY HOBSON:

You know, they say,

"The best wine is grown

in the toughest soil."

And when you think of

just the finest wines,

the grapes have to push through

rocks and branches,

in all sorts of detours,

in order to come through the soil.

In many ways, I think that

that really does characterize

Tyler's growing up.

He had some horrific experiences

as a child,

and that has fed into who he is.

That ultimately led

to the characters he created

and the imagination that he had.

Because you go inside your mind.

And so, it all makes sense to me

that he would turn into

this person that he is,

that he would have

the level of perseverance

and relentlessness that he has.

Because he had to come through a lot.

He had to be that wine

to break through that soil.

(SHOES TAPPING RHYTHMICALLY)

LUCKY:

It's hard living in New Orleans.

Hard to survive,

and it's a dangerous town.

The g*nf*re.

The robberies.

The-the g*ng v*olence.

But it was, it was very dangerous.

It was very dangerous.

The crime rate was real high.

We was once the m*rder capital

of the world.

ANCHORWOMAN: g*n v*olence is surging

once again in New Orleans...

ANCHORMAN:

Rise in crime is...

ANCHORWOMAN 2:

Murders are up in New Orleans, and...

JAMES BALDWIN: I don't know what

most white people in this country feel.

I can only conclude what they feel

from the state of their institutions.

MAN:

"He told me, 'Dying is very easy.

Living is a difficult thing.'"

(SIRENS WAILING IN DISTANCE)

And, um, the police went up

in Bruce Grocery.

Opened fire on 'em.

YOUNG MAN: They told me,

"Stand up," and I said, "No.

What, so you can sh**t me?"

LUCKY: Statistically, here in New Orleans,

you might not make it to live to see 21.

If you make it to your 21st birthday,

you beat the odds.

You-you beat the devil.

You beat the statistic.

And it's survival of the fittest

growing up in this area.

You know? So, soon as

you come out your house,

hell, you might not come back.

I'm-a pan around,

and you'll see this building right here.

This was a scatter-site,

so we lived in here as well.

Two houses down... Aunt Maxine,

my Tyler Perry, Yulanda, Emmbre,

Melva, they lived two houses down,

which we're gonna go to right now.

This is the actual house

that Tyler grew up in.

In the back of this house, he built a, uh,

clubhouse, where we would go back there,

under the house,

and get away from Uncle Emmitt.

PITTS (OVER TV): We crossed the street

to where he used to live,

and the pain of his past came back.

TYLER:

This is where I grew up.

I have not been in this house in years.

PITTS:

He brought us out back,

showed us the cubbyhole where he would

escape from his father's abuse.

- (DOG BARKING IN DISTANCE)

- This was my hideout,

my safe place, you know?

When it got too much, you'd go in here?

TYLER: Yeah. Yeah.

I've spent, like, all day in there.

LUCKY:

I be a little sad for Tyler sometimes

because he had it real rough.

You know, he had a real... he had...

he had it way rougher than us.

It didn't have to be like that.

Yeah, I don't know

what God message was for him,

and maybe the message has come to pass,

because he's very successful now.

Whereas he has a lot going on,

and he's taking care of a lot of people

and blessing them,

but how is he sleeping at night?

You know, thinking about his childhood.

Tyler's dad,

he was a rough man growing up.

He was a... a no-nonsense type guy.

You know, didn't laugh a lot,

didn't think too much was funny.

Uh, you know, he was a strong,

hardworking man,

but he was just a real irate,

sultry type man.

Just hard, you know?

Third-grade education,

come out the country,

and he just guided by working hard.

He would get off work maybe 3:00,

get home at 3:30.

There's a corner store right here

at the corner, not even half a block,

and they would have cases of beer.

But he would drink every single day.

Soon as the truck pull up,

we knew it was about to go down.

He gon' jump out with the,

with the, with the 24 case of beer.

He gon' drink all of 'em

until somebody get here,

and he gon' cut up.

And for Junior... for, uh, for Tyler,

I'm sorry... for Tyler,

(STAMMERS) his beatings was just

a little more excessive.

One time, we were real young,

and he whipped Tyler real, real bad.

He had blood all on his back.

He ran out the house, man.

He... you know, he was young.

He ran out the house.

He come around the corner by us.

And our mom was like,

"What? Who did this?"

AUNT JERRY: There are these huge welts

across his back.

I mean, about this long and about

that thick 'cause they're swollen.

I mean, that's-that's my nephew.

He's a baby.

He was a little boy then, little boy.

Maybe seven or eight years old.

He was little.

LUCKY:

She didn't play 'bout us.

You know, her nieces, nephews, her kids.

The mother lion, if you will.

She protected us by all costs.

If the big bad bear was coming,

she gon' fight the bear.

So, I just... just clicked.

I went and got the g*n.

We come around the corner,

Mama dragging us all.

We had on our little Hanes brief.

You know, our little tighty-whities,

and we crying.

Saw him getting on the porch

as usual, drinking.

AUNT JERRY: And I asked him

why did he hit him in his back like that.

And he told me to mind my business.

He shouldn't have said that.

She raised the g*n up to sh**t him,

and my dad moved it.

(g*nsh*t)

That was so scary,

'cause it went...

I looked at my mom like, "Jesus."

(CHUCKLES):

You know, she...

Mom was just about to sh**t Uncle Emmitt,

you know?

And then he didn't play with her,

and he would listen to her.

Even in the drunken stupor,

he would listen to her,

'cause he remembered that g*dd*mn g*n.

AUNT JERRY:

That's not one of my proud moments,

but it was just so hurtful.

I just can't tolerate it,

because I chastised my children, too,

but none of my boys could ever tell you

that they got beat like that.

I mean, no, no, no, no. How can you

when you love your children?

How can you do that?

How can your heart allow you to do it?

So I don't understand that,

but it's not for me to understand.

OPRAH: It wasn't until last night,

when I was talking with the producers

about this story, that I first heard,

uh, that you had been beaten so badly

that one time you blacked out.

Like, I-I remember holding on

to a chain-link fence,

and I'm holding so tight

my hands are bloody

as he's hitting me, and I'm-I'm holding...

- Wow.

- Just trying to hold on for my life.

(VOICE BREAKING):

I was so enraged about it in my mind.

I see myself running from me.

- Wow.

- And I couldn't get the little boy...

(BREATHES SHAKILY)

I couldn't get that little boy

to come back to me.

I couldn't get myself to come back to me.

OPRAH:

So it got so bad that, as a little boy,

- you slit your wrists.

- TYLER: Yeah.

Yeah, I was, I was suicidal,

because I thought I just...

what is the point in living?



Having this tremendous trauma as a kid,

for me...

...I could create spaces in my mind

that were real.

While things are happening to me,

no matter what it was...

if it's my father yelling,

or if I'm being violated

or touched inappropriately...

I would go in my mind

to a different place.

One of my places of escape was this yard,

and I could see birds and trees and fields

and hear people having conversations

and see their houses and their cars

and the tiniest detail

of the outlet on the wall,

what was plugged into it and what...

the steam from the coffee.

I could see all these things in my head.

The world was so vivid

and so beautiful and so clear,

that place that I thought was

safe and peaceful

really existed, and I got there.

And I didn't want to leave.

I didn't want to come back down

into myself after the trauma was over.

And the heightened senses

would send me to these moments.

OPRAH: The way he was

literally tortured as a little boy...

that was t*rture... and to know

that he was able to separate

in his imagination

without losing his mind.

Because for so many children

who are treated as horrifically as he was,

particularly by the father figure,

they have personality disorders.

And they completely separate,

not just in terms of their imagination

but separate in terms of

personalities in order to, uh,

bear the t*rture, bear the pain.

Bear the consistent

never knowing when it's gonna come

or how hard it's gonna be,

but you know it's gonna be hard.

His ability to relate to people is

because he comes from

the space of living it

and not just talking it.

And that's why he can speak to

anybody else who's ever been abused

or burdened or involved

in any kind of struggle and crisis,

as children, as adults.

He's one of those people who is able

to turn his pain into some real power.

And he wouldn't be who he is,

he wouldn't have the wealth,

the notoriety,

the ability to tell the stories

in the way that he specifically

is able to hit the nerve

of the African American community,

had he not lived that pain.

TYLER:

People ask, "How can you write, you know,

20 scripts in two weeks?"

It's just I can access that place

and see that world and hear those voices,

and it just floods out of me.

So for-for what some think

is-is weird or strange,

for me, it's just being able to access

a place that I created as a kid

to help me cope,

that now is the very thing

that is sustaining

a lot of what I'm doing in the business.

So, again, everything finding its way

to work together for the good.

ELVIN ROSS: Writing in his journal

was cathartic for him.

He got that from Oprah.

He used to always speak about her

in the early days,

you know, and how that

someday he would meet her.

You know, "Someday I'll meet Oprah.

"Someday we'll be friends, you know?

Someday I'll have my own TV show."

KELEIGH THOMAS MORGAN:

He was so inspired by that episode

where she talked about journaling

and writing things down,

and I think he found healing through that

and catharsis.

And-and that's where the first stories

were born, the first play.

So I love that somebody who inspired him

and who he looked up to,

and who probably seemed...

a lifetime away

ended up becoming one of

his closest confidants.

ALL:

Yay!

But he also used to always talk about

the way she did business.

I watched him walk away

from major networks

because they wouldn't do it his way.

There was a certain formula that he had.

But it goes back to his faith

and what God has told him.

"This is what I've given for you to do.

Stay steadfast and stay focused."

- And that's exactly what he's done.

- (APPLAUSE)

TARAJI P. HENSON:

Tyler, you are a brilliant visionary

that embodies

what the African American dream truly is.

I am deeply, deeply honored

to present

the 2019 BET Ultimate Icon Award

to my dear, dear friend, Mr. Tyler Perry.

(CROWD CHEERING)

TYLER: I couldn't help

but think about my mother.

I remember being a kid

at about five years old.

She would take me into the projects

with her when she played cards

some Friday nights with a bunch of women.

Now, these women didn't have

more than a 12th grade education,

but they were smart Black women,

they were powerful Black women.

They had great stories to tell.

And I was a five-year-old kid

sitting there on the floor,

playing with my Matchbox cars,

listening to them talk about

their men, their relationships

and their pains.

And when one of them would get really sad,

another woman would come in and

make a joke and they'd all start laughing.

I didn't know

I was in a master class for my life.

I would get home,

and my father would be beating my mother

and doing all kinds of things

and saying all kinds of stuff to her,

and he would leave the room,

and I'd walk in,

and I'd imitate one of those women,

and she would start laughing.

There was a power in that

that I didn't really get.

My first ten movies were

all about her subconsciously,

wanting her to know that she was worthy,

wanting Black women to know you're worthy.

You're special.

You're powerful. You're amazing.

(CHEERING)



MAXINE PERRY: When I had Tyler,

or Junior, as I called him,

Emmitt Perry Jr.,

he was my only son for ten years,

so of course I spoiled him rotten.

I would give him a bath

three and four times a day.

I would dress him in this little jumpsuit,

one-piece outfit.

Thought he was so cute in it.

And he grew up to be a very loving child,

very sweet.

He was very sweet.

You know, and with Junior,

I mean, it was just a difference.

LUCKY:

Tyler, he got both of 'em.

He got his... he got his mom humility,

love, grace, peace.

But he got his dad hustle,

his-his work ethic.

You know, he's just not

an assh*le like his dad.

No disrespect to my Uncle Emmitt.

I love him.

Yeah, but he was an assh*le.

You know, he was truly an assh*le.

And he'll see the documentary.

You know, I'll-I'll face him.

(CHUCKLES) I'm an adult now, you know?

But he was, he was a m*therf*cker, man.

But, um...

but when you're younger, you know,

this the big, bad wolf.

But when you get older,

you confront the big, bad wolf.

And that's what happened with Tyler,

you know?

As he got older, he was like,

"You're not gonna run over me anymore.

You're not gonna step on me anymore."

TYLER:

You know, I think about my mother,

and I think about this 20, 20th,

21st century judgment of her

and how she stayed with this man.

But her mother died when she was 13.

This man married her when she was 17.

She knew nothing about the world.

She knew nothing about life.

And her... all of her sole support

and everything she knew

and everything she had been taught is

if he paid the bills, you had a good man.

So she stayed in what she knew.

MAXINE:

We got married in 1963.

- We moved to New Orleans.

- WOMAN: Okay.

And I had Yulanda, then Melva right after.

Didn't have too much sense,

just got pregnant.

Young and dumb. And...

TYLER: Having my sister at 18,

my other sister at 19,

me at 24, and here we are.

She's a Black woman in Louisiana

with three kids.

What does she do?

What does she do for work to pay?

To support us? What does she do?

She stayed.

And I have absolutely no judgment for her

because of the pain and the hell

she went through herself

just-just to survive

and to keep the peace.

And on top of all of that, she loved him.

Don't know how, I don't know why,

but I knew she did.

She loved him until the day she died.

I think that her holding on to everything,

holding on to every emotion,

never showing people sadness,

always just smiling and happy

and always wanting peace,

always wanting my father to be smiling.

Like, she would send me in the room

to say hi to him when I didn't want to,

'cause he could walk in a room, I'd leave.

I remember asking my mother,

I was like, "Is he my father?"

'Cause I just could not understand

how this man could look at me

and hate me so diligently, which...

with such passion, he had such hate.

Just the intimidation factor of it,

the... again, the wicked hatred of it.

- Come on, thy weary

- (CROWD CHEERS)

I believe I've got some witnesses

here tonight...

TYLER:

How did I deal?

(STAMMERS)

Listen, if God gave me nothing else,

he gave me a mother who took me to church,

who prayed and believed.

I know he is...

I became Tyler's pastor as a teenager.

And so, it was like God connected me

to him because of his hurt.

TYLER:

The sense of community and faith

and believing carried me through

some of the darkest times

growing up into young adulthood,

of trying to understand

who I was, what I wanted to be in life.

It was all intertwined in the church.

- (LIVELY MUSIC PLAYING)

- (RHYTHMIC CLAPPING)

k*ller MIKE: You grow up in a Christian

household, especially in the Black South,

much of your life is

revolved around the church.

In matters of finding the arts,

as Reagan cut the arts out in the '80s,

it really was church plays.

It really was community theater

that kept the arts alive for kids

that may not have had access

through public schools anymore.

ELVIN:

So, growing up in New Orleans,

Tyler and I attended the same church,

which was Greater St. Stephen Baptist

Church... Full Gospel Baptist Church...

in-in New Orleans, Louisiana.

Greater St. Stephen was like

the event place of the city at the time.

So it was almost like

an outlet for Christians.

People from all walks of life

would attend church there.

It pretty much served as, like,

the church of the city.

(LAUGHS): I was a musician,

one of the fifth string keyboard players,

I used to like to say,

and Tyler was in the choir.

It was a pretty big thing

to attend Greater St. Stephen.

It was an even bigger thing

to be in the choir.

TYLER:

On my mother's side,

my grandfather was a minister,

my great-grandfather was a minister,

his father was a minister,

and we can find ministers going

all the way back to sl*very on her side.

So the very church, faith,

God is in my blood.

It's in my DNA.

He's always been...

he's always been a leader.

I know many people may not know the story,

but Tyler, as a teenager,

uh, was-was-was going to be a preacher.

TYLER:

Went to seminary school, studied,

learned more about the Bible.

(CHUCKLES)

It was time for me to do my first sermon.

BISHOP PAUL: In our ministry, you have to

preach what we call a trial sermon.

You really have to be humble. (CHUCKLES)

You have to... Uh, I mean,

it's-it's just a solemn situation

where you just stand there.

Okay, I shared with you

the kind of word

that you're supposed to give.

I want you to give it.

My Aunt Thelma was there.

My mother was there.

Everybody was so proud, 'cause I...

there I am, doing my first sermon.

And Noah did according unto all...

BISHOP PAUL:

I'm sitting there for the test for him.

He gets up,

honored me, honored the church.

And then, "Listen, y'all, y'all just all..."

(LAUGHS): I mean,

and people are falling out laughing.

(LAUGHTER)

(LIVELY CHATTER)

I said,

"Hey, you're not supposed to do that.

This is a serious time.

You're trying to pass the test."

Uh, and said, "Lord, I thought

you said it was gon' rain."

ALL:

Yeah.

After it was over, he got up behind me,

and he said, in front of everybody,

"You know, if God calls you,

he'll qualify you.

Um, but sometimes you ain't qualified."

I-I stopped him in the beginning.

I said, "No, no, no, no, no.

You're called to do something else."

In front of everybody, in front of

my aunt, in front of everybody.

I was crushed.

So, in my trying to figure out

what I'm gonna do with this thing,

this calling thing,

I hear that voice saying,

"I'm gonna take you to another place

to speak to more people."

I didn't know what that was at the time,

didn't know how I would get there.

And that has been the most frustrating

part of my early life and early career.

Listen, I got a father who says

I'm a stupid mother(BLEEP),

I'm never gonna be anything.

I'm-I'm a piece of (BLEEP),

I'm a jackass, every day of my life.

I never thought that people would

actually want to see me do anything,

see... uh, respect me as an actor.

You add that to white people

controlling every part of it.

I'm like, that-that wasn't even

a possibility or an option.

- Open the floodgates of heaven...

- TYLER: I do remember

being in the choir

and doing this thing about

all of the animals in the ark and Noah.

I do remember that.

I remember standing there.

This is my big time to shine 'cause

I had two lines in front of the church.

- ...a problem, 'cause I see no rain.

- Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, sister.

I want to know what you building

that big old thing for.

What you gonna... God gonna put his shoes

in there or something?

- (LAUGHTER)

- What is that?

Well, since you're bringing

two of everything,

I got two air fresheners

'cause I know you need it.

(LAUGHTER)

He was able to relate to people.

- We want rain.

- (OVERLAPPING CHATTER)

We want rain.

- Make it rain. Make it rain.

- (CROWD CHANTING)

I think that that's what drove him.

Let it rain, rain

Let it rain

Rain

Let it rain down on me

Rain, rain, rain

Rain down on me

Rain, rain, rain

Rain, rain

Let it rain

Open the floodgates of heaven.

(SONG ENDS)

LUCKY:

I tell you this, man.

New Orleans wasn't

extremely supportive of Tyler.

He had to go away.

He love his town, don't get me wrong.

He love his town. He do.

But the town didn't produce Tyler Perry.

You know, Atlanta produced Tyler Perry.

It's Outkast for the boots,

I thought you knew

So now you know, let's go

All the players came

from far and wide...

TYLER: In the '90s,

there was this great migration.

Every Black person was moving to Atlanta.

20-something years old,

put everything I had,

which was nothing, in my Hyundai

and drove to Atlanta.

Moving to Atlanta was a big example

for me to understand what I could be.

Hallelujah, hallelujah

You know, I do some things

more different than I used to...

I see Black people doing well,

and that's not something we had

as Black people in New Orleans.

It was dr*gs, gangs, r*pe, m*rder.

You know, horrible atrocities going on.

And to come out of that

and come into Atlanta,

where the drug dealers in my mind

were replaced by doctors

and lawyers who were Black,

where the people in the neighborhood

had more than what they needed

and felt that they deserved it,

it was like,

"Whoa, this is the promised land."

There's a heart that beats

in this city for Black people to thrive.

That for me is a revelation,

that I deserve it, too,

because I am just as good as anybody else.

(BUSY CHATTER)

So, I came here for what-what

the Black kids call Freaknik at the time,

- which-which is spring break.

- (SCATTERED LAUGHTER)

But when I saw people doing well,

I knew Atlanta was gonna be my home.

Seeing hope all around me,

that's what this city

and this state has represented for me.

I was working everywhere I could.

Saved enough money to rent the 14th Street

Playhouse and did my first play.

ELVIN:

I moved to Atlanta several years later,

and he came up to me

one Sunday after church and said,

"Hey, you remember me from New Orleans?"

I was like, "Yeah, I actually do."

He was like, "I'm doing this play called

I Know I've Been Changed."

I was like, "Isn't that the same play

that was failing in New Orleans?"

He was like, "Yeah, it's-it's... you know,

we're-we're... we picked back up,

and I lost my music director."

TYLER: I rented this place called

the 14th Street Playhouse to do this play,

because I thought

people are gonna show up.

We're rehearsing in the shows.

It's this 200-seat theater.

I keep checking the ticket sales

every day.

They said, "Oh, you sold one today."

All right, we're two weeks out.

"Oh, you've sold four seats."

Uh, okay.

I don't know what the hell I was thinking,

that people were gonna come out

and see a play

on the Fourth of July weekend.

- (INDISTINCT CHATTER)

- (APPLAUSE)

PRESENTER: Tonight,

this young man that wrote this play,

and these great cast members,

they have come here

to give us some insight

on the trials and tribulations that

we've been going through in our lives.

Some of us have been

through the storms a lot.

And they're giving us...

KEITH CORSON:

I Know I've Been Changed is about

adult survivors of child sexual abuse

and the lingering ramifications of that

in their lives.

It's telling a very personal story

that is actually really relatable

to a lot of people.

I mean, if you just look at statistics

about how many people have been

victims of sexual as*ault

and child sexual abuse,

um, it's something

that's not spoken of very much.

But it's something

that a lot of people deal with.

Wrapping that with

an uplifting message at the end,

you can take this trauma

and turn it into something positive.

So Perry has a very motivational premise

with this play.

I remember this.

- (LAUGHS) - CORSON: And I think

that's continued through his work.

TYLER: There were about 30 people

in the audience,

and I thought I'd see 1,200

over the course of the weekend.

That was a hard moment

and hard lesson learned.

Out of the 30 people that were there,

there was someone who said,

"I think this is good. I'll invest."

I was like, "Really?"

I can do the lights.

I will save that money.

All right.

I can sell the candy at intermission,

because I can do that, too.

And then I can be back on stage,

so I've got enough time

to get in costume, sell the candy,

put the lights up.

Oh, and I can drive the truck.

All these things to save money.

We were so broke that

we used to share burgers together.

He would take half.

I'll take the other half.

We would take a handful of fries

and just talk about

these great dreams that he had.

We're splitting a burger, and he's

telling me he's gonna be rich one day.

Uh, he would say, "Man...

you know, they... it's all

learning experiences," you know?

Uh, uh, it's not failures.

You know, but he believed in hisself,

he believed in his project,

and he wanted to get his message out,

so he stayed the course.

I'd get jobs in between these gigs, right?

So I go to my boss,

and I tell him I need some time off

to go and do this play.

My mother had rented a van

for me to drive the cast.

That was the worst show of my career.

I still have nightmares about it.

I loaded up everything in the truck

and drove down to Spartanburg.

That weekend, a hurricane,

of all weekends, is coming that weekend.

I still did the show. Nobody showed up.

I was coming back,

it's raining so hard I'm flying.

- (THUNDER CRASHES)

- This big truck,

with all the stuff in the back of it,

and I got the pedal to the metal

because I was so angry with God.

I'm like, "You told me to do this.

I know I heard the voice.

"What is going on?

Every time I step out here

to do these plays, you leave me."

Over and over and over again it happened.

And I'm just like, "What am I doing?"

And I'm just flying.

Didn't care if I lived or died.

(THUNDER RUMBLES)

BISHOP T.D. JAKES: Any time

you're about to have a fresh start,

there's always a storm.

A storm always announces

that you have outgrown where you are...

- (ECHOES): have outgrown where you are...

- TYLER: But hearing my mother say

that the play will never work,

that was... that crushed me,

because she was my sole support.

I got home and told her that I didn't make

that $300 to pay for that van.

Oh, that was it.

"(BLEEP) you mean

you didn't make this mother(BLEEP)?"

Oh, she-she lost it.

"Give that (BLEEP) up.

You ain't never gonna make it."

I'll never forget it.

I sat there in tears.

She was in front of me on the sofa,

'cause she was smoking.

She was just like... (IMITATES PUFFING)

"You spent... How-how the hell I'm-a pay

this $300 on the (BLEEP) credit card

'cause you run...

running out doing this mother(BLEEP)..."

And she's just smoking, right?

And I'm sitting back on the sofa

as she's there doing it,

and tears are just running down my face.

And she's smoking and she realizes that,

at some point in all her cussing,

she's realizing I'm quiet.

She turned around

and she sees the tears on my face.

She said...

and then she got water in her eyes.

She's like, "Baby, I'm so sorry.

I just want you to just get you a job."

I got home to an eviction notice,

of course,

and ended up out on the streets.

I...

Know I've been changed...

After about seven years of doing the show

over and over again and it not working,

I had got another job, so defeated.

I said, "Okay, that's it.

I'm not doing this anymore."

And I got a call from these promoters

saying they had an opportunity

to do the show at the House of Blues,

and they wanted me to do it one more time.

And I was like,

"Eh, no, I'm over it. I'm done."

I started thinking and hearing that voice

and praying that I should do it.

This time, I had been homeless,

out on the street.

I know what that feels like.

I don't want to do that again.

I know that I can depend

on this money coming in.

But that voice was so clear.

So I went and told the man that I quit.

We're gonna do the show.

So I'm thinking this is gonna be

the same story all over again.

I just wanted to get through the show.

I sat in the dressing room

the night of the show,

and I said, "God, you know what?

I've had enough."

It's... I was 28 at the time, and I said,

"I-I can't go on living like this.

You... I know you told me to do this,

"I know you keep bringing me out here,

but I don't hear from you

"when I get in these situations,

when I can't pay the rent,

"when I can't pay the bills,

when I got friends and family,

I'm calling them for 20,

30 dollars so that I can eat."

- But when God is telling you something...

- WOMAN: Mm.

- ...and you know it in your spirit...

- Yes.

...you walk into what God is telling you.

So what I did was I said,

"Okay, I'm not doing it no more, God."

And I heard a still,

small voice say to me,

- "I am God.

- (SCATTERED CHEERING)

I tell you when it's over.

You don't tell me when it's over."

(CHEERING, APPLAUSE)

I got up and I looked out the window,

and there was a line around the corner,

in the cold, trying to get into

the Tabernacle, with House of Blues.

The show starts. I walk out onstage.

It's packed to the rafters.

Every joke is hitting,

every line is hitting.

They are loving it. They are rolling

back and forth in the chairs.

End of the show, I come out

to take a bow, standing ovation.

Dust literally shaking,

coming down from the rafters

- from all the noise in the room.

- (CHEERING)

My life shifted in that moment.

It changed in that moment.

I got a call from a national promoter

who said,

"We want to take you to the Fox Theater

next week."

4,500-seat theater.

I think we did three or four shows,

sold them all out.

It was the beginning of something

that I wasn't prepared for,

because I had had

all of this negativity in my life.

I had all these people tell me

what I would never be.

Nobody said what I could be.

And now, all of a sudden,

I had success for the first time.

- (SINGER VOCALIZING)

- (CHEERING)

Yes, he did.

TYLER: And the show was bigger

and better than ever.

New set, new lights, new sound.

It-It's over the top.

I'm actually leaving the show

to go do the new show,

which is called

I Can Do Bad All By Myself.

INTERVIEWER:

Okay, and are you in this particular one?

Yes, I am. I play a 68-year-old woman

named Madea,

- who... Yeah.

- (LAUGHS) A 68-year-old woman? Oh.

TYLER: I was gonna do

the Madea character small,

really quick, onstage five minutes,

make the people laugh

and get off the stage.

I don't owe you nothing!

ELVIN: He had started out with Daddy Joe

in I Know I've Been Changed.

And then he moved to the character Madea.

The first stop we did was in Chicago.

It was Madea and another artist

that was supposed to be in the play.

TYLER:

Sold all these tickets out in Chicago

for her to be there,

and she never showed up.

So all these people come in

looking for her, and she wasn't there.

It was really scary,

and I had to go onstage

and do the Madea lines and her line.

We're looking at an audience, and they're

looking like, "Are you kidding us?"

TYLER:

Somebody tell me what is going on.

ELVIN:

I looked at him, I was like,

"It feels like

we just lost the Super Bowl."

TYLER: I tell you

how much I appreciate your patience,

'cause I know that

this has been a struggle.

I know it's been difficult.

It's been difficult for us.

ELVIN: After all of that success,

there was there another failure.

When you walk into a season that's yours,

I don't care what is happening around you.

No matter what it is or who it is,

nobody can stop you,

nobody can keep you

from getting to what's your...

You paid your dues.

No man has done this,

so no man can take it away.

And I wake up every morning

thanking God for it.

(PHONE RINGING)

ELVIN: He called me early in the morning,

says, "Get up."

I'm like, "Okay."

"We're gonna fix it."

He worked on the script.

We met for rehearsal.

We worked on some music.

And that Wednesday night... show opened

on Tuesday... that Wednesday night,

he came out as Madea,

and he got some laughs.

- (HUMMING)

- (PHONE RINGS)

- (DEEP VOICE): Hello?

- (LAUGHTER)

(MADEA'S VOICE): Oh, hey, girl,

how you doing? Girl, I thought...

ELVIN:

The next night, we worked it again.

The next day, we got bigger laughs.

- Well, how I look today?

- Oh, you look nice, too, Miss Ma'am.

- Thank you so much. (LAUGHS)

- (LAUGHTER)

ELVIN: By the time

we got to the end of the weekend,

the theater was full,

and everybody was humming.

He had completely worked the play.

Madea had become the star.

MAN:

Absolutely loved it.

WOMAN:

He plays the characters.

Would have to be Madea. We're...

Hands down, Madea. (LAUGHS) Hands down.

I loved it. I loved it. I loved it.

We loved it. Absolutely loved it.

We'd come see it ten billion more times.

Madea is this larger-than-life character

who can tell you all about yourself.

Tell you all you... all about yourself,

drink you under the table

and cuss you out.

And then tuck you in.

TYLER: It's a Southern term.

It's short for "Mother Dear."

k*ller MIKE: I think it's important to say

the African American community,

especially in the South,

is a matriarchal one.

Our families are ran by big mamas.

You can be whatever you want

to be in this world.

k*ller MIKE:

You don't have a Black Panther Party

without the female contingent.

- I like that. Okay, okay.

- If you're Black and from the South,

you know Madea,

like, straight up. (LAUGHS)

You just... it may be your aunt,

it may be your mom,

maybe your grandmother or your sister.

You know someone who's loosely familiar

with the principles of the Bible.

May not have ever read it.

But... (LAUGHS) But will tell you,

"Jesus said, 'Be nice to your cousin.'"

You like, "Jesus never..."

"What did I say?"

- Didn't I tell you not to grab...

- (LAUGHTER)

k*ller MIKE:

For me, it's-it's brilliant.

You know your cousin

that struggles with addiction.

And you know your cousins

that had to go live with an aunt.

And you know those cousins

only made it through high school

and became independent adults

because that aunt embraced them

and took them in.

Well, come by in the daylight.

Hell, don't come by at o' dark-thirty.

Madea, please.

- (SIGHS SOFTLY)

- (INSECTS CHIRPING)

Come on in here.

JOE:

Who that is at the door?

- I'm getting tired of all these people...

- Shut up, Joe! I got this!

- I've been

- TYLER: The show started to take off.

- Loving you...

- And I was traveling from city to city,

seeing 99.999% Black people,

packed to the rafters.

- (CHEERING) - REPORTER: Soon

he was performing 300 shows a year

for 30,000 people a week.

His plays toured in sold-out arenas along

the South's so-called "Chitlin Circuit."

(BLUES GUITAR SOLO)

TREAANDREA RUSSWORM: There's

a rich tradition of gospel theater,

and there's a rich tradition of

the chitlin circuit, a sort of Black

theater and performance history.



TYLER:

That circuit was so wonderful.

I mean, you had Josephine Baker

and Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald,

and all of these people who could not

perform in white establishments,

so they went on the road

and to all these little juke joints

with chicken fries and chitlins.

And they traveled the country,

and they became so famous

among their own people

that they were able to support themselves

and live well.

You were tired...

k*ller MIKE:

So in matters of the Chitlin Circuit,

for me, the spirit of it is

a very real and true spirit,

and I think he's genius to have done it.

WHOOPI:

He's standing on all of those shoulders.

He's a giant upon giant shoulders.



Can you do that one more time?

Yeah, just like that.

Ow!

(CHEERING, APPLAUSE)

Yeah, just one more time!

With you, my life...

TYLER:

I was on the road from 1998 until 2004

doing 300-and-something performances

a year,

all over the country, end to end.

And before social media,

I'm out at the end of the show saying,

you know, "Sign up for my mailing list.

Here's my website."

People were like, "Your what?

Your www-what?"

And I had a few million people

following me on my website,

so I could send out an email

and sell out theaters and arenas

all over the country

before we even advertised anything.

CORSON: What Perry started doing

and has continued to do is that

he's put up the financial backing

for his own projects

and-and taken the risk if it went wrong.

It was a beautiful thing

for me to understand that

we had the power

to support and lift each other.

Because when I came on to the circuit,

no one was talking about

the things that were really plaguing us

as a community, like molestation and r*pe

and drug addiction, to this degree,

so I wanted to p-paint it

in a... in-in a frame

of making you laugh,

and laugh so hard

that you get so comfortable.

- (LAUGHTER)

- At the end of the show,

I'm gonna take about 20 minutes,

and I'm gonna talk about what's

plaguing us and how we help each other.

What am I supposed to do now?

MADEA:

Get up and go on with your life.

It's all right to sit around,

be depressed for a minute,

cry about it, do whatever you have to,

but don't stay there too long.

Get up and go on with your life.

- (APPLAUSE)

- MARK E. SWINTON: The biggest difference

between a Tyler Perry play

and a traditional theater or Broadway play

is that they cater to different audiences.

And I remember taking my mom

to Broadway plays

and was always excited to do that.

And I remember one day she said to me,

"I like going to the Broadway plays,

but I really like

going to see Tyler Perry plays."

(LAUGHTER)

And I remember I asked her why,

and she said, "Well, I feel safe there."

Well, Tyler Perry, we love you,

we love you, we love you.

- WOMAN: They love it and will.

- We love Madea.

CORSON: Some people kind of

look at-at Madea as...

a continuation of the-the fat suit,

uh, and the drag performance

that kind of emasculates

Black male performers.

Oh, that's wonderful.

I can't wait for Sherman

to bring me home some grandbabies.

You see this with Eddie Murphy.

You see this with Martin Lawrence.

Um, but it's doing something

much more nuanced and complicated.

It's not making fun of.

It is, um, kind of embodying with respect.

Madea?

If Tyler Perry is the Tyler Perry

the producer, the director,

Tyler Perry not in drag

is a centerpiece of his brand,

then Madea is right there next to him,

right?

So this character looms large in his work

and in the public interaction

with his work,

uh, both at the fan base level,

um, being that Madea is probably

the signature portion

of-of what people gravitate toward

or have gravitated toward

in appreciating Tyler Perry

and in the critiques.

Madea has got to be

the centerpiece of that as well.

So Madea is important.

Madea is a big part of

Tyler Perry's brand.

ANNOUNCER:

And now, New Orleans, Mr. Tyler Perry.

DR. SAMANTHA N. SHEPPARD: And

Tyler Perry is the center of his world.

He's the sun, he's the moon,

he's the entire universe,

and he's God himself.

He's the Father, the Son, the Holy Spirit.

Like, that's who he is for his work.

And, in doing so, it really is about him.

And when I say it's about him,

I want to actually make a shift

in how we understand this.

Yes, the representational politics

are problematic around women.

But if we peel back the disguise

even just a little bit,

if it's about Tyler Perry,

then it really is about patriarchy.

It's about Black patriarchy.

It's about toxic Black patriarchy.

It's about masculinity.

It's about the way that Black men

have not and continue to not understand

Black women's experiences,

even as they view up close.

In fact, we should be even weary.

You are so close

to Black women's experiences,

so close to the traumas,

and yet it's still illegible for you.

You still don't understand.

HOBSON:

It is a man playing the character,

but this man is so good at understanding

this woman and women like her.

And as a man,

he validates a lot of women's feelings.

The Black woman component is an important

cultural voice out of our community,

because it is the truest representation

of leadership in our community.

CARL HANCOCK RUX:

Let's put the Black male

in a Black female dress and empower him

with the ability

to become the ultimate savior,

in order to empower

the victimized Black female body.

All of these things are abstractions.

None of these things are

actually about humanity.

None of these things are actually

about looking at each other.

So it's really not

the Diary of a Mad Black Woman

or-or an Angry Black Woman.

It's-it's the Diary of a Puppet.

BALDWIN:

I can only speak as... as what I am.

I'm a kind of poet.

And if I'm a kind of poet,

then I'm responsible

for my own point of view

to the people who produce me...

...and the people who will come after me.

CRITIC 1: ...understand why my grandmother

and my mother and my aunts

love this stuff, and my family down South,

why they love this stuff.

I just can't watch it without cringing.

CRITIC 2: His latest film,

I think he's crossed the line.

I mean, I see some kind of

misogynistic tendencies in there

that I don't know

what he's trying to work out on film.

Probably needs to work it out

in therapy in a hotel...

CRITIC 3: I noticed that

a whole lot of entertainers,

artists, they come from backgrounds

of pain and just abuse

(ECHOING):

and all kind of stuff.

("MR. MORALE" BY KENDRICK LAMAR

& TANNA LEONE PLAYING)

(HEAVY RHYTHMIC BREATHING)



Enoch, your father's just detoxed,

my calling is right on time

Transformation,

I must had a thousand lives

And like 3,000 wives

Jamie Foxx had to hang up the dress,

but Tyler Perry has become a billionaire

and still likes to put on a dress.

... on my mind and it's heavy

Tell you in pieces

'cause it's way too heavy...

How come Black Lives Matter

isn't out here protesting

the fact that another Black man

is dressing up as a woman

in order to make a buck?

- When there's no one to call

- Don't need no conversation...

- (BLEEP) you!

- Go out to the world

- and appeal to the masses.

- (OVERLAPPING ANGRY SHOUTING)

He said to preach the gospel.

Preach the gospel of your sin and repent.

Jesus Christ...

(BLEEP) all y'all!

KENYA BARRIS: I feel like you have

figured out the beat of your own drum,

and that's what you dance to,

and it works for you.

You don't seem like you care.

I don't.

I don't know how you do it, man.

TYLER: Nina Simone said this,

and I never forgot it.

She said, "You will use up

everything you've got

trying to give everybody what they want."

My mother, she told me the value

of being who I am, of my Blackness.

She said, "Don't you ever

let anybody tell you who you are.

You know who you are.

You know where you come from."

I watched her stories,

I watched her struggles,

and I'm telling the stories

that I come from.

And that's why they're winning,

because people are recognizing themselves

in these stories.

No matter what the critics are saying,

"Oh, I don't get this (BLEEP).

I don't understand what it is."

I don't give a (BLEEP)

'cause I'm talking to us.

That's why millions of people are

watching my shows every week.

That's why people keep showing up

and sending the movies to number one.

I'm talking to us, connecting with us.

You know what I'm saying?

What you know about Black trauma?

F&N's kicking back is another genre

Tyler Perry,

the face of a thousand rappers

Tyler Perry, the face of

a thousand rappers

Tyler Perry,

the face of a thousand rappers.

(SONG ENDS)

BARRIS:

Thanks, Tyler Perry.

You're welcome, Kenya Barris.

We doing government names?

- I just thought it was

a special moment, man. - Yeah.

PASEORNEK:

So, in 2003,

uh, to my office there was a pile

of tapes and a note that says,

"I'd like to introduce you

to the work of Tyler Perry.

He's interested in making a movie."

So I thought, "Huh."

I called our home entertainment

department, and I said,

"Have you ever heard of Tyler Perry?

It seems he's done huge numbers on video."

And they're like, "Never heard of him."

And I said, "Could you call around and see

if anybody in the industry

knows who he is?"

Because how does someone do

that much revenue

and we've never heard of him?

Get a call back,

no one's ever heard of him.

Meantime, I had a diversity committee,

uh, that I would meet with

every now and then

and talk about what type of movies

were interesting to them

and who was interesting.

I start off the meeting saying,

"Who here has heard of Tyler Perry?"

Every Black person in the room,

their hand goes up.

No white people.

Like, there's something going on here.

INTERVIEWER: So you mentioned Lionsgate.

Was there a person there

that really was open-minded,

that was open to you?

Yeah, yeah, Mike Paseornek, hands...

hands down, was the guy who said,

"We need to do this with you."

PASEORNEK: So I called Charles and said,

"We'd love to meet with Tyler."

I was in, uh, L.A.

I just-just taped my very first movie.

I just filmed it,

and I'm so excited about it.

- I can't wait for you guys to see it.

- (APPLAUSE)

It's Diary of a Mad Black Woman,

the movie.

- It's gonna be a wonderful,

wonderful, wonderful. - (CHEERING)

CORSON: When Diary of a Mad Black Woman

came out in 2005,

critical communities

had no idea who he was.

- Who are you?

- Who are you?

CORSON: This was a random movie

that was showing in the theaters,

that hadn't really been

advertised on television.

Hadn't come across their desk

in terms of, uh, screeners,

so they didn't know what this movie was.

So they just thought this... okay,

this is maybe some fly-by-night thing.

It was gonna make a couple hundred dollars

on each screen and go away.

- But when they saw the returns...

- (g*nsh*t)

...they realized this film is much bigger,

and it had to have had a big audience.

TIM PALEN:

The time that Tyler came to Lionsgate,

nobody knew the rocket ship

that landed on the front lawn.

But they certainly knew when it left.

It left a big impression.

It's crazy to think that

Diary of a Mad Black Woman

was number one movie in America

in 2005 on March 25th.

And on March 25th of 2022,

A Madea Homecoming was the number one

streaming movie in America.

This mother(BLEEP) is actually on fire.

So, 17 years later,

still the number one movie,

still people rushing out to see it

opening weekend.

And, Brown, you trying to close the trunk

while they, while they,

while they do it, okay?

- Okay.

- PALEN: It really stems back

to his relationship with his audience.

Run, Madea! Run, run!

PASEORNEK: Roger Ebert, you know, he wrote

this scathing review of his first movie,

and after the movie came out,

he had never gotten more emails

or-or messages saying

how wrong he was about this.

The people spoke.

So he said, "You know,

I'm gonna write another review."

But the thing that we talked about

that's amazing about Tyler

is he broke every rule.

PALEN: First conversation at the studio,

where a studio executive said to him,

"Black people don't go to the movies."

Like, they were just wrong on every count

when it came to Tyler.

And I think that a monster like Hollywood

has to sort of protect itself,

and one way it does that

is by being critical.

Problem is, Tyler just kept succeeding.

NEWSMAN: Its debut as a box office smash

was a shock to critics,

but not to the filmmaker and star

who claims Hollywood

has ignored the very audience

that is flocking to his movie.

TYLER:

Been a long journey, so...

- INTERVIEWER: It can be fast, huh?

- Yeah. Oh, yeah.

Oh, yeah. That's my world.

REPORTER:

Perry made the film for about $5 million.

It pulled in ten times that

at the box office.

Perry got here refusing to play

by Hollywood's rules.

He demanded creative control

of his projects.

That first Friday, opening Friday,

and we were number one in the theaters,

I had to pull the car over.

In March 2004,

Tyler gave me his script for Diary.

By the summer, we were filming.

By the next February, it was

in the theaters opening at number one.

MORGAN: The whole town was talking

about it when his film opened number one

at the box office.

It was not expected.

They tried to do... there's something

called tracking in the film industry,

where they use a lot of data

and, um, research

to anticipate what the grosses are

gonna be that weekend.

And they had, like, grossly mismanaged it.

They had no idea what it was.

It surprised everybody,

and I thought it was awesome.

It was great.

Now big studios are listening

and taking note of this writer/producer's

diary of success.

What I think happened after Diary of

a Mad Black Woman hit at the box office

was this backtracking to figure out

who is Tyler Perry

and how did he get an audience

to show up for this film

that we've never heard of

and seemed like it was unimportant.

'Cause it was important,

and people did know him.

He just wasn't someone who was visible

within the normal venues.

EMANUEL: Well, the perception of Tyler

Perry was he was definitely an outsider.

I don't think people completely,

like, embraced or understood

his economic value.

Certain people did.

I recognized that it was hitting a nerve

and feeding a level and depth of, um...

understanding that,

um, regular media could... would-would

not even be able to comprehend.

You know, you're speaking to an audience

that has been underserved,

and in many cases

not served at all,

particularly when it comes to theater.

And so, uh,

it would be very hard for, you know,

regular mainstream media

to understand what was happening

in those theaters.

Particularly if you didn't grow up

in-in... in the Black church,

you didn't grow up in neighborhoods

where people are underserved,

you wouldn't know what was going on there.

His ability to speak to the audience

that now are his ride or dies,

speak to an audience that says,

you know, I hear you, I see you,

I feel you, I know who you are,

and let me, uh, help elevate your stories,

you know, he's done that

as well as anybody ever has.

WHOOPI:

What lots of white people forget,

there's an entire industry,

and always has been, of us.

People want entertainment,

and they will come out and see it.

They ignored all those folks.

But he did not,

'cause, you know, a whole bunch

of ten-dollar tickets

makes a lot of money.

"Hellur."

(LAUGHS)

Tyler Perry is living up to

some high expectations.

Madea's Family Reunion,

the sequel to Perry's surprise hit

Diary of a Mad Black Woman,

pulled in just over $30 million

to dominate the weekend box office.

NEWSWOMAN 2:

The film took in $30.25 million...

NEWSWOMAN 3: ...hold on to the top spot

at the box office over the weekend...



SPIKE LEE:

Each artist should be allowed

to pursue their artistic endeavor,

but a lot of stuff that's out today

is coonery buffoonery.

We're-we're talking about

Tyler Perry at this point.

- (AUDIENCE LAUGHING)

- No. No, I mean, now, look.

Is that in fact maybe

what Black America wants to see?

You know, you vote with your pocketbook,

your wallet.

You vote with your time,

sitting in front of the idiot box.

The man has a huge audience, and he's...

Tyler's very smart.

Church buses will pull up, packed.

Bought his own jet.

You know, you can buy a jet,

you got money.

(LAUGHTER)

For me, just the imagery

is-is-is troubling.

Is there a disappointment from you

(FADES):

as a director and an African American?

RUX:

I don't think that

Tyler Perry entered

the creative marketplace

to save the Black community.

And if he did, I think...

...he would have actually

come fully armed.

Which he did not.

And I don't... I don't have any evidence.

And that doesn't mean it doesn't exist.

It doesn't mean I'm correct.

It just means that

I don't see the evidence

that he entered this creative marketplace

armed and informed

with an intention to

really give something noble and valuable

to a Black/brown community.

I don't believe that.

ANDY NORMAN: It's definitely more hurtful

when it comes from your own community.

But his own community, at the same time,

is the one who has got him

to where he is now.

So it's not the whole community.

It's a few, you know, it's a few people.

But we love those people, too. (LAUGHS)

(PIANO INSTRUMENTAL FROM "DREAMS

AND NIGHTMARES" BY MEEK MILL PLAYING)

TYLER:

I think the most difficult part

in all of the success

wasn't battling Hollywood.

It was Black people.

There's a certain class of

Black people who look down

on all things Tyler Perry. (CHUCKLES)

When I start to look at the history of

what we've done to each other

as Black people

who... others who are successful,

it's pretty interesting to see.

Amos 'N Andy was

the first African Americans on television,

and it was the NAACP who boycotted,

the first television boycott ever.

So the show was yanked off the air

in 1953,

and there was not another Black cast

on television until the late 1960s.

The NAACP boycotted The Color Purple,

because of the depictation

of Black men in...

Alice Walker,

Black woman who wrote the story.

So they were picketing and boycotting

outside the Oscars.

Langston Hughes called Zora Neale Hurston

"a new version of the darkie,"

because she spoke from a Southern dialect

and she wrote in that dialect.

So I learned very early on that it's okay.

This is how it goes, no matter

how well or good your intention is,

no matter how many people it really lifts

out of despair and sadness.

It only matters to certain critics

if it is what they deem to be art.

What I will not do, and what I cannot do,

is change what I am, who I am,

what I've been called to do

and how I do it because someone,

some critics think that it's not art.

k*ller MIKE:

The audience is there.

He paid attention to an audience

that people ignored

and were saying, "Come up to us."

And he said, "No, I'm-I'm down here

with you," you know?

I'm gonna... we're gonna laugh at

the things that we laugh about

amongst family gatherings.

We're gonna make public the things

that we think are jovial.

You know, when you look at white comedy...

...they're allowed to do

the most ridiculous things,

and they never have to wear the burden of,

"You're making all Irish people look bad.

"You're making all Scottish people look...

you're making British people... You look..."

You know, Mel Brooks didn't worry about

making his culture look bad.

He worried about being funny.

And if it used anecdotal things

that he had ownership

or control over, it was permitted.

And Mr. Perry has done the same thing,

and he was genius in doing so.



("DREAMS AND NIGHTMARES"

CONTINUES OVER CAR RADIO)

Hold up, wait a minute,

y'all thought I was finished?

- When I bought that Aston Martin

- Hey! (LAUGHS)

Y'all thought it was rented?

Flexin' on these n*gg*s,

I'm like Popeye on his spinach

Double M, yeah, that's my team,

Rozay the captain, I'm lieutenant

I'm the type to count a million cash

- Then grind like I'm broke

- Grind like I'm broke

That Lambo, my new ...,

she don't ride like my Ghost

I'm riding around my city

with my hand strapped on my toast

'Cause these n*gg*s want me dead,

and I gotta make it back home

(TYLER LAUGHS)

I love it.

- (ECHOES): Whoo.

- (SONG ENDS)

Morning, everybody.

PASEORNEK: I don't know anybody

who's had a run like Tyler.

Let's look at the greatest directors

and the greatest actors.

They haven't had a 19, 20-film run

where their audience

just kept showing up every time.

I mean, this is historic.

Tyler had built a fanbase that you could

turn a switch on and they showed up.

Uh, gave him an advantage

over every other filmmaker out there.

What he's done that those others

didn't do was he segued it

into film and television,

and he controlled it.

The thing that's valued

in the entertainment industry

is owning something.

And what you own is pieces of paper

that give you rights to things.

And Tyler wanted to own all those rights,

even before he had any leverage.

(LAUGHS) Wow.

MARK ITKIN:

Yeah, ownership was, from the get-go,

the most, I think, important thing

to Tyler, besides the creative,

because it gave him the full control

to do what he wanted to do.

Giving up ownership is not an option.

If I wrote it and produced it and

worked that hard on it, you can't own it.

Jay-Z has a lyric that says,

"You n*gg*s out here taking advances,

but we over here taking real chances."

And it landed with me,

because I never wanted to be

a person that had to wait on someone

to give me a check, to say, "Okay,

go make something for your own people."

EMANUEL:

We won't go into the fine details,

but there was a lot of times people were

questioning the stories he was telling

or how he was telling 'em,

and he was saying, "Listen,

"just let me tap into my market.

I know my market.

Please don't tell me my market."

And they would always want to give him

some sort of note or critique,

and-and then they realized,

you know, he actually understands it.

Just get out of the way.

And, um, and it's true.

TYLER: And, listen, I'm not mad

at anybody who doesn't want to own.

Yeah, who doesn't want to take

the responsibility, 'cause it's hard work.

You work your ass off

when you're the owner.

And there's nobody, I mean nobody,

who would outwork me.

Nobody could outwork me.

James Brown would've bowed down.

One, two, get down...

("THE BOSS" BY JAMES BROWN

FEATURING THE J.B.'S PLAYING)

OZZIE AREU:

I remember hearing stories very early on

when he was pitching his first TV show

to some Hollywood execs.

MORGAN:

They wanted to give him a bunch of notes,

and, "Oh, we'll buy, you know,

a few episodes from you."

And he was like, "What?"

Like, "That's not what I'm doing."

AREU:

The fact that that turned them off,

then that turned Tyler off.

And, in my opinion, it made him feel like,

"Well, how do I do this myself?"

And so, of course, Tyler being Tyler,

like, revolutionized

the entire model and created

an entire new way of selling television.

Look at me...

What you did in business was

you did a pilot.

If that pilot got picked up,

you hoped for 12 to 20 the next season.

If that worked, you'd get another 20.

So everybody wanted to get

to "a hundred" to get to syndication,

which meant that there was

long-range money in that and residuals.

I've paid the cost to be the boss...

He really pushed strong into TV.

He was groundbreaking

with his original series,

which he did as part of the 10/90 formula.

We do ten shows and pay for it.

If they hit a certain market share,

then the network agrees to buy 90 more.

MORGAN: Which then

immediately puts you into syndication.

Again, a great business deal.

EMANUEL:

That was unique to him,

and it was genius.

ITKIN:

I knew that the traditional studios

would probably never go

for something like this.

You needed a boutique operation

in the syndication business

that was willing to take chances,

and most importantly,

that would give Tyler

the creative freedom

to do what he wanted to do.

And the other genius is Tyler owned it.

It was off to the races.

ITKIN:

Also, which hadn't been done before...

but this is the beauty of

working with Tyler Perry...

Tyler was willing to put his own money

into producing those ten episodes...

I'm trying to get 10 ready to go

for TBS

at least the first 10.

...so that not only would he own them

and have full creative control,

but if it worked,

he would have financial control.

And so, he decided to open his wallet

and put his own money in.

And that's when I went to Atlanta

and did the ten episodes of

House of Payne.

ITKIN: The deal was there was gonna be,

over a period of two weeks,

we're gonna test the ten shows

and then evaluate

what the next step would be.

Tyler Perry is a risk taker, so why not,

you know, take a chance?

- And we cut.

- ITKIN: The episodes go on the air.



And it's a very, very big success.

TYLER: The ratings were higher

than what was there before,

which shocked them.

They were like,

"Okay, what do you want to do?"

Somebody came and they offered 17.

They want 17 more.

Somebody wanted 26. I was like,

"I want 100 episodes

so I can be in syndication."

Mark went back to TBS, and they said,

"We'll take the 90 episodes."

That's where the 10/90 model came from.

AREU: And that was the first time

that had ever been done.

So a ten-episode pilot

that he personally financed himself,

and it was probably almost all of

the money that he had at that moment.

But, again, this is him

reinvesting in himself,

reinvesting in people,

reinvesting in the audience,

and understanding that,

"Hey, look, I'm going all in."

PASEORNEK: So, Tyler betted on himself

with television

and scored big with that.

You know, they're thinking, "Oh, well,

maybe he'll be okay for a few episodes,"

and it became, you know, one of the most

successful shows on cable of all time.

And, of course, they wanted

more than the initial hundred,

and that's where Tyler came up

with Meet the Browns.

I remember being so jealous. (LAUGHS)

'Cause I was at... by that point,

I was CEO of BET,

and all of a sudden,

Turner has these two shows by Tyler Perry

that are instant hits.

He saved my butt at OWN.

He really rescued me.

He volunteered and said,

"I can write you a show,

and I can make it a hit."

Have and Have Nots has been on so long

and doing so well in ratings.

I said to him the other day,

"It's like As The World Turns."

So there wouldn't have been Will Packer.

There wouldn't have been Ava DuVernay.

There wouldn't have been Greenleaf.

There wouldn't have been any of that

had Tyler not said,

"Here, let me help you."

We tried to do a deal with him long ago,

early on, before he went to OWN.

TYLER:

That Viacom deal was probably 12 years

from the first time we talked about it

to it actually happening.

DEBRA: Some of the folks at Viacom

thought his career would fizzle out.

Well, that proved to be wrong,

and he keeps coming up

with more and more ideas.

TYLER: When I walk into these companies,

I know what I have to bring.

And here I am, at the top of

all of this work that I've done,

and I'm able to say

I really appreciate all of

the good, the bad

and the ugly to get here.



Bless up, how you doing?

- DJ Khaled!

- (APPLAUSE)

Great. One more. Let's get wide.

How long on Myles? Back up for me.

Get it.

GAYLE: I think Black people

in general are underestimated.

And so, here is Tyler Perry

making hit after hit after hit,

but it wasn't really respected,

I think, in Hollywood.

If there's one thing everybody respects,

it's money.

And people saw the Tyler Perry Studios,

and I think for the first time,

people went, "Whoa,

what-what does he do again?"

You know, they knew his name,

they might have been familiar

with some of his work,

but they looked at Tyler Perry Studios,

and there was no denying

the talent and the power of Tyler Perry.

You know, I had... I'd had

many studios that I thought "was it."

The first building was on Hoke Street.

I don't even think it was

three or four thousand square feet,

and I thought, "Oh, yes, this is

gonna be my movie studio."

I remember the first day

we were talking about

doing Diary of a Mad Black Woman there.

The producers walked in, they go,

"This is not enough room.

We can't do a movie out of this building."

I'm like, "Wait... (STAMMERS)

What-what do you mean?"

'Cause I had never done it before.

I bought a bigger building on Krog Street.

Moving in there,

there was not enough parking,

the neighbors were complaining every day,

and I was just forcing it

and forcing it and forcing it, and

tried to... I'm like, "This is the place.

This is gonna be it. Nope, this is it."

'Cause I had this thing

where I just only wanted to do

things that I could write a check for.

But sometimes

when you're going to higher levels,

you have to bill for where you're going

and not necessarily

where you think you are right now.

That message came to me as clear as day.

"You're too big to do it wrong."

So then to... leaving there

and going over to Greenbriar,

I'll never forget that night,

because my lawyer,

Larry Dingle at this time,

he called me up and said,

"I know you're having trouble

on Krog Street.

Please go look at this location

at Greenbriar."

And I'm standing in front of the gates

and I'm praying about it,

and I looked at the gates, and it's

Bible scriptures taped all over the gates.

And my favorite one was Psalms 91.

I was like, "Okay, if this ain't a sign,

I don't know what is."

Brick and mortar were always

the thing that I knew all my life.

I grew up in sawdust,

and if I can build a building

and own it and house everything in it...

the lights, the sound, the cameras,

if I can put it all in the room,

I know that eventually

owning this product,

getting to the other side of it,

not having profit right now,

but when it all came together

as this catalog,

it will be worth a tremendous amount.

And that's where we are.

REED: He believed in Atlanta's

film and entertainment community

ahead of the curve.

When I got sworn in January 4, 2010,

the motion picture and entertainment

business in Atlanta and Georgia

was about a $350 million business

that employed

seven to nine thousand employees.

When I left on January 2nd, 2018,

it was a $9.5 billion business

that employed more than 34,000 people.

The center of energy for all of that

started with Tyler Perry

and Tyler Perry Studios.

And every time you see a movie

with that peach logo on it,

uh, we ought to tip our hats to Tyler.

REPORTER:

The grand opening of Tyler Perry Studios

included a lineup of stars

that impressed even the big man himself.

TYLER: I'm-I'm so excited that

Sidney Poitier is here, and Cicely Tyson,

and Oprah's on her way.

It's just, I am extremely excited

to have all of...

Ruby Dee, are you kidding me? Hank Aaron.

People who paved the way

so that this could happen.

He's steadfast and he's solid,

and he's no phony.

You can feel how real he is.

JOHN LEWIS: A young African American man

left New Orleans with very little

and pursued his dream

right here in the city.

Uh, you have to believe.

WILL SMITH:

Really starting with nothing.

It's a... it's a truly powerful

American story.

REPORTER: In a magical moment

toward the end of the evening,

Tyler escorted the legendary Oscar winner

down the red carpet himself.

TYLER: And there's a moment

where Sidney Poitier is about to

dedicate the soundstage in his name,

and he's in tears, and

fireworks are going off in the distance.

And he points at me and I point back,

and he says, "You." I said, "No, you."

ANNOUNCER (OVER SPEAKERS):

Ladies and gentlemen,

please join us in dedicating

the Sidney Poitier Soundstage.

(CHEERING, APPLAUSE)

TYLER:

In that moment, he comes down.

Oprah grabs him, they hug, and she said,

"What were you thinking up there?"

And he said, "I remember being at MGM,

where I was the only Black man allowed,

and the shoe shine man."

So now this Black man

and all of these Black people

are watching this moment.

It's kind of hard

to not make this about race

when it's so much about

the disenfranchisement

and what we had to battle

and what we had to fight.

So to be able to honor him and

give him that moment was phenomenal.



So, in the middle of all of this success,

I'm dealing with my mother slowly dying.



My mother was in a wheelchair

at the time, and she was like...

she couldn't see.

And I leaned down to her...

(CHUCKLES SOFTLY)

I leaned down to her

and I said, "Are you okay?"

She said, "Yes, everything is beautiful."

I said, "How do you know that?"

(TAKES DEEP BREATH)

She said, "I can feel it."

"I can feel it." She could feel it.

This is a fantastic, incredible,

wonderful moment,

and, um...

Um, as I look around this room...

- (APPLAUSE)

- It, uh...

Looking at my mother,

looking-looking at me.

- You-you see what your baby boy did?

- (LAUGHTER)

(CHEERING, APPLAUSE)

So, for her to see that moment,

of her baby that had come through

all that bullshit, hand in hand with her,

that was good.

That was really good. It was a good night.

And I remember even before that,

Boyz II Men "Mama" came on the radio,

and she was driving somewhere.

And she calls me up, and it scared me,

because...

w-when she got sick,

I-I was never able to turn my phone off.

It, uh, it stayed on 24/7,

the ringer on all the time.

And she-she was crying hysterically,

and I'm thinking,

"Okay, I got to get on a plane,

I got to..." (STAMMERS)

I'm like, "What is it?

What is it? What is it?"

And she was saying to me, "Thank you.

"Thank you.

If-if you wouldn't have made it through,

"even when I was telling you to stop,

I wouldn't be able to afford my medicine."

Hmm.

(BIRDS CHIRPING)

When she died...

...I couldn't find my way out of it.

Everything was dull.

Everything was missing something.

Everything. Nothing mattered.

And it was that way for...

...a long, long time.

AUNT JERRY:

Tyler was there when she passed.

All of her children were there, and, um...

it was hard, it was very hard,

'cause that was my baby.

You know, that's my girl.

I just left the room.

(CHUCKLES): I must have cried

for two or three days.

Mm. (BREATHES SHAKILY)

TYLER:

I have one regret in my life, just one.

It's my mother on her deathbed.

I was leaving, 'cause I had to go

back to Atlanta to do something,

and she just looked at me.

And I said, "I have to go,"

and she just... she said nothing.

She just would not stop staring at me.

And I felt like... and then she said,

"You know, I'm just so tired.

I'm so tired. I'm so tired."

I said, "No, no, it's all right."

And I'm... And I started doing

all the spiritual stuff and,

"No, God's gonna do g..."

(SIGHS) Talking her out of

what she was telling me.

And she said, "Okay, baby. Okay."

My one regret is that

I wished that I had sat there

and listened to what she wanted to say,

rather than me trying to think about

myself in the moment of losing her.

Let her be in the moment of telling me

all the things she wanted to say.

Yeah. One regret.

MAXINE:

Tyler, I just want to tell you how much

it means to me,

how thankful I am, how blessed you are,

how blessed I am, to have a son like you.

Because so many children

wouldn't think about their parents

after they've come up.

And it's just amazing that he's doing

all these things for me.

I... You give your parents flowers

while they live.

I've gotten all my flowers.

TYLER: I was a little boy, and she tells

this story. I have this on video.

MAXINE:

One day, we were coming from the country.

TYLER:

And she was driving.

MAXINE:

And they had this Jaguar that pass by.

TYLER:

She said, "Ooh, that's a pretty car."

And I said, "Wow, that's a pretty car."

I said, "What, Mama?"

I remember ch... getting up on the seat

to see what she's talking about.

And she said, "That car."

And I said, "What kind of car is that?"

She said it was a Jaguar.

He said, "You know what?

"When I get big, I'm-a buy you a Jaguar.

And I'll buy you a house, too."

I said, "Okay, baby. Okay."

TYLER:

And she said, "Okay, baby. Okay."

One day, I was doing a play,

Mother's Day in New Orleans.

Called her up onstage

and gave her the keys to that car

in front of the audience.

Big moment for me, big moment for her.

She cried. It was beautiful.

MAXINE:

Thank you, thank you.

(LAUGHS)

How does that make you feel?

Made me feel good. It made me know

that I did the right thing.

TYLER:

But as a little boy,

watching all that she had gone through,

I wanted to do everything I could.

Making sure that she wasn't in pain.

Making sure that she had money

and could leave this man.

It was my whole desire.

And no matter how much money I had,

it wasn't enough

to make sure she had all she needed.

So, when she died, that s...

everything in me died.

I'm like, "What do I do with this now?

What do I..."

If I didn't have contracts

and things lined up,

that probably... that...

2009 would've probably been the end,

because... there was nothing

to keep m-making me want to

get out of bed and move through it.

I started drinking stupid heavy.

Um, and that lasted for a few years.

I'm just out here enjoying

this Mardi Gras, you know.

Wait a minute. Hold on. Hold on.

TYLER: No holiday meant anything

'cause she wasn't there.

Nobody meant anything

'cause she wasn't there.

And having Aman come along

and redefine all of that...

all right, what does that mean?

What does Christmas mean for him?

What does, mm, being born

right after Thanksgiving

and then, you know, Chr...

what does Christmas mean and New Year's,

and seeing his excitement in all of this

gave it a whole...

gave it a whole new, uh,

meaning in life, purpose and circle.

- (AMAN BABBLES)

- Mm-hmm.

Yeah.

My prayer for him

when Gelila was pregnant was about,

"God, give him the best of me,

and anything that is the worst of me,

let it be buried with me."

I only wanted him to have

the best of me in his DNA.

I remember I was telling him

I love him one day,

when he was maybe about four,

four and a half.

And I told him

like ten different times that.

He said,

"Why do you keep telling me that?"

Because, uh, you know,

I wanted him to know

what that sounds like,

what that feels like

to have that from your father,

somebody to say, "I love you,"

and to hug you and to know

that you are-are special

and-and strong and powerful.

PIERS MORGAN:

Is he still alive, your father?

- He is. He's still alive.

- And what kind of relationship

- do you have with him?

- We don't speak very much,

but I am taking care of him.

I make sure he has everything he needs.

Do you feel that he loved you?

No, never felt that. Never felt that.

I felt very strongly that

there was something there,

and I didn't know what it was,

and when I was about 30,

my mother told me

he never thought that I was his child.

- So...

- Really?

So that was another thing I didn't know,

which caused a lot of issues as well.

Y'all look mad. What the doctor say?

Some bad news, Brown?

- He's fine.

- Ask her, Cora.

Madea, who's my daddy?

- That is your daddy.

- I'm-a find out.

Dana tell you anything

you want to know. Call Dana.

- Who is Dana?

- Yeah, who is Dana?

Yeah, they both dumb as hell.

You don't know who Dana is?

They've been using Dana

to find people out for years

who the daddy or who the mama. Dana.

- CORA: We...

- D-N-A. DNA.

That's Dana. Lord, you so dumb.

TYLER:

We did a DNA test.

Well, results come back.

He's not my father.

And I felt a-a wave of, um, relief.

I was relieved because...

...my image of a father was not

somebody who could do that to their child.

LUCKY: Uh, we're gonna be turning

real soon, right here.

(INTERCOM BUZZES)

- Uh, say, Uncle Emmitt.

- (HORN HONKS)

That was me, Uncle Emmitt.

EMMITT PERRY SR.:

I don't give a (BLEEP) who it is.

LUCKY:

Well, I apologize, baby.

EMMITT: Apologize my (BLEEP) ass.

Now get the (BLEEP) away from here.

- LUCKY: Uncle Emmitt.

- EMMITT: Get the (BLEEP) on.

Let's go.

Get the (BLEEP) on.

- I was coming to visit you, n*gga.

- (BLEEP)

(EMMITT SHOUTING ANGRILY, INDISTINCTLY)

- You stay the (BLEEP) out of here.

- I called you, Uncle Emmitt.

I was checking on you. I called you.

Now tow your (BLEEP) ass away from here.

(ENGINE STARTS)

LUCKY:

You knew it was me, though, huh?

EMMITT: Yeah, I knew

who (BLEEP) it was, but you...

LUCKY:

Yeah, that's what I'm saying.

Coming to try and talk to his daddy, man.

That's all it was.

I didn't mean no harm, baby.

How you gon' be like that?

You heard me?

You heard me, Uncle Emmitt?

Uncle Emmitt?



PIERS:

Has he ever said sorry?

No, he hasn't.

- He hasn't.

- Would you like him to?

At this point, I don't know if it matters.

I really don't know if it matters.

I was able to forgive him in my mid-20s,

and that changed my life.

Because what I did was, what-what

I think a lot of people don't realize

or understand is that

their parents have a story, too.

Now... So, whatever happened in your life

because of them has made...

And you really need to find out the story

so that you can understand it.

And what I found about...

He-he and his sister and his brother,

they were all found by a white man

in rural Louisiana, in a ditch.

He was two years old at the time.

He was brought to a 14-year-old woman

named Mae to raise.

Her father was bedridden, very old man,

who was a sl*ve.

And everything that she knew to do

to get these children to behave

was to beat them.

(STAMMERS) She would tie them

in a potato sack, hang them in the tree,

and she would beat them.

So that's what his... that's what he knew.

That's what he came from.

- He'd been abused.

- Oh, I mean, he'd been abused

his entire life.

So it helped me to understand

a lot of who he is,

which made it easier for me

to let go and forgive him.

PIERS:

Hard to forgive that.

TYLER: It is, but it's very necessary,

because what I found that is this...

and this is so true...

If you do not forgive,

you hold on to this thing in-inside of you

that can change your life

and take you in the wrong direction.

Nine times out of ten,

the people that have done things to you

are asleep and at peace,

and you're holding on to it.

It can really, literally,

become sickness in your body

and make you physically ill.

So I think that

forgiveness is beyond important.

PIERS:

You support him?

TYLER:

Absolutely, 100%.

As a child, he wasn't a great father,

but he was a great provider,

and he had an incredible work ethic.

So he definitely gave me my work ethic.

Hold the work. Let me concentrate.

GAYLE:

Well, his work ethic is...

I-I still don't understand

how he works at the speed that he does.

You know, I've never worked for him,

but I hear Tyler Perry's tough.

- Let's roll, let's roll, let's roll.

- (OVERLAPPING CHATTER)

GAYLE:

I hear Tyler Perry ask a lot of his cast.

But I also know this:

Tyler Perry doesn't ask anything

of anybody else

that he's not asking of himself.



Don't have your hat backwards in here,

you understand?

- Turn it around. I'm just kidding.

- (LAUGHTER)

DERRICK DOOSE:

I started off as a production assistant.

In my first time working with him,

he had never done a movie before.

He just streamlined a bunch of stuff.

TYLER:

I want to see all that.

Give me two Steadicams

and get the antennas close.

- I'm ready to roll.

- And a lot of people didn't get it.

When I say, "Bring the energy," I'm...



Sorry, guys, hold up. Nobody sh**t.

Oprah wants to talk to me.

You all are sh**ting that in 4 days!?

We're sh**ting an episode a day, yeah.

What!?

DOOSE: It's extremely nontraditional

for everybody.

And you had to be ready to go.

Like, there was no downtime.

4,000 pages of content a year sometimes.

60, 80, 90 episodes of TV,

two, three features,

and that's Tyler actually writing 'em.

TYLER: People ask,

"How do you sh**t a movie so quickly?

How do you sh**t television so quickly?"

When I walk in on the set,

when I'm watching an actor act,

I'm seeing all the cuts in my head.

So I will roll and do everything,

moving the camera in every position,

no matter how close, how tight I want it.

Once the lighting's set up,

I'm ready to go.

You just have to trust the process,

and I've got a really good team

that helps me to do that.

Good job, guys. We got it.

CREW MEMBER:

Nobody does what we do right here.

He does what nobody else can do.

TYLER: And just from the time I-I saw

the first process of a movie being made,

I just didn't understand

the ridiculous amount of waste.

PASEORNEK:

Millions of dollars of wrong, bad choices.

We could feed a nation on the waste I see.

TYLER: Standing there with

your fingers twiddling, talking about,

"What if we..." What the (BLEEP)

you talking about, "what if we"?

You should've figured out "what if we"

before you got your ass here.

The "what if wes" are gone.

You're on set now. The money's burning.

Work that out before the monies is spent,

checks written.

That's what I think. (SCOFFS)

(CREW LAUGHING)

PASEORNEK:

I always say that Tyler accomplishes more

in one day than most of us in a lifetime.

Had a conversation with Tyler

outside of the office.

I hear him whispering to me on the phone.

He's in a hushed voice.

And we're talking about what,

you know, I'm gonna sh**t Tuesday,

and we'll do this and we'll do...

And I'm like,

"Tyler, where are you?"

And he says, "I got to go,"

and then I hear the Madea voice,

and he walks out onto stage.

He was having a business meeting with me

from backstage.

Well, who can multitask like that?

That's what Tyler does.

NORMAN: I always tell people

that this train will keep on running

whether you get on it or you get ran over.

So the question is

you have to jump on board

or you get ran over or pushed out the way.

His legacy will always be picked apart.

Everybody has a opinion.

Everybody has a voice.

Some criticism is good. Some is bad.

I don't think it'll ever stop,

but it's not gonna stop him either.

Are you a revenge guy?

Or are you a forgive and forget guy?

I'm a "forgive and forget,

but don't (BLEEP) with me" guy.

GAYLE: Some of the biggest names we know

can say that they got their start

because Tyler Perry gave them a break.

That is no small thing.

All the negativity hit me right and left

about how he should be this

and he sh... he's that,

he's horrible, he's a...

Just kept my eyes on the prize.

NEWSMAN:

Media titan Tyler Perry is one of

Hollywood's most prolific power players.

PITTS: What filmmaker has had

five movies open number one

at the box office in the last four years?

This record belongs to Tyler Perry.

This is gonna be good!



GAYLE:

The entertainment icon is the mastermind

behind dozens of movies, plays

and TV shows.

LARRY KING: Forbes Magazine named him

the number three top earning Black star,

grossing 125 million dollars a year.

MEREDITH VIERA: ...movies have taken in

more than $400 million at the box office

in the past five years.

REPORTER:

873 million worldwide...

REPORTER 2:

...la pelcula, A Madea Christmas.

AREU: Tyler was making hit after hit

after hit after hit.

And finally people had to wake up.

WARREN ZAVALA:

Tyler Perry is completely unique.

And so, you interface with him and his

business in a completely different way.

You know, I still go back to

the conversation I had

when the pandemic started.

Media mogul Tyler Perry

made headlines recently

when he announced that his studio

would resume production.

I have 360 employees or so on these shows

who are taking care of their families

and who needed to work.

I couldn't wait around for a plan.

I had to do something.

ZAVALA:

Tyler believes.

Maybe it's his faith,

maybe it's his history,

but his strength and his belief of self...

...moves people.

Moved me.

NEWSMAN: Tyler Perry, the award-winning

actor, writer, producer, director,

and author is a bona fide studio mogul,

and that story is far from over.

(CHEERING, APPLAUSE)

TYLER: When I built my studio, I built it

in a neighborhood that is one of

the poorest Black neighborhoods in Atlanta

so that young Black kids can see

that a Black man did that,

and they can do it, too.

(APPLAUSE)

The studio was once

a Confederate Army base,

which meant that there was

Confederate soldiers on that base

plotting and planning on

how to keep 3.9 million Negroes enslaved.

Now that land is owned by one n*gro.

(CHEERING, APPLAUSE)

I love you, guys. Thank you.

(CHEERING FADES)

WOMAN:

What is this? What are we looking at?

We're looking at Ford McPherson,

which is gonna be Tyler Perry Studios.

- The new Tyler Perry Studio.

- The new Tyler Perry...

- The ultimate Tyler Perry Studio.

- Yes.

- And how excited are you?

- I'm really excited.

It's, um... it's overwhelming.

But what I feel is gonna happen here

is gonna be magical,

so I'm very excited.



REED:

You have no idea what it is like

to acquire an asset

from the United States Army.

Things that you would need to do

in a traditional real estate transaction,

the Army will just tell them,

"We won't do it."

But I was mayor when this place was empty.

You think of Ford McPherson

being left vacant,

this was a situation

that could have gone very, very badly

and pulled down

an entire community of working people.

Because of what he's done

on Fort McPherson,

a quarter of a billion dollar investment

in a military base,

the city has an opportunity to benefit

because he's brought all of the property

values in the entire corridor up.

And so, he's just a constant giver.

The signal sender that this facility is

to the entire motion picture business,

the quality of relationships

that he brings onto this campus,

this base, is exactly in the hands

that it should be.

Welcome to the first day

of sh**ting here at...

- WOMAN: Yes!

- ...Tyler Perry Studios.

(CHEERING, APPLAUSE)

REED:

And I can't tell you what it meant to me

that I gave the keys to this base

to a Black man.



It was a star-studded night Saturday

as celebrities flooded Atlanta

to celebrate the grand opening

of Tyler Perry Studios.

The studio... 330 acres...

sits on the grounds of

the former Fort McPherson army base

in southwest Atlanta.

Tyler Perry, known as the most successful

African American filmmaker...

...in history.

TYLER:

And this is my gift?

Yea.

- We love you, and we're proud of you.

- Aw.

Try not to cry.

Thank you. This is beautiful.

I'm gonna wear these tonight.

I'm gonna throw away this ribbon

for you, ok?

I have other cuff links,

but none as special as this.

This is real...

these are really, really special.

- I'll have them forever and ever.

- That's for you, Papa.

- Thank you.

- You can keep it-

And you can keep the card and the picture.

It says, "I love you, Papa."

Thank you, my love. Can I get a hug?

Ah, so wonderful.

REED:

I always felt that, for people of color,

Tyler has a Disney-like quality.



HOBSON: The thing that is so remarkable

about Tyler's story,

he has this twin brain:

creative and business.

(CHEERING, APPLAUSE)

Very few people have it.

It was so easy for me to know

that he was the right person to be

the steward for Fort McPherson.

My husband, George Lucas,

did the exact same thing.

He established his studio

outside of the Hollywood system,

and it gives me a lot of perspective

on what Tyler was up against.

And George did it as a white man,

and it was really hard.

And Tyler has done this as a Black man.

(LAUGHS) You first...

you got to look in the mirror and have

an honest conversation with yourself.

Until Mr. Perry and this studio,

pretty much you had to go to white folk.

But he figured out that there's a place

I can do what I want to do,

and he is the tip of the spear

that proved we can do it.



The grand opening was amazing.

It was a Black reunion.

Colin Kaepernick, Cicely Tyson,

Jay-Z, Beyonc.

That was very much the feeling

that we deserve as a culture.

REPORTER:

Tonight was a monumental night,

not just for Tyler Perry

but for everyone here in Atlanta.

Superfans! (WE'RE FANS!)

We're stargazers!

This is just incredible.

And particularly for him to be in Atlanta.

- MAN: Yes.

- Like, this is civil rights.

This is movement. This is everything.

Rise up, Tyler Perry, rise up!

REPORTER 2: Your name is now

on a soundstage at Tyler Perry Studios.

What does that feel like?

I never thought a Black man would own

a studio, a massive studio like this.

Tyler has an acumen and a determination

that's greater than most of us have.

That's right, yeah. That's right, brother.

TYLER:

Tonight means about inspiration.

And tonight means how many people

can I cause to dream bigger.

If that happens tonight,

then I did what I was supposed to do.

Thank you. Thank you.

SPIKE: This is monumental, 'cause what

he's done has never been done before.

A Black man and do that?

It's a beautiful Black thing.

OPRAH: It's not just important

for the Black culture.

It's important for culture.

Tyler Perry, who said,

"I won't ask you for your money.

I won't ask you for your studios."

He did it his way.

(SILENCE)

- Take a breath.

- Yeah, no, I'm good.

I'm just, like... want to

get through this next moment.

All right, ready?

(BUSY CHATTER)

Thank you so much. Thank you so much.

You know me.

I'm sneaky and I wanna look.

- Yeah, yeah. - I took my private tour

the day I came in here.

God blessed you, man.

- Didn't he do it?

- Amazing.

(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

When people see me and you together...

It's powerful!

Come on, man.

Let's get this legendary joint.

Black Excellence right here.

That is so cool.

I got stories to tell you.

What's up, baby?

(LIVELY CHATTER, LAUGHTER)

TYLER: Wow, look at you in your tux.

We got our bow ties on.

Looking good. Looking good.

Walk around with me?



How are you?

- MAN: Is Tyler right next to me?

- I just got to... I just got to...

I just got a whole other thing.

What's up, man?

How you doing, man? Let's-let's...

- Want to step out?

- Yeah, we're gonna get it started.

WHOOPI: I got to the studio,

and it says, "Tyler Perry Studios,"

and I was like, "Wait a minute."

And then I realized I've met

the first Black owner of a movie studio.

Not just of a movie studio,

of the movie studio

that beats just about

every other studio in Hollywood.

He say, "You know,

I'm gonna name a soundstage after you."

ANNOUNCER (OVER SPEAKERS):

The Whoopi Goldberg Soundstage.

(CHEERING, APPLAUSE)

WHOOPI:

Not to be a bitch or anything,

but it'll never happen in L.A.

I'm not that to them.

But it made me understand that,

if I went tomorrow,

the movie business is in good hands.

TYLER:

I want to thank all the honorees

for lending their name

to this historic moment.

400 years this year.

This is also the year of Jubilee,

and for this moment to happen

and happen for me is beyond anything

I could have ever imagined.

We all have a destiny.

We all have ancestors

and people who have prayed for us,

people who've endured all kinds of things

so that we could stand in this position.

I want you to think about this.

Why are you here?

What is this moment for?

It ain't just about a party.

It's about a dream in you

that we all get to stand here,

everybody represented equally.

This is what America is,

as a people's destiny

are tied into your dream.



BISHOP JAKES: Young people,

it don't happen the first day.

Don't be upset

if it doesn't happen when you're 20,

and it didn't happen when you were 25,

and it didn't happen

when you thought it was gonna happen.

That doesn't mean

it's not going to happen.

You see Tyler now,

but you didn't see him then.

Tyler is 50 years old.

- Greatness takes a while.

- (CROWD CHEERS)

Greatness takes a while.

Greatness takes a while.

Greatness takes a while.

You can't get there overnight.

But if you withstand the storm,

and the attack and the tests

and the winds and the wave,

something good is

going to come out of this.

(APPLAUSE)

God opens up a door.

An amazing door, and

somebody finally hears you or sees you

or notices you,

and they open up a door for you.

And I want to thank Tyler Perry

for not stopping

at having a door for yourself.

But your door is our platform.

You opened up a door so that people

who would never get noticed anywhere else

could walk through and have a chance,

and that deserves a clap

and that deserves a shout,

and that deserves emulating and imitating.

That deserves praising God.

But you floated on top of

what other people drowned in,

and if you never succeed,

you ought to shout because you survived.

(APPLAUSE)

You must be willing first to be a survivor

before you can be successful.

Everything that went wrong in your life

is what made everything go right

in your life.

(APPLAUSE)

TYLER:

I, uh...

(APPLAUSE)

Yeah.



I just, uh...

My entire intention,

Gelila and I both, is just to raise

a good, amazing, wonderful person,

who's...

...incredible, who honors God,

who... (SNIFFLES)

I just realized it was 11 years ago,

I was sitting there when I did this...

(VOICE BREAKING):

I was with my mother, who died in 2009.

And now I'm here with him, and-and...

(APPLAUSE)

There is a circle of life that goes on.

I done forgot

everything I'm supposed to say.

(FADING):

But thank you to everybody...

(WAVES SLOSHING)

LUCKY:

God protected Tyler in the essence of,

"Be still. Have peace.

I got you covered.

You know, I'm protecting you."

So he brought him through all that stuff

to bring him to where he's at today

and who he is today,

because in order to endure all that pain

and suffering and chaos,

God got to have something

in store for you.

How great

Is our God

Sing with me

How great

Is our God

All will see

How great...

OPRAH:

Do not play him small,

because he is not just

some lucky, rich n*gro turned Black man.

To take what he saw as an opportunity

to reach a group of people

and to turn that into this soon-to-be

multibillion-dollar enterprise

is what everybody else is trying to do.

REED:

I think it's an important story to tell,

because folks need to understand that

how hard he works

and how hard all of this is

to create the opportunities,

that now, really,

the world is just catching up with.

PASEORNEK:

And let's remember, the audience decides.

It's not the critics.

It's not a bunch of intellectuals.

It's the audience that decides:

Is this good or is this bad?

And I challenge anyone

to come up with the same run of success

that this man has had.

TYLER: Thank you, everybody,

for all your hard work.

I am beyond moved. I am inspired.

My hope beyond anything

is that you caught it.

Some people who worked with me

20 years ago may know what that means,

because there's a wave

that's been happening for a long time.

And I've watched the ones that catch it go

and do amazing things, with or without me.

So I hope you caught it.

I hope you've honored it.

I hope you realize how delicate it is,

how fleeting it is, how it's like dust...

can be gone in a second.

I hope you just saw it.

'Cause it's so pure. It's so special.

It's nothing but God.

There's some people in this room

who have tremendous talents,

and they are just amazing at what they do,

but there's some things going on

in their lives that,

if they could ever connect their pain

to what their gift is,

that gift would change

and shift into something else

that would not only be the bridge

that brings them over

but could bring others over with them.

LUCKY:

A lot of us go through things.

He went through some stuff, man,

that could've destroyed him.

It could've destroyed him psychologically

where he went under the bridge

in a cardboard box

and disappeared off the planet

because of what he had been through.

But he didn't do that. He was resilient.

He did the opposite.

He fought the demons.

He fought the naysayers,

the dream snatchers,

the haters, the people that was opposing.

People saying, "You're not gonna become."

"I have to become."

And he became.

AMAN:

Why do you work so hard?

TYLER:

Why do I work so hard?

Because I want you to have

a really good future,

and I want us to have a really good life.

And we can travel and have fun

and help other people.

So, don't you think that's a good idea?

- Mm-hmm.

- Okay.

- AMAN: And you're my hero.

- TYLER: I'm your hero?

Aw. Love you. You're my hero.

- Appreciate that, baby. I love you.

- AMAN: You, too.

TYLER:

Always on to the next thing.

You live in the moment,

but you plan ahead.

Focused on the next step,

thinking about the next step,

but you're in the moment.

That doesn't mean you're unsatisfied.

That just means that there's always

something that you feel is left to do.

For me, anyway.

(SONG ENDS)

This is empty, and I'm done.

(SETS OBJECT DOWN)

(SIGHS)

MAN: Well, if you can,

if you could just look right here

and say your name and who you are.

Why?

You don't know I'm Tyler Perry?

MAN:

I know who you are, but I want to know...

who you think you are.

Do you think you're a director?

What-what defines you?

"I'm Tyler Perry, and I'm a father.

I'm..." Whatever you want to say.

("A SONG FOR MAMA" BY BOYZ II MEN PLAYING)

I'm Tyler Perry, and I'm Maxine's baby.

Mama, mama

- You know I love you

- You know I love you

You know I love you

Mama

- Ooh

- Mama

You're the queen of my heart

You are

Your love is like tears from the stars

Your love is like

tears from the stars

- Mama, I just want you to know

- Mama, I just want you to know

Loving you is like food to my soul

Loving you is like food to my soul

Oh

Yeah

You are the food to my soul

Yes, you are.

("SENAYE" BY ROPHNAN PLAYING)

(SINGING IN FOREIGN LANGUAGE)

(Music fades)
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