Photoshoots > Session 69
Public Appearances > 2019 > Sep 19: Audi Celebrates the 71st Emmys
Public Appearances > 2019 >Ā Sep 20: The Hollywood Reporter and SAG-AFTRA Celebrate Emmy Award Contenders
Public Appearances > 2019 >Ā Sep 21: BAFTA/LA BBC America TV Tea Party
Public Appearances > 2019 > Ā Sep 21: Showtime Emmy Eve Nominees Celebrations
Ā Gallery: Emmy Weekend Events was originally published on Aldis Hodge Online | Est 2010
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Bokeem Woodbineās cold-open, his artistic-masonry skill, him earning that money with all that work, and having to hand it off to that white man, Ā the fullness I felt at him at triumphantly sounding out the word āsoldierā with Beyonceā Freedom scoring it. Ā PERFECT.
AISHA HINDS Ā IS. Ā THE. Ā SHIT. as Harriet Tubman. Ā Strength, determination, badassery, hints of vulnerability on past love(!). Ā She IS the actual western hero myth that white movies keep pretending only white men were in our history, when that fact is that they were the minority in that. Ā Harriet is an actual super-hero.
I have enjoyed the Hawke couple. Ā The fact that they embody what true white allyship should entail. Ā Itās not a clean thing where you help but donāt take on any personal risk. Ā The fact that they were totally all in, that John Hawke saw his black niece as the family she is, that they both risked their lives without the typically annoying smug that usually is portrayed with white heroes, but with regret that it took them that long... Ā It really is the way it should be done.
Ernestineās downfall. Ā The addiction. Ā The very apt statement on how pain is passed on. Ā Her lover, a black man is degraded and abused, and so he does the same thing to only person who he can, a black woman. And it still goes on today. Ā So good to still see Adina Porter (maan her face is like a classical sculpture)
BLACK LOOOOVE. Ā Noah spending every moment of his time bending and shaping an engagement ring for Rosalee out of nails. Ā That moment when they see each other. Ā Just that little bit John Hawke dropped for his benefit about his āniece visiting from Canadaā and his reaction. Ā When they finally see each other at the gallows after months apart.
THE SEWING CIRCLE!!!!!! Ā Jasika Nicole and her womenās abolitionist group and their guns. That āfriend of a friendā is based on actual history and was code for abolitionists. Ā Quakers also, who were heavily involved in the Underground Railroad, were called āThe Friendsā . Ā I really want to see more of them.
That ending. Ā It was sad, but Iām glad it happened. Ā He had been pretty much the only white man who was completely on the side of āgoodā. Had he stuck around, the danger would have been him being seen as the center of things, when heās not.
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Press: Aldis Hodge Talks 'City on a Hill,' His Favorite Boston Spots and More
Ā BOSTON COMMON ā After acclaimed performances in What Men Want and Clemency, actor Aldis Hodge continues his big year with City on a Hill. Debuting June 16 on Showtime, the drama stars Hodge and Kevin Bacon as a pair of law enforcement officers taking on corruption in Boston. āThis show is going to be fire,ā Hodge promises. We chatted with the actor about the series, working with executive producers Matt Damon and Ben Affleck, and even food.
What made you want to get involved with City on a Hill?
I love the show because itās gritty and raw. Weāre dealing with Boston in the ā90s, crooked cops and robbers, that kind of thing. What really captures me about the show is that regardless of the scenario and what brought us all together, weāre still dealing with the life of Boston. Weāre dealing with these people as representations of the life of Boston and how harsh it can be or has been for some.
Did you enjoy filming in Boston? Find any favorite spots around town?
I grew up between New York and New Jersey, and I had family in Boston. We would go up to Boston in the winters. I have no idea why the winters, because they were terribly cold. Bostonās changed a little bit, but I will say my favorite place that I hit was Ostra. The first place that Kevin and I met and had dinner at was Ostra. We had a fantastic conversation and got to know one another, but the food was brilliant. I was there a couple times a week. Their sauces are fantastic.
How involved were Matt and Ben?
This whole idea was really born in Ben Affleckās head. They were both completely involved. Benās actually been on set a couple of times. It would be nice to actually see him direct. That would be really cool. What are your favorite Boston movies? Of course, I love Good Will Hunting [written and starring Damon and Affleck]. I also really like The Town [Affleck starred and directed]. I thought it was done really well. Then again, The Departed [Damon starred in] is damn good, man. Itād be a toss up between those.
Press: Aldis Hodge Talks āCity on a Hill,ā His Favorite Boston Spots and More was originally published on Aldis Hodge Online | Est 2010
Press: Aldis Hodge Is A Real-Life Superhero, So Give This Man What He Wants
After years of dramatic roles, the āWhat Men Wantā star wants to make you laugh and fulfill his dreams of being a super-powered badass
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BET ā Legend has it that Aldis Hodge worked cheap early in his career. Really cheap. Like, McDonaldās Happy Meal cheap. The pre-schooler was tagging along on a photo shoot for Ebony Magazine, where his older brother, Edwin, was working. The producers had a last-minute need for another cute kid and Aldisā mother convinced him to take the gig in exchange for a coveted Batman toy. Thanks to momās quick thinking, Hollywood has been gifted one of its most intense and versatile acting talents.
Hodge has amassed a colorful acting resume that includes stints on shows like A.T.O.M.: Alpha Teens on Machines, Friday Night Lights, Supernatural and Leverage. But it was his moving portrayal of a restless slave named Noah on WGNās Underground that made viewers sit up at attention and cheer with their fingers across social media. In the same year his appearance in Black Mirror as a somewhat single father named Jack living with his girlfriendās voice literally in his head, allowed him to blend his piercing stares with subdued comedic timing. But now Hodge gets to go for the full belly laughs in the R-rated comedy What Men Want as the bartending, romantic, very single father named Will, who gets caught up in Taraji P. Hensonās mind-reading male-strom.
During a stop at BET, Hodge is adorned in gold, beads and denim fabrics that accent flawless skin that has benefited from the sunās full attention. He walks with squared shoulders inherited from his retired Marine parents. His cape is invisible. If not for the disarming laughs cracking his intense looks, you might think heās one cartoonish horn blare away from taking off through the ceiling to catch a meteor hurtling toward earth. Between bites of his lunch we talk about the comedy of sex, his fascination with controlling time, engineering the perfect date and being a champion for the people.
I didnāt cross reference it until just today. I just recently did an interview where I was like, āDang, she was inside my head, too! Whatās going on?ā But it was pretty cool. The synergy was awesome. But with each role, I come at it with a clean slate and figure out where the tones are. I had been out of comedy for a long time, not my choice, but for the past five to seven years my career has been swinging up into the drama area. But most people donāt realize comedy is a big part of my life. I started stand-up when I was 11. When I was 13 I used to host a room at the L.A. Improv and I did that ātil I was 17 or 18 years old. Then on Leverage we did five seasons of that. It was an action caper show but I still got to flex my comedic muscles. We killed that in 2012, so itās been a minute. I was happy to reintroduce people to my idea of humor. Will is not inherently the braggadocios funny one. Heās not the big personality in the room. Heās reactionary. Heās gonna have a sense of realism, so his comedic timing is subtle. The tones and notes are a little more subdued, and thatās a different tone to play. But our director, Adam [Shankman], took so many different types of comedians with very different timing and put as all together and kept us on the same note. We were always on the same page. You had Josh Brenner, who most people know from Silicon Valley, Pete Davidson from SNL, Wendi McLendon-Covey from Bridesmaids, Tracy Morgan, obviously. Everybody has a different style that theyāve been hitting for a minute, and he just figured out how to weave together. And there are some people youāre not gonna expect to be funny but are hilarious, i.e. Erykah Badu. Sheās hysterical. And then Iām there in the mix. As an actor, Iām always hungry for fresh challenges. I donāt like to feel like Iām sitting in a box, and when this opportunity came up, naturally I was nervous at whether or not I could still be funny, and I was hoping. But I just let Adam take care of me on that one.
Speaking of your comedic side, you pranked Taraji with honey buns on the set of Hidden Figures. Did anything else like that go down on set for What Men Want?
Nah. The prank for us was getting through the sex scenes. We wanted to get through those as fast as possible. Itās tough. Itās always a nervous environment when youāre doing scenes like that. But the biggest thing is, because itās physical comedy, how do you do that without looking stupid? You want people to laugh with you and not at you. But thank God for Adam and Taraji. Itās easy to keep a straight face when you have nerves. We had fun with it. You let yourself fall into it. And Tarajiās a pro. If you see the movie, I took a couple of those hits for real. Some of them reactions are real!
Is it worse to know she knows your thoughts, or is ignorance bliss?
Better not to know, of course. I would not want to know who knows my thoughts. I wouldnāt want anyone to be in my head like that, but if you did know, imagine how anxious youād be all day. Youād be like Brandon, Josh Brennerās character, all day. Just rambling to keep people out of your head.
If you had to disguise your thoughts, what would you think about?
Man, most of my thoughts on a regular basis go to design. As soon as I step into a room Iām taking in the square footage, Iām measuring in distances, everything is art to me. Or Iām putting my engineering cap on to see how itās built. So I donāt think anyone would want to be in my head, because itās pretty boring. Iām a nerd, bruh.
Speaking of engineering, horology sounds like something men do after a breakup. How did you get into watch making?
Iāve been doing that since I was 19. I just love building things. Iāve always had a natural inclination to create and build, and it satisfies a necessary art. It got to a point in my career, I think I was 13 or 14, where I didnāt have enough life experience to add gravitas to some of these characters Iām trying to play. I started drafting blueprints for my dream house when I was 12. I always loved designing and building, because thatās where my imagination lives. Art is my language, and acting is just an emotional exposition of my art. So, itās the same thing to me, just a different conduit. But the other side of me is like building, I love crafting things. Horology satisfies a lot of different things. I wanted to be an architect in school but that would mean Iād have to quit acting, and Iām not gonna do that. Iām gonna die in a directorās chair when Iām 110 years old. But what I found about the intricacy of horology and watch design is that it was architecture and painting and mechanical engineering. It satisfied so many points for me, and I could do it at my own pace.
You rarely hear of men discussing their dream house. What did yours look like?
I like space, I like nature. I like to bring the outside inside. Thereās a couple of architects that I really love. I grew up on the work of John Lautner, Frank Lloyd Wright, Frank Gehry. But one of the firms I love now is Olson Kundig, particularly Thomas Kundigās work. His houses are machines. Heāll cantilever a side or a roof and all you gotta do is crank it and youāre lifting the side of your house off. I canāt afford that in New York, but one of these days Iāll have to partner with him for a house.
Your son, Ben, in the film is adorable. What was it like working with him?
Auston Jon Moore. Heās a fun kid. Iām excited to see what happens with his career. He was five years old when we were doing it. Really spunky, good instincts. We had a good time. I was actor-parent-child wrangler. When we were shooting the rooftop scene, we had all this food out, and he kept eating the food. āWe need continuity, baby. You gotta put the food back.ā Heād say OK, and then weād come back and heād have a mouth full of chips. He was awesome.
He had one of my favorite scenes with the panties. Was your ādonāt breatheā line ad-libbed?
Yes, that was ad-libbed. I was like, āThe baby! What do you do?ā What would I say?ā We had fun with that scene because Adam just let us be free and add as much color to the characters as possible. That was a fun day, trying to get him to put on the underwear. When he realized what it was he was like, āHold up, fam.ā So, I had to put the underwear on my head to show him it was cool.
You pulled a Mars Blackmon?
Yeah, yeah. I sacrificed [laughs].
There are two scenes in What Men Want that youāre not in, the card scene and the wedding. Which would you be in if you could?
I definitely would have loved to have worked with Erykah and have a little Taro reading. She was just pouring herself into that character. Thatās her imagination splayed out on camera. But I would have loved to see Will have a session with Sistah.
What about the poker game with the athletes?
I think Will might be a card shark, but I donāt know if he got the chips to sit at that table. That was a very high-stakes game, and heās too smart to bet his rent money. But if he had the chips, I think because of his bartending skills he could read people really well and take home a nice healthy pot.
Youāve been the subject of a lot of wish-casting, particularly to be Green Lantern. Have you ever thought of playing a superhero?
Iād love to be a superhero. Iāve been trying to be a superhero for 12 years. If that opportunity came that way, Iād eat it up immediately. I got into this business as a kid because I loved Batman. I was trying to get my Batman toys. I grew up on Marvel and DC.
Noah from Underground definitely was a superhero. How do you feel about that role years later and the impact he had?
I took it as a grand opportunity just because of the fact, when the initial idea of the show came to me, I was like, āIf this is a series about enslavement, how does it work for five or six seasons? Do we want to see our people in persecution for that long? Where is the gratitude that comes out of this for the audience?ā But when I read the pilot I was like, āOh, it shows us in the situation, but not made of the situation.ā It showed people in bondage, not slaves. It gave us dignity. It gave the people who went through that an actual identity. They didnāt bring slaves to America, they brought engineers and doctors, brilliant people. So, for me to be able to expose that they had hopes and dreams and still had the strength to find love in those times was immensely powerful, because weād never see it in our history books. Our schools failed us in that. So the opportunity to add to the dignity of our people was a high honor. I look at all of those characters as superheroes. They actually added the show to curriculum in schools. This is the effect that you can have as an artist. Thatās what I love.
With Valentineās Day is coming up, how would you engineer the perfect date?
Thatās tough, man, because you gotta work off the person. It depends on who she is and what she wants. Some ladies want dinner and flowers and some ladies just want to kick back and watch a movie. My ideal date would start with a little dinner, some champagne, maybe some chocolates. Then weāre gonna go to the movie theater, weāre gonna see What Men Want, Iām not even lying. Get her laughing, feeling good, then probably go dancing. Then if I really feel like Iām on my mack-ness, Iāmma be like, āHey, boo. Real quick though, I just wanted you to know that I got your mom a ticket to the movie, too. I wanna let her know itās her Valentineās Day, too.ā And thatās my ideal date: Dinner, What Men Want and a little dancing.
What Men Want starring Taraji P. Henson and Aldis Hodge is in theaters now!
Press: Aldis Hodge Is A Real-Life Superhero, So Give This Man What He Wants was originally published on Aldis Hodge Online | Est 2010