Denzel Washington Interview: Devoted to Family and Faith

For Denzel Washington, it’s not about fame and fortune. It’s about keeping the faith.

Denzel Washington
American Gangster
Denzel Washington Plays Frank Lucas
Boys & Girls Club
Denzel Washington's Wife
CLIFF WATTS/ICON INTERNATIONAL
Washington's devotion to his family and deep sense of faith make him somewhat of an anomaly in Hollywood.
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DAVID LEE
Denael Washington in American Gangster.
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DAVID LEE/TWC 2007
Washington plays 1970s drug kingpin Frank Lucas. The actor does double duty as director of The Great Debaters.
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COURTESY BOYS & GIRLS CLUB
Washington, a Boys & Girls Club alum, shows his membership card with kids at an Atlanta branch.
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UPI/LANDOV
Denzel with his wife Pauletta.
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Denzel Washington
CLIFF WATTS/ICON INTERNATIONAL
Washington's devotion to his family and deep sense of faith make him somewhat of an anomaly in Hollywood.
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The Second Time Around


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With a pair of Oscars and a paycheck of $20 million a movie, Denzel Washington no longer jumps when the phone rings. But he still drops everything for his family. “Excuse me,” he says with a proud grin as he flips open his cell phone. “One of my sons is calling.”

Washington’s devotion to his family and deep sense of faith make him something of an anomaly in Hollywood. A member of the Church of God in Christ, the actor has been married to wife Pauletta for almost 25 years. And to hear him gush about their four children—John David, 23, Katia, 20, and twins Malcolm and Olivia, 16, you’d think he was a stay-at-home dad.

On the contrary, Washington works all the time. He’s made 37 movies in the last 29 years, including Academy Award winners Philadelphia, Training Day and Glory.

Although he often plays good-guy roles, this month he appears in American Gangster as a really bad guy. Then, as if to reaffirm his versatility, Washington directs and stars in The Great Debaters, opening Christmas Day, a feel-good movie about a 1930s African American debate team and the inspiring coach (played by who else) who helps them take on Harvard.

Between edits on the film, Washington sat down with Reader’s Digest to talk about fame, fortune and why his personal happiness has little to do with any of that.

RD: What do you think your strengths are as an actor?
Washington: I don’t analyze myself. I put it out there, and it’s up to the people to interpret it. I keep it simple, try to continue my spiritual quest.

RD: Do you think of yourself as a spiritual person?
Washington: Definitely.

RD: In what way?
Washington: I read the Bible every day. I’m in my second pass-through now, in the Book of John. My pastor told me to start with the New Testament, so I did, maybe two years ago. Worked my way through it, then through the Old Testament. Now I’m back in the New Testament. It’s better the second time around.

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Respond with your own comments here. Denzel , could Mrs Dottie's pound cake have anything to do withBy carolynhaywood, on 06/29/2008

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Visiting the psych ward, a man asked how doctors decide to institutionalize a patient.

"Well," the director said, "we fill a bathtub, then offer a teaspoon, a teacup and a bucket to the patient, and ask him to empty the tub."

"I get it," the visitor said. "A normal person would use the bucket because it's the biggest."

"No," the director said. "A normal person would pull the plug."

 

-- Josh Roberts


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