Return of ‘Best Man’ was tough task

Director of the movie Malcolm D. Lee, second from left, with the cast members (from left to right) Morris Chestnut, Nia Long, Harold Perrineau (back), Sanaa Lathan, Melissa De Sousa, Terrence Howard, Monica Calhoun, Regina Hall, Taye Diggs and Eddie Cibrian at the premiere of 'The Best Man Holiday' in Hollywood on November 5, 2013. Photo: Mario Anzuoni

Director of the movie Malcolm D. Lee, second from left, with the cast members (from left to right) Morris Chestnut, Nia Long, Harold Perrineau (back), Sanaa Lathan, Melissa De Sousa, Terrence Howard, Monica Calhoun, Regina Hall, Taye Diggs and Eddie Cibrian at the premiere of 'The Best Man Holiday' in Hollywood on November 5, 2013. Photo: Mario Anzuoni

Published Feb 10, 2014

Share

Back in 2012, while filming The Best Man Holiday, Morris Chestnut and Nia Long became increasingly nostalgic.

It had been 14 years since the release of Malcolm D Lee’s 1999 hit, The Best Man, and 21 years since the actors were first-time co-stars in John Singleton’s street-life classic Boyz n the Hood.

“There was a moment when we were shooting in a limo and Nia looked at me and said, ‘You are a man now!’” recalled Chestnut. “We are in such different places in our lives and careers now. We’re fortunate to still be here.”

Chestnut, Long and the entire original cast of The Best Man– Taye Diggs, Terrence Howard, Sanaa Lathan, Harold Perrineau, Regina Hall, Monica Calhoun and Melissa De Sousa – return in the Christmas-themed The Best Man Holiday, which opened on Friday.

Although other follow-up films have come years after their originals – Riddick, for example – the long-awaited Best Man reunion is a relatively rare feat, especially for a predominantly African-American cast.

 

Lee, The Best Man Holiday’s writer-director, struggled to get his sequel backed by a studio. The heartbreaking nature of the story-line, which was far from the jolly tale distributors were expecting, didn’t help his cause. Still, Universal Pictures went for the film, but only after the entire cast came to the studio for a reading.

“They understood what the movie was and what it could be,” said Lee of the studio’s response to the reading. “However, we know it’s hard to get people to go see a film with a primarily black cast that doesn’t star Will Smith or Denzel Washington.”

When Chestnut portrayed Ricky Baker in 1991’s Boyz n the Hood, he became a talked-about young actor on the rise. After landing a few supporting parts in films like The Inkwell and G.I. Jane, he won leading roles in The Brothers and Two Can Play That Game and was soon type-cast as the heartthrob.

“At the time, I didn’t realise I was doing all romantic comedies,” said Chestnut. “But I’d go to set and not really respect what I was doing. I didn’t see it as a challenge.”

Though he became a household name among African-Americans, Chestnut didn’t have the box office draw of a Smith or Washington.

“I woke up one day and was like, ‘OK, I had fun, but I didn’t really fit anything meaningful in there’,” Chestnut said. “It was a lesson learned.”

He’s since appeared in films like Think Like a Man, Identity Thief and Ladder 49, and on TV shows such as V, American Horror Story and Nurse Jackie. But he still fights for roles.

“It’s a never-ending story,” said Chestnut, who admires the talent of Best Man co-star Howard.

“He’s a different cat,” Chestnut said of the Oscar-nominated actor. “We call Terrence the beautiful mind because sometimes a person can be so brilliant that it is hard for them to stay focused. When you say ‘action’ he is so phenomenally present, but when you say ‘cut,’ he is phenomenally detached.”

As Lance, the devoted football star in The Best Man Holiday, Chestnut “had to have his poker face on and cracks in the armour”, said Lee. “He played all of that beautifully. He was extremely serious.”

Yet he couldn’t evade his hunky habits. The 44-year-old, who lost 15kg for the part, goes shirtless in the film.

“We didn’t shoot that scene until the second to last week of production!” said Chestnut. “Maintaining a diet and exercise routine at my age is a lot. I couldn’t cheat.”

But it was all in a day’s work. “This movie was fun and emotional,” said Chestnut. “To be able to go deep into this character and see my development as an actor at this stage in my career – 20 years in – I’m very fortunate for that.” – Sapa-AP

Related Topics: