TYLER PERRY EXPLAINS WHY HE'S RETIRING HIS BELOVED MADEA CHARACTER
Perry told CNN in a recent
interview why he's saying goodbye to the feisty character after 10, soon to be
11, successful films.
"I'll be 50 this year and
I'm just at a place in my life where this next 50 I want to do things
differently," he said. "This character has been amazing. So many
people have loved her. It's been a great franchise."
But Perry left the door open,
somewhat slightly, that maybe one day down the road she'll be back.
"She's also run out of
things to say in my point of view. So if there's something else for her to say
maybe one day she'll return but for right now, no, I think I'm done."
Perry first debuted Madea on
stage in the play "I Can Do Bad All By Myself" in 1999 and she made
her screen debut in the 2005 film, "Diary of a Mad Black Woman."
Despite the film's title, it's
not Madea's funeral and Perry says he did that for a reason.
"No, you can't kill her.
I mean, that's like killing Rocky. Don't kill him. I left the door open because
I don't want people to have a finality that she's gone. That final thing, she's
dead and gone, don't want that."
Perry has said previously that
he created Madea after his late mother and his aunt.
"(My mother) loved
Madea," Perry said. "She told me whatever you do, don't stop playing
this character. She loved Madea. My mother, even though we look alike, she was
a much more beautiful version of this character for sure."
Perry's 19 films have grossed
over $864 million at the North American box office. He also launched sitcoms
such as "Tyler Perry's House of Payne," and "Tyler Perry's Meet
the Browns."
And while this isn't a
goodbye, it's more of a see you later, we will definitely be seeing more of
Perry.
"I need to load myself up
in business to be busy, that's my drug. Load me up, let me work, work, work,
that's my drug."
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