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‘Empire’ star counts comedy, playing superhero on wish list

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Taraji P. Henson arrives at the Oscars on Feb. 26 at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles.

If you love Taraji P. Henson as music executive Cookie Lyon in the Fox drama “Empire” or as mathematician Katherine Johnson in the Oscar-nominated film “Hidden Figures,” savor those performances, because you likely won’t see anything like them again.

“I don’t like to repeat characters,” Henson said. “I’m an artist to the bone.”

“Hidden Figures,” the real-life story about three African-American women working for NASA during the space race, was a fixture on the awards-season circuit. “Empire,” in its third hit season, returns to Fox at 8 p.m. Wednesday and has become appointment television in an age of binge-watching. Later this month Henson begins production on the movie “Proud Mary,” in which she plays an assassin who discovers a maternal instinct.

Mathematician. Music executive. Assassin. What else is on her wish list?

“I would love to be a Marvel superhero,” she said. “I’m dying to get into some comedy. I think I’m a stronger comedic actress than a dramatic actress. You guys just fell for the drama side.”

In a telephone interview from Chicago, where she is shooting “Empire,” Henson, 46, discussed Cookie’s future and more. These are edited excerpts from the conversation.

QUESTION: “Hidden Figures” helped inspire a larger conversation about African-American women on screen.

ANSWER: I think Hollywood sees that there are interesting stories that we haven’t heard before — that was one of a million. We were all very serious about doing it justice. That movie was bigger than any of us.

Q: In the “Empire” midseason finale, Cookie helped stage an intervention for her son Jamal (Jussie Smollett). Moments later she discovers that her new beau, Angelo (Taye Diggs), might have a checkered past of his own. Where will we see Cookie’s character going next?

A: You’ll see her put on her business hat. She can’t pop off like she used to, so it’s about containing herself. But there are times when she’s pushed. She’s consistently fighting for her family.

Q: On some level, isn’t she also fighting for herself?

A: I don’t think it’s for her at all. If it is for her, it is the joy of watching her fruition come to life — all her effort and things that she wants for her boys, her family. That’s what she’s fighting for at the core.

Q: You’ve worked with Terrence Howard (who plays her ex-husband, Lucious Lyon) before — much of that electric rapport is scripted?

A: A lot of it is just me and Terrence. The producers and writers let us go because when it’s natural you can’t write it. They give us the skeleton, the bones, some of the meat. We add the gravy, the stuff that makes it taste better.

Q: What’s the best “gravy” you’ve added?

A: Her one-line zingers. They won’t call the character Anika; they call her “Boo Boo Kitty.” That was just an ad-lib from the first season that’s carried over. That’s the one everyone remembers.

Q: That creative freedom must be great.

A: Yeah. That’s the only reason why I went back to TV.

Q: Cookie has made up for a lot of lost ground since returning home from a long prison sentence. What hasn’t she done yet that you would like to see her do?

A: I would like her to really, finally find love. Isn’t that what every woman wants? Someone that gets her and is going to love her for who she is.

Q: Well, Angelo seems to be trying to nurture a relationship with her.

A: As long as Lucious is in love with that woman, you know what is going to happen.

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