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More than a riff

The actor comes away from his portrayal of Muddy Waters in 'Cadillac Records' with a deep appreciation of the blues legend.

AT THE MOVES / THE PERFORMANCE: JEFFREY WRIGHT

December 04, 2008|Michael Ordona, Ordona is a freelance writer.
  • Jeffrey Wright
    Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times

"If Elvis Presley was the king of rock 'n' roll, then Muddy Waters was the god," declares Jeffrey Wright, and he's got a case.

After all, the legendary bluesman helped originate the music without which rock would never have been and is cited as a primary influence by the likes of Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page and the Rolling Stones.

"So many musicians express their absolute adoration, love and respect for Muddy Waters," says Wright. "He's adored, he's revered in a way that's reserved for that seminal few. He couldn't read or write but is somehow responsible for influencing half the popular music of the latter half of the 20th century and beyond. It's a tribute to his genius and his honesty."


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On this overcast day in Beverly Hills, a hint of gray in Wright's beard, the actor is nattily dressed in a close-fitting black suit and blue tie in a style reminiscent of late-'50s pop stars. He looks ready for a period album cover: "Three More From Jeffrey Wright."

The Tony-, Emmy- and Golden Globe-winning actor appeared earlier this season as Gen. Colin Powell in Oliver Stone's "W." and recently reprised his spy-with-a-conscience take on CIA operative Felix Leiter in the Bond opus "Quantum of Solace." This weekend will find him as the sharecropper-turned-Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Waters in "Cadillac Records" with Adrien Brody, Beyonce Knowles and Gabrielle Union. Among the other titans represented in the film are fellow Hall of Famers Little Walter, Howlin' Wolf and Willie Dixon.

"All those cats came from the same place. It's almost as though there was just one collective bluesman within the bodies of a dozen or so guys, all from the same neighborhood in Mississippi," Wright says. "They created this music; they dug it out of the dirt. Literally. It came out of songs of the field -- field hollering and things like that. Some of the first blues guitars were strings attached to the sides of shacks that they would strum, causing the whole house to act as a sounding board.

"Some of us knew more than others about the history of this music, but we all, in discovering the history of these people, fell in love and were energized in a way that celebrated that discovery."

For an actor who had played guitar for years but didn't consider himself anywhere near as sharp as of one of the most expressive blues ax men ever, convincing audiences he had the appropriate chops was a real challenge.

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