I arrived in
Charlotte, NC,
in
December of
1985 to begin my career as an electrical engineer
with
Duke Power Company (today Duke Energy) which at that time was the
biggest and baddest employer in the area. It was the company that practically
every adult wanted to work for and had an application on file. I personally was
not as impressed and a bit disappointed that I was not hired by nearby
IBM
or
Northern Telecom in the
Research Triangle area of
Raleigh,
NC (the Capitol). It was not long before I actually began to like the
Queen
City and its night life which was head over heels and above any other
metropolitan area in
North and adjacent
South Carolina. One night
I ventured into one of the bars in
Downtown that featured a
Jazz
cellar called
Jonathon's (now defunct). As I wrote in my book
Charlotte From a Tour Guide's Perspective "It
was and is still the only real jazz club that Charlotte has known
that could rival the Unleaded Blues Club -- on the south side of Chicago
-- and clubs along Bourbon Street in New Orleans a.k.a.
"Nawlins"" The featured performer back then was a
cute petite local Jazz vocalist by the name of
Maria Howell. If she were not performing, I simply would not stay.

Fast forward to
1991,
the year that I resigned from
Duke, and ventured into the publishing
business full time. At that time there was no magazine that featured
Black
culture, so I started one called
The Guide to Black Charlottetm which later became
Trend Magazine Onlinetm. I was simply ecstatic when
Maria
accepted my invitation to be interviewed for our
Spring 1991 edition (Page 26) and even more surprised when she stopped by my office and
ingratiated us with her down-to-earth
Southern Belle personality and
effectual smile punctuated by natural dimples that rival those of actress
Debbi Morgan. The interview took place just five years
after the release of the blockbuster movie
The Color Purple (1986) directed by the iconic
Steven Spielberg and starring
Danny
Glover,
Whoopi Goldberg,
Margaret Avery, and
Oprah Winfrey; in which
Howell played the role
of the
Church Choir Soloist who sings the memorable
"God is trying to
tell you something" hymn towards the end of the movie. She has since gone
on to appear in other block buster movies and
TV shows to include the
Vampire
Diaries series (CW Network) and the
Army Wives series
(Lifetime), as well as
The Blind Side (2009), a recurring role of
Grace on the
NBC (National Broadcasting Company) drama
Revolution
(2012 - 2014),
The
Hunger Games: Catching Fire
(2013);
Hidden Figures (2016),
Saints and Sinners
(2016-2018),
A Christmas Carol (2019),
Maneater (2020); to name a
few. She
still performs mostly on the east coast,
does speaking engagements,
voiceover work,
merchandising, and is consistently and constantly working in the acting arena.
I caught up with
Maria
again in late
2020 while back in her home state of
North Carolina
sheltered in place from the
COVID-19 (Coronavirus) pandemic. This is
what transpired three decades since our last interview.
Jay (Juan) -- Maria do you know that you and I both
have Spanish names and translated their both biblical?
Maria -- That's right; John and Mary
Jay -- Do people still recognize you from The Color
Purple movie?
Maria -- Ummmmm; That's a tricky question (pause); They
don't.
Jay -- Really?
Maria -- The reason why I say it that way is because
I constantly get,
"You look familiar!" They know my face, but they don't
know where from, and when I say The Color Purple they say
"Yeahhhhh, you
look the same, you haven't aged a bit" once I give them the confirmation or
affirmation. It is usually someone else telling them that
"She is the one
from the Color Purple," or if I just walk up to people in public I always
get
"You look familiar!" It also depends on where I am for example here [Charlotte,
NC, area] the majority of people know pretty much; but when I am in California,
say LA [Los Angeles] there are so many other actors there everybody looks everybody
up so they will know from research. People are always looking to see [who's
who] because when you audition for something you look at who the other cast
members are and then you look at their background and then they know that way. But
if people there just see me walking down the street -- no.
Jay -- Out of all the hats that you wear; you are singer,
actor, composer, producer, entrepreneur, and board member -- which do you
prefer wearing the most and why?
Maria -- Singing; singing is my number one simply
because it's the first thing that I ever did and it's more of a natural Segway.
It affords me to be able to branch out and do all these other things. So,
singing is the core and that's the one I prefer to do first.
Jay -- So, if God said you can only do one for the
rest of your life that's what you would do?
Maria -- Yeah; probably, in this list yeah. Yeah, singing,
yeah because it's the thing that feels more organic and more of a part of me
and my spirit and my soul. Yeah.
Jay -- To date what has been your favorite character
to play and why?
Maria -- Ummmmm, I have to go back to The Color
Purple because if it's a good experience, you never lose that first time. And
that was my first time in a professional acting capacity, and I will never
forget what it felt like and I will never forget the experience and I won't
forget what it has afforded me since then. God allowed that to be my door
opener.
Jay -- Walk me through the first day you showed up on
set?
Maria -- Ummmmm, the color green because I was green
as I don't know what, I had no clue as to what I was doing; I was just so happy
to be at the party!
Jay -- So, you drove yourself or did somebody else drive
you to the set?
Maria -- Well, you have to report to base camp and
then they bussed us all over because that's typically how that happens.
Jay - So, it's just like going to a regular job?
Maria -- Pretty much yeah, I mean yeah, as regular as
it can be in that capacity. You drive to the base camp and then if the set is
somewhere else, they get you on a bus or a van and then take you to the set. If
the set is right there then you walk across the yard or whatever to get to it.
Jay -- Where was the base camp; wasn't it in the
Burlington area?
Maria -- No, no, no, it was in Monroe [just east of
Charlotte, NC], Union and Anson County.
Jay -- Oh yeah, there's a sign there; have you seen
the road sign?
Maria -- Yeah, in Wadesboro; that's where I shot my scenes
-- now of course there are different locations for different parts of the movie,
but my parts of the movie was there.
Jay -- So that's where the church scene was?
Maria -- Yeah.