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| Gene
Edwards and Morgan Freeman |
Gene
Edwards: Tell me about the music in the
delta when you were growing up, what you remember.
Morgan
Freeman: When I was growing up, we weren't
really famous for the music. I mean we were but
we weren't. I don't think you were aware, when you
were in the midst of it, what you were in the midst
of. You were just there. So we had our places to
hang out and our favorite musicians, one of which
was James Gatemouth Lightening. These were the people
we danced to as kids and knew intimately.
Gene
Edwards: They were your neighbors
Morgan
Freeman: Yeah. They were, they were what,
I suppose the term you would use is sustaining because
when Friday night comes around, all the kids are
allowed out for how long kids are allowed out on
Friday night, so that's who we went to visit.
Gene
Edwards: And they played on the streets.
Morgan
Freeman: They didn't play on our streets.
I was in Greenwood , but I remember I spent my very
early childhood up to the age of six and one half
in Charleston , Tallahatchie County , the next county
over and they used to have some blues men who were
just like CC Lighters . They just came around. If
you had a mason jar full of gin, they hang around.
And I remember that. I remember these Sunday mornings
just sitting on the porch,
Gene
Edwards: Just hanging around
Morgan
Freeman: Sitting with them, rocking with
them, clapping with them and stuff. that was, and
you know, that was the delta blues.
Gene
Edwards: Why did you stay. I mean you
could be anywhere.
Morgan
Freeman: I didn't stay. I came back.
Gene
Edwards: Well, why did you come back?
Morgan
Freeman: I came back because I went everywhere,
I saw everything, and I really realized two things.
First one was that in all my life the most comfortable
place for me, to me, was here. No matter what else
was going on, there was a comfort zone. So when
I ran, when I left, and I did leave running. I didn't
get far, but I did leave running. I went to all
these different places. I was in New York , Los
Angeles , San Francisco , Chicago , Philadelphia
, Pittsburgh . I mean name it.
Gene
Edwards: Broadway shows, television, movies.
Morgan
Freeman: Yeah. And what I saw and experienced
informed me that you know in all this, you never
felt quite the same. You never felt quite as comfortable.
Now I don't know that I can blame that so much on
the area so much as I can blame that on my parents,
my grandmother. You know what I'm saying. But wherever
I think you find your comfort zone, that's where
you're going to wind up.
Gene
Edwards: So does that feed you? You are
the hardest working man in …. Recharge batteries?
Morgan
Freeman: Absolutely. I mean everything
about being back here. Having hookied up with Bill
is one of the best things that ever could have happened.
You know, I got roots that go back generations so
I feel very right about where I am.
Gene
Edwards: What do Hollywood people have
to say about that when you say I've got to get on
the plane and go back to the delta?
Morgan
Freeman: The first time, they say, you're
going to Mississippi ? Yeah. And then a lot of them
have come here subsequently and the best part of
all that is then they go, oh it's so beautiful,
the people are so friendly, oh it's so.
Gene
Edwards: The food's so good.
Morgan
Freeman: The food's so good.
Gene
Edwards: The music's so nice.
Morgan
Freeman: Right. So I said, well you know,
there you go.
Gene
Edwards: (Note: This interview was conducted
on October 21, 2005, eight weeks after Hurricane
Katrina.) Do you have the sense?... I have the sense
that in the last eight weeks, the world's attitude
toward Mississippi has changed. Sine the world came
here.
Morgan
Freeman: The world has gotten a clearer
look. That's the problem, one of the problems that's
been since, I suppose since the sixties, is that
we've been looked at through the prism of the news
rather than… I mean, there is a lot about history
that we cannot excuse
Gene
Edwards: Should not.
Morgan
Freeman: No. But I don't think our history
is darker than the rest of the country's. I never
saw anybody beaten, a handcuffed man anywhere in
Mississippi .
Gene
Edwards: What's the last eight weeks done
for you? You were involved in the Mississippi Rising
and…
Morgan
Freeman: Yeah. I don't know that it's
done anything for me.
Gene
Edwards: Or done to you.
Morgan
Freeman: Well, it's the fact that we have
this tragedy that has occurred across the sweep
of the Gulf Coast — New Orleans , Mississippi ,
Alabama . We're supposed to be the poor stepchild.
So what I think has happened is it turns out that
we're not quite that, we were a little richer than
that, and I think part of this last eight weeks
has shown the world that. That our richness is real.
Gene
Edwards: Some really wonderful people
live down live down here.
Morgan
Freeman: Yeah.
Gene
Edwards: I want to talk about Bill Luckett
. Did he find you? How did this happen?
Morgan
Freeman: I was building my house which
is out of the ordinary for the area. Have you ever
built a house? So it was getting to be dire. So
I was looking for a way to get away the murder.
So I needed some help and another friend of mine
who is in construction took over the job of being
project supervisor for me. He said, “You need a
good lawyer.” So he introduced my wife to Bill Luckett
and she started glowing. So I had to meet him and
the rest is just one of those things that happens
when you meet the right person.
Gene
Edwards: But from that point to this point,
how did you get there? And what was it like when
you walked in here for the first time?
Morgan
Freeman: Well, this was just an old building,
the floors falling apart, ceiling coming in. He's
also a builder, which was why he was so good coming
in. We started dating is what happened Everybody
laughs when I say that… Anyhow, we started dating
and in order to go to dinner, we'd have to go a
long ways. We'd have to go to Cleveland . We'd have
to go to Oxford , We'd have to go to Memphis . And
we started also started out hanging out around here
because there was a little blues club called the
Crossroads, and every now and then it would be open
and live music and the place would just be crammed
with people. And there would be someone in there
from Australia , England , Japan , across Europe,
Scandinavia . Look at all these people coming here
to hear the blues and there's no place that you
can count on. That's criminal. This is Clarksdale
Mississippi , storied home of the delta blues. Why
isn't there? We have to do something about this.
Well first we need a place to eat so ha says, “I
think I'm going to build a restaurant.” I said,
“Really?” He said, “Yeah.” I said, How about if
I help?” He said, “I gotta think about that. Okay?”
(laugh)
Gene
Edwards: Did you feel the hook?
Morgan
Freeman: Right so you know, we built a
restaurant, got it up, going and right after that,
started working on this.
Gene
Edwards: Are there moments when you say
to yourself, what in the world was I thinking about?
Morgan
Freeman: Never. I know exactly what I
was thinking about. There are moments when my business
manager will say what were you thinking about because,
you know, getting into particularly in the restaurant
business for anybody anywhere. If it is an overnight
success, it's going to be an overnight failure.
It just works that way. You know but if you can
sustain it, pretty soon, it will be able stand on
it's own.
Gene
Edwards: What's your best moment in this
place, do you know?
Morgan
Freeman: I we've had a lot of them.
Gene
Edwards: You've had some good times.
Morgan
Freeman: My wife and I love to dance together.
It's one of the things that proves to us that we
belong together. And sometimes we come here and
the right music is going, and it's a jam and it's
like this is the only place to be.
Gene
Edwards: I remember the blues divas.
Morgan
Freeman: I was just clowning around. I
was in Dana Point, California, with Harry Belafonte
a couple of weeks ago, and he was talking he said,
“You know Sidney Poitier and I were great friends
but I've always known that I was the much better
actor because I could convince people that I could
sing and he couldn't do it.”
Gene
Edwards: Well. Look around Clarksdale
. Tell me about Clarksdale the future, the promise
the hope to make all these things happen.
Morgan
Freeman: Clarksdale is, I think particularly
for the delta, it's like a microcosm, and whatever
happens here will happen. If you've got an overview
of this area and you get up in the area and you
look down. AndiIt's like looking down on Switzerland
. It's farmland. We grow food, fiber,
Gene
Edwards: Cotton.
Morgan
Freeman: If it grows, we can make it grow
here. It's foolish of us to try and change that,
but the down side of it is that we have a large
portion of our population who are generationally
here to this land without access. I mean if I have
1000 acres of land to farm, I don't need 1000 hands
to pick the cotton.
Gene
Edwards: One day you did.
Morgan
Freeman: One day I did. That's part of
the down side of our legacy, that this area, up
until maybe 30 years ago, this area, oh, it was
important to the farmers to have uh a cheap labor
force. Just like it's important right now. Why do
we have these people streaming up from Mexico ?
It's important for our society to have cheap labor
so it's almost the same way there. Now we're stuck
with that labor force, and we have not been able
to gear everything else around to something else.
We have to decide what else there is first. Can
we do, what other kind of industry can we offer
youth? My feeling is first education. Just be a
place where people can get education. The whole
country is falling short with that, “No Child Left
Behind” not withstanding. The other thing is, I
think that we are rather uniquely positioned for
tourism, a growth industry. Tourism because this
is a part of the world that people don't know, and
when they come down here, they're mightily impressed
by it. They just think it's so different from the
rest of the country.
Gene
Edwards: I had a guy on the street tell
my you know we didn't pay much attention to those
blues fans until we realized that some of them were
driving Lexuses> (laugh) I thank you for all
you're doing.
Morgan
Freeman: A great pleasure.
Gene
Edwards: It's always fun.
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