Samuel L. Jackson lauded at MoMA film benefit by close family and
friends
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[October 24, 2024]
By BEATRICE DUPUY
NEW YORK (AP) — The Museum of Modern Art was filled with expletives and
laughter Wednesday evening as Samuel L. Jackson’s family and friends
celebrated the actor and director’s storied career of box office hits,
larger-than-life characters and explosive one-liners at the annual film
benefit.
Jackson, known for his infamous F-bombs, stuck to a more sentimental
speech at the benefit while his friends and family honored him with some
of his choicer one liners.
“I’ve been fortunate enough to play a wide array of characters where I
have learned something new about the human experience with each and
every one, and I always carry a piece of them as I carry on,” he said.
At 75, Jackson has built a Hollywood legacy that stretches across 40
years. From playing in action packed blockbusters as Mace Windu in “Star
Wars" or Nick Fury in the Marvel universe to the iconic Quentin
Tarantino characters of the foulmouthed Jules in “Pulp Fiction” and
Ordell in “Django Unchained,” Jackson has shown time and time again that
he can effortlessly transform himself with each new role. His
versatility is what has catapulted him into movie stardom.
But Jackson’s career is not only defined by acting on screen in movies
and T.V. He has lended his cinematic talents to Broadway where he played
Martin Luther King Jr. in “The Mountaintop” and Doaker Charles in “Piano
Lesson.”
In between the clips from Jackson’s illustrious career, an intimate
circle of Jackson’s family and friends going back to his college days at
Morehouse took to the stage to honor him.
His wife LaTanya Richardson Jackson joked at the benefit how she
questioned Jackson’s acting abilities up until the point she saw him in
“Pulp Fiction.” Before he decided on acting, she said, Jackson was
studying to be a marine biologist.
“Fast forward, I saw Pulp Fiction and I sat in that theater, and I
started crying,” she said.” I said my life is over, he’s going to be a
movie star.”
Actor Denzel Washington first worked with Jackson in 1979 and has since
marked 45 years of friendship with the actor. He recently produced the
August Wilson adaptation of “The Piano Lesson” for Netflix, which
features his long-time friend. At the event, Washington said he
remembers learning from and watching Jackson perform onstage as a lead
in a play while he was once the understudy.
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Honoree Samuel L. Jackson, right, and wife LaTanya Richardson
Jackson attend the 16th annual Museum of Modern Art Film Benefit,
presented by Chanel, honoring him on Wednesday, Oct. 23, 2024, in
New York. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)
“I wish I was half the character
actor that he is, ” Washington said.
Filmmaker Spike Lee first saw Jackson acting with his wife on their
former college campus. Since their college days, Lee has gone on to
cast Jackson in “Jungle Fever”, “Do the Right Thing” and “Chi-Raq.”
“I was blown away by their talent,” he said of Jackson and
Richardson Jackson. “I knew that if god willing if I became a
filmmaker that these great artists would be in my films.”
Actress Brie Larson and filmmaker George Lucas both sent in video
messages, praising Jackson’s incredible catalog and his loving
personality. Other speakers of the night who shared kind words and a
handful of F-bombs for Jackson included Tony Award-winning director
Kenny Leon and actor Walton Goggins.
As the latest MoMA film benefit honoree, Jackson joins past
recipients including Martin Scorsese, Tom Hanks, Julianne Moore,
Cate Blanchett, Quentin Tarantino. The New York museum’s 16th annual
benefit, presented in partnership with Chanel, raises money to
preserve and bring movies into the museum’s collection.
“As we celebrate film tonight, let’s remember the power it has to
change lives and inspire future generations that benefit from MoMA’s
acquisition and preservation of films like the ones that ignited the
dreams of a little black kid sitting in the segregated Tennessee
movie theater that is standing before you now,” Jackson said in his
speech.
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