‘Empire’ Cast Reveals Dream Guest Stars for Season 2

Empire

FOX

The first season of Lee Daniels and Danny Strong‘s Fox hip-hop drama Empire had seemingly every soap opera trope under the sun. There were breakups and affairs, cat fights and cutting words, mistaken paternity and murder. But it wasn’t just the core cast of the hip-hop musical who were able to play out some of the juiciest storylines: guest stars and musical collaborators fleshed out the world and added even more decadence — and drama.

Read more ‘Empire’ Finale Postmortem: EP Danny Strong Teases Season 2

As Strong told The Hollywood Reporter, the writing staff on Empire‘s first season was open to a number of different power players coming in to perform alongside the likes of Terrence Howard, Taraji P. Henson, Jussie Smollett, Trai Byers, Bryshere Y. Gray, and the rest of the Empire cast. And it was a good thing they had that attitude, as the show had everyone sitting up and taking notice.

Jennifer Hudson wanted to be on the show before we had even aired! We wrote [Michelle] for her because we heard she wanted to be on it, and we were all so excited because she’s so talented and such an amazing singer. It was like, ‘Sign us up!'” Strong said.

Read more Jennifer Hudson on Her ‘Empire’ Role

That kind of open-minded approach is something the red-hot series will carry into its previously announced second season. With that in mind, THR caught up with the cast of Empire to see who they wanted to see on the show in season two.

Smollett was the first to bring up Oprah Winfrey. When THR talked with him for Jamal’s coming out episode (“The Lyon’s Roar”), he half-joked that Jamal should be sitting down with Winfrey for an interview. But of course, he’s not the only one who would want Winfrey to appear on the show — in any capacity. Kaitlin Doubleday (Rhonda) said she didn’t care who Winfrey played; she just wants “to learn about life” from her on set. And Daniels himself has admitted to courting her, noting he “is wearing her down.”

Read more Fox Plots ‘Empire’ Season 2: Lee Daniels Courts Oprah, Pushes for Less “Opulence”

Another name that came up often was Denzel Washington. He and Byers worked together on Antwone Fisher, and Byers wanted nothing more than for Washington to somehow be a part of Andre’s storyline. “Maybe he could play a doctor — a doctor trying to help Andre. He knew me well when I was younger, and he would be trying to help Andre now.”

Grace Gealey (Anika) also picked Washington as her dream guest star, though she didn’t specify that she had to be in a story with him if it ever came to pass. “I just want the genius that is Denzel; I don’t care who he plays!” she laughed.

For the most part, though, the cast kept coming up with names of those who could double as dream musical collaborators for various characters. Smollett rattled off Mariah Carey, Janet Jackson, Kanye West and Brandy Norwood in quick succession, giving an excited “hell yeah!” when asked if he wanted to sing with any of them.

“Did you think I wanted them to just come on and cameo and walk around in the background? No, we have to do a song! Father Lee needs to pick up his damn contacts on his phone!” he said with a laugh, adding that Jamal still has to release his album and will need collaborators on the record.

Read more ‘Empire’ Cast, Creators Pick the Quintessential Music of Season 1

Doubleday seconded Smollett’s choice of Jackson but added Missy Elliott and Justin Timberlake to her wish list, keeping it all in the Timbaland family. “I grew up on music like Timberlake,” she said.

Gealey thought Beyonce could add some flare and give diva Cookie a run for her money, and Byers agreed. Byers also wants to see Beyonce’s boy Jay Z come with her, as well as the great Aretha Franklin. “How amazing would that be?!” 

Although Gray showed love for Queen Latifah, Keke Palmer and Black Thought in the dream guest star/collaborator capacity, he was quick to note that he was open to anyone. “Just talent,” he said when asked what he was looking for in a dream guest star. “Just talented actors and talented performers who will continue to make the show great.”

Who is on your wish list for season two? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

Twitter: @danielletbd

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‘Empire’ Postmortem: EP Danny Strong on Ending the Season the “Polar Opposite of Where It Began”

Empire S01E12 Still - H 2015

Chuck Hodes/FOX

[Warning: This story contains spoilers from “Die But Once” and “Who Am I,” Empire‘s two-part season one finale.]

“Heart and fear.” Those were the two key elements Empire co-creator Lee Daniels felt the first season finale absolutely had to have. And Fox’s hip-hop drama delivered on that in spades during Wednesday’s two-hour season finale. 

During the breakout hit’s freshman season finale, Lucious (Terrence Howard) learned he didn’t actually have ALS and isn’t dying — but he still picked a successor (Jussie Smollett‘s Jamal) for Empire Entertainment. Even better: Lucious actually had genuine moments of affection for Jamal as the father and son bonded over music with the head of Empire also revealing his real name to his son. Additionally, Lucious learned that Cookie (Taraji P. Henson) knew he killed Bunkie (Antoine McKay) and believed his former wife turned him in for the murder when he ended up behind bars. 

Meanwhile, Jamal showed how far he would go to earn his father’s respect, and ultimately, the company. He not only put aside some of his artistry in order to wear a business cap, but also turned violent with Beretti (Judd Nelson). Teaming with his father had him turning into his father in ways that will surely have repercussions come season two. It put golden child Jamal on the outs with the rest of his family, who all came together — even Anika (Grace Gealey) — in a bid to regain some power for themselves.

And because Empire is Daniels’ version of Dynasty, the season finale also featured a murder when a pregnant Rhonda (Kaitlin Doubleday) walked in on Vernon (Malik Yoba) fighting her husband Andre (Trai Byers) in their own home and hit him on the head with a candlestick.

The fast-moving soap opera ended with just about all of its core characters turning 180-degrees from where they started the season. To hear Empire co-creator Danny Strong tell it, the surprising new alliances and role reversals were the key element of the finale.

Read more Fox Plots ‘Empire’ Season 2: Lee Daniels Courts Oprah, Pushes for Less “Opulence”

“One of the things about the show that is so important to me and Lee and [showrunner] Ilene [Chaiken] is that even though we’re doing this fabulous, heightened soap opera, there’s a truth to it and a reality and emotional depth,” Strong told The Hollywood Reporter. “That’s always been one of the main goals of the piece, so choices are just driven by trying to tell the truth — in a world that still has juicy soap opera turns.”

Here, Strong talks with THR about the events of the finale, how it sets up the previously announced second season, and key reflections on the show so far.

Let’s start with Lucious. Many wondered if Howard’s days with Empire were numbered but his positive bill of health answers that question. Is he powerless now that he’s behind bars? 

Lucious being misdiagnosed was in my original pitch. Lee and I pitched the show to four different networks, and it was always in the pitch that he was going to think he had ALS, but toward the end of the first season, he’s going to find out he was misdiagnosed. I’ve heard a few stories about that; my ex-girlfriend’s father was misdiagnosed with ALS, but also my grandfather had an autoimmune disease that crippled him but then it just reversed itself. ALS is misdiagnosed with a particularly high percentage. It’s a very hard disease to diagnose. I’ve been asked how we were going to do a show with a character dying of ALS a hundred times and maybe one person brought up misdiagnosis. It never seemed to cross people’s minds, which I loved because it was kept a surprise for the audience. But Lucious going away to prison as the final moment of the episode had been planned out quite awhile ago. We wanted to end the season with Lucious and Cookie in complete role reversals — where Lucious is in jail, and Cookie’s in the mansion. It’s the polar opposite of where it began.

Yet Lucious’ ego isn’t bruised by being behind bars. Why end it there as opposed to on his successor, or even on the media commenting on him being behind bars?

It’s a cool opportunity to show a different perspective and viewpoint of the Lyons. We thought it would be a much cooler ending to end it on Lucious — our protagonist/antagonist — and where we’re heading next season.

Lucious is quite spiteful at times — like cancelling his legacy album because Jamal came out. Was there ever possibility of having him say, “screw you,” to all of his sons when he found out he wasn’t dying and not choose any of them as a successor?

We say it in episode 12, which is, as an IPO, there still needs to be a succession plan now that it’s going to be in public. So, he’s picked a successor, and that’s why. Next season we’re still going to see some conflicts because of the decision, but this whole season was about who was going to inherit the empire, and we felt like we needed to pay it off, but it was also very logical under these circumstances.

See more ‘Empire’ Cast Before They Were Stars

What was the process like to decide just how far Jamal would go, not only for the title, but ultimately for his father? Lucious was a man who hurt him so much for so long, yet he still proved he would do anything for him.

All sons ultimately want the love of their fathers. The more abusive the father is, the more the son wants that love from him. We always had this Michael Corleone-esque arc planned for him where we were going to see, over the course of the season, him slowly start to turn into this father. That’s ultimately why his father chooses to make him the heir. Because he, at the end of the day, is the most like him. 

Season one kept stressing how much of an artist Jamal was, but now that there was a glimpse of him in the business role, it seems he’ll be sacrificing a lot of that.

I can’t give season two away! (Laughs.) That’s a very astute observation, but that’s all I’ll say about that!

It’s sad to see Jamal on the outs with Cookie because that bond was so beautiful, but it gave Taraji some really nice vulnerability to play in the finale.

Where we leave [Cookie], she’s still desperately trying to bring her family together. We’re trying to keep the emotional core, her emotional response, in our stories as truthful and honest as possible. There’s also a breakdown of the sort of tough veneer of the prisoner; it’s emotional growth for her character. It’s about trying to make her a well-rounded character for an amazing actress to play.

Why was it important to show Cookie and Anika uniting against Lucious?

It seemed like a natural progression of the storytelling that people who hated each other would be working together. In some cases, it was something that was mapped out from the get-go, and then some were setting up season two and where the alliances had to be for season two. There are a lot of reversals in the finale; we really do end up in a different place than where it all began. Jamal now appears to have a resentment toward his mother. Hakeem and Cookie, who hated each other, are now working together. It doesn’t mean it’s going to go well! But alliances have shifted and new pacts have been made.

Was it always Vernon who wouldn’t survive to see season two? Yet the moment didn’t happen until the finale, which seems like it can launch some interesting drama in season two, once characters catch on to the fact that he’s dead.

Yeah, we planned on doing that quite awhile ago. To me, it felt like a very satisfying conclusion to this season — a fulfillment of arcs but also a reset to where the story needed to go — that’s what we were going for!

There were some fun callbacks to the pilot in the finale episode, including Cookie picking up a broom again. How did you choose which moments to revisit?

None of it was about specifically making a recall to the pilot. The broom thing was a gag that we put in, but it also shows the progression of the relationship. In the pilot, she beat him with the broom, but now she’s sweeping up around him while she’s trying to recruit him to team with her. It’s a full reversal from how the series started. It was a result of the storytelling as opposed to trying to give some sort of nod to the pilot.

Olivia’s (Raven-Symone) storyline was something in the original pilot but cut for time. With so many characters on Empire — the core cast and those who came in and out — how did you manage getting certain characters to certain individual points while still serving the overall themes and focus of the season?

The stories stem from my ADD. Early on, I liked the idea of having a fast-moving plot with intersecting stories. Lee and I loved the idea of subverting the genre and having a gritty, urban family drama at the core of it that tackles mental illness and homophobia but combining it with a fast-moving soap genre that has multiple plotlines of different genres — the music plotline, the crime plotline, the family plotline. That’s always how I envisioned the show, and you never know if it’s going to work. Cuts happen in so many different stages. … I was worried in the conceptual stages that I couldn’t sustain a narrative with just music plotlines. That was one of the reasons I put in a crime plotline. I told Lee I didn’t know if just the music storylines could take us through all of the episodes, but I thought if we had the crime [element] and the family and the music, they could all balance off of each other and be something special. I was worried it would be boring [otherwise]!

The show started out using flashbacks really heavily in the pilot, but as episodes went on, there seemed to be less of them. Did that come about because when you had to make cuts, anything that wasn’t moving the current story along was first to go?

The flashback motif stayed throughout the whole season but some episodes had more than others. There’s quite a few in the last two, but there were full scenes of flashbacks in the pilot, where it became more short sequences in some of the later episodes. One of my favorite flashbacks of the season happens in episode 11, where Lucious is working on the song, and we zoom in on little Jamal singing along with him, and we see this kid starting to get into music.

What did you think of the season finale? What are you looking forward to seeing in season two? Sound off in the comments section below and stay tuned to The Live Feed for more Empire coverage this week.

Twitter: @danielletbd

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‘Empire’ Cast, Creators Pick the Quintessential Songs of Season 1

Why Empire Music Not Topping Chart - H 2015

Chuck Hodes/FOX

The first season of Fox’s Empire was only 12 episodes, but in that short amount of time, the show delivered a number of long-lasting elements, from Cookie’s (Taraji P. Henson) quotables to her signature looks, and of course, its Timbaland-produced music.

The breakout drama from Danny Strong and Lee Daniels has featured a wave of buzzy music: From Hakeem’s (Bryshere Y. Gray) earworm single “Drip Drop” to the many versions of “You’re So Beautiful” to the track that started it all in the pilot episode, Jamal’s (Jussie Smollett) “Good Enough,” The Hollywood Reporter asked the cast and creators of Empire to select the song they thought most defined the show’s groundbreaking first season.

Read more Why Isn’t ‘Empire’s’ Music Topping the Billboard Charts?

“No Apologies” — Jussie Smollett & Yazz 
The first single that was released from Empire was this one, done so before the show had even premiered, despite the fact that it came from the second episode of the series and featured quite a few story spoilers. Grace Gealey (Anika) felt it was a track that embodies Empire as a whole because “it reflects how we’ve approached a lot of the topics. We’re not sorry for none of it. We had some things to say, and we’ve said them!”

“Tell the Truth” — Smollett
“It’s the most emotional, raw song, and it also speaks to all the lying that goes on in this show, in this family, and how at the essence, everybody just wants to be living in their truth, whether it’s accepted by everybody or not,” Kaitlin Doubleday (Rhonda) said.
 

“Drop Drop” — Yazz featuring Serayah McNeill
Gray told THR the quintessential song for Hakeem specifically was this raunchy single he and his sort-of girlfriend, definite collaborator Tiana (McNeill) released. “It embodies who Hakeem is. It’s very sexual and stuff like that; he’s a sexual person!”

“Good Enough” — Smollett
Smollett noted that this song was extremely representative of Jamal’s “struggle and journey for the season and said so much about where he was.” Strong seconded the notion, adding that the main story of the season was about the father-son dynamic between Lucious and Jamal. Jamal was the son most like Lucious, but he was also the one Lucious understood the least. Lucious needed to get to know his son for the man that he was, not the stereotype in his head. “I think that’s quintessentially what the story has been about this season: a father/son relationship [in which] the father doesn’t accept the son for who he is and the son is trying to get his father to accept him,” Strong said. Additionally, Daniels selected this song, too, noting that it was a moment in the pilot where everything this show is about from a filmmaking perspective collided. “It was a combination of Timbaland doing his thing where his world met my world met the cinema,” Daniels said.

Read more ‘Empire’s’ Jussie Smollett Breaks Down Jamal’s Coming Out

“Remember the Music” — Jennifer Hudson
Trai Byers
(Andre) chose this number from the end of the season not because it connected with his own storyline but because he felt it was one song that was relevant for everybody — on the show and off. “It’s a song about identity; it’s a song about growing; it’s a song about troubles and trials and tribulations and being able to overcome them to find yourself,” Byers said.

“You’re So Beautiful” — Smollett
Perhaps the biggest number in Empire‘s freshman run was this one. Not only was this song the lone track released to represent the eighth episode, but there have been multiple versions of it, too. Smollett pointed to this track as one that “clearly represents where Jamal is now, and that’s a beautiful thing.” Showrunner Ilene Chaiken explained the beauty in it being how far Jamal has come with his openness with his sexuality, as well as his ability to be a truly legendary artist. “I love the song; it gives me joy; but I also love the way it told a story,” Chaiken said. “We knew that Jamal was going to come out by singing — by doing a cover and changing the gender pronoun. We didn’t know in the beginning that it was going to be one of his father’s songs, but as the stories progressed, we came up with the idea of making it one of Lucious’ songs to create all of this extra drama around it. As Danny was getting to write this episode, we had already recorded ‘You’re So Beautiful,’ and there was a specific request for a song like that — a song for Jamal that was more upbeat, a more pop sensibility after he had done so many great soulful R&B ballads. We were getting close to the end, and we hadn’t used ‘You’re So Beautiful,’ so I said [we should] make it the coming out song, but then we had to go back and make an old school version and a family version, too.”

What was your favorite song of the season? Sound off in the comments below and stay tuned to The Live Feed for more Empire coverage after the season finale.

Twitter: @danielletbd

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