Filmmaker, playwright and actor Tyler Perry comments on TLC's first original scripted drama, 'Too Close to Home.'
Filmmaker, playwright and actor Tyler Perry comments on TLC's first original scripted drama, 'Too Close to Home.'
Filmmaker, playwright and actor Tyler Perry comments on TLC’s first original scripted drama, ‘Too Close to Home.’

It fascinates Tyler Perry to create programming structured around people and what results from their choices.

The dynamic actor, writer, producer, playwright and director’s latest small screen foray, Too Close to Home, is a dramatic series on TLC spanning eight episodes centered around a young woman (Danielle Savre) who abandons her family and trailer park origins for a new life on D.C.’s political scene. She fabricates coming from an affluent background but is forced to relocate back to her small town roots and confront pressing family issues following her sordid, headlining tryst with a reputable politician.

“I wanted to know what would happen if people really got to that level and had to go back to where they came from,” questions Perry, sliding inconspicuously into the show’s Atlanta premiere. “If you make bad choices, there’s going to be hell to pay. Everything is about how do you use your platform or the show without preaching or beating people over the head. She’s got this lovely, crazy, insane family, colorful people in the background as all of us have. I just wanted to explore that world and where it goes from here.”

Quietly resting his face on his left hand throughout the advanced preview, Perry, synonymous with creating and portraying the girthy, hell-raising, pistol-slanging matriarch, “Madea,” got his creative inspiration for Too Close to Home from admiring the work of veteran television producers Aaron Spelling and Norman Lear. The primetime series’ ensemble (and predominately white) cast features Heather Locklear, Matt Battaglia, Trisha Rae Stahl, Kelly Sullivan, Brooke Anne Smith and Brock O’Hurn.

The modest, self-assured New Orleans native responsible for producing high-grossing box office smashes such as I Can Do Bad All By Myself, the Why Did I Get Married? series, Daddy’s Little Girls, The Family That Preys, For Colored Girls, Good Deeds and Temptation: Confessions of a Marriage Counselor wastes no time acknowledging and praising his cast’s professionalism and humility.

“It was really phenomenal for me to have people this talented come along,” reiterates the blissful NAACP Image award recipient. “I got a chance to work everyday and have a great time.”

Perry preps the actors by starting with prayer. During casting, he thinks ingenuity overrides talent. “I look for truth,” insists Perry, now seated comfortably on a bar stool. “I don’t care if those actors are not incredible. They take me places that blow my mind. I want new faces and people who bring honesty. These actors work their asses off.”

The 46-year-old creator, humanitarian and fast-paced showrunner behind House of Payne, Meet the Browns, The Haves and the Have Nots, Love Thy Neighbor and If Loving You is Wrong, watched every program on TLC while he was negotiating Too Close to Home. Perry extracted certain attributes and dramatic elements from each program on the cable network to concoct the series.

Shot entirely on the media mogul’s newly developed Ft. McPherson production lot, Perry shares post-screening that he recruited a new cinematographer and constantly renovated numerous sets on the studio’s 330 acres (i.e. the Oval Office, trailer park and a farm) to give TLC’s first original scripted program more lush production aesthetics.

It was especially important for Perry to be consistent with his previous work by infusing subtle morality plays into Too Close to Home‘s subject matter. “I took elements from all the shows and put them together in one show,” he says seated next to the cast members minus Locklear. “I hope after everything is said and done, everything is all about your choices and the consequences for your choices.”

Oprah, Perry’s ally and close confidante, he says, is as equally as excited and supportive of Too Close to Home as he is. The humorous thespian and groundbreaking studio owner is not concerned about the race or ethnicity of the performers on any of his programs. He aspires for Too Close to Home, already renewed for a second season, to generate similar fanfare as The Haves and the Have Nots.

Perry additionally hopes viewers can see themselves in the plots but recognizes that Too Close to Home signals another chapter in his creativity. “It’s a different cast of characters and different group of people,” he says. “If you look at all of my shows, take a minute, study and see all of these are very different people who have their own lives and stories to tell.”

This post was written by Christopher A. Daniel, pop cultural critic and music editor for The Burton Wire. He is also a contributing writer for Urban Lux Magazine and Blues & Soul Magazine. Follow Christopher @Journalistorian on Twitter.

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