Tyler Perry is still airing out his thoughts about the music industry and its mistreatment of Black women following his recent comments at Angie Stoneβs funeral. And letβs just say...heβs still standing ten toes down on his stance.
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For context, Perry was selected to give the eulogy at Stoneβs funeral a week ago. During his touching sermon, he harped on how heβd grown weary of how Black artists like Stone never really received fair compensation or recognition for all they contributed over the course of their career. He also let on that while he didnβt have a personal relationship to the βNo More Rain (In This Cloud)β singer, he paid for all her funeral expenses.
βAll of those years, all of those songs, all of that money that was owed to her β where is it? Itβs wrong, this is wrong, and Iβm tired of seeing us struggle and go through things and work hard and not reap the benefits of what we were supposed to reap,β he said in part, per Atlanta BlackStar.
Now, in a new interview with Extra ahead of the New York premiere of his new film, βDuplicity,β it seems Perryβs sentiments have yet to leave his mind and he brought up other Black women artists and actors whoβve experienced similar trajectories.
βIβm tired of seeing 60-, 70-, 80-year-old women out onstage performing and theyβve been in a business with all these number one hits. I had one that said to me, βWell, one day Iβll be a millionaire,β and had been in the business all of those years,β Perry explained. βItβs heartbreaking for me. Thatβs why I took care of Cicely Tyson the last 15 years of her life. Iβm an empath and I cannot stand to see people mistreated, misused, abused, when itβs so easy to just do the right thing.β
He ended by stressing the importance of doing the right thing for the industry and to abide by the contractual obligations that they present to their clients and roster.
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