Uzo Aduba feared the worst during police stop
Actress Uzo Aduba once feared for her life as a college student after she was stopped by two plainclothes New York City policemen.
The Orange is the New Black star was in the Big Apple when she was told a person matching her description was accused of vandalizing property, but she is convinced she was stopped because she is black.
"I was taken aback," she recalls to Haute Living magazine. "I was
backing up slowly because I thought I was about to get raped,
mugged, killed. My instinct was to run. I wasn't really interested
in taking that encounter lying down, so to speak."
"I knew what they were saying I was responsible for couldn't be
more fictitious...," she continues. "I was like, 'Someone matching
my description who was wearing a bright red T-shirt that says
Switzerland on the front and a yellow backpack that says Jamaica on
it? Come on.' If only they had opened my backpack, they would have
seen the complete works of Shakespeare in there, which I was
reading for (college). I couldn't have been more (of a) theater
kiddie."
The 35-year-old subsequently ran away from the police officers and
called for help.
"I remember thinking I did not want to have my dignity taken from
me that day," she says. "I walked away from that situation with my
life, but I was also keenly aware that this was the first time that
this had ever happened to me."
Now Uzo is able to tackle many of the racial injustices she sees
going on in her hit prison drama.
"We're watching on our show what is happening right now in our
world," she continues. "We didn't shoot this yesterday; we shot it
a year ago. (Show creator Jenji Kohan) is someone who knows where
we are as a society and wants to address it in such a magnificent
way. She's excellent in holding up mirrors to people's faces."
For the Emmy award-winning actress, that also means being able to
use her character, Suzanne 'Crazy Eyes' Warren, to humanise what is
going on in society.
"I try to go to a place of expression or giving voice to the people
or things that I feel have no voice," she explains. "I try to reach
inside the stomach of the people who are lost, the people who feel
oppressed, the people who feel misunderstood and just try, to the
best of my ability, to let them sing."
"That's the beauty of art," she adds. "All I ever want to do with
my work is give it out, not take it in. I just want to give it
away. That's the easiest way I can express myself."