
Jenifer Lewis had no problem sharing the details of her one night stand with actor John Voight, her sex addiction, and other issues that went on in her life in her new memoir The Mother of Black Hollywood.
Check out this article from Page Six:
Jenifer Lewis bared her soul in her memoir “The Mother of Black Hollywood,” including the details of her sex addiction and a one-night stand with Jon Voight.
In the chapter titled “A Doll Named ‘Killer,’” Lewis, 60, recalls performing at Studio 54 one year for an AIDS charity and catching Voight’s eye.
Lewis, who currently stars on “Black-ish,” writes that she and Voight began their night with a walk through Central Park and took a romantic carriage ride.
“We talked about being from families of hard workers,” she writes. “We stared into each other’s eyes and kissed. We went to his room on the 35th floor of the Essex House. I was spellbound by his sensitivity and kindness … Let’s just say he was a real ‘Midnight Cowboy.’”
Lewis told Page Six it was a night to remember.
“It was a beautiful night. Hansome carriage ride. We walked. And he was very sweet, he walked me home,” she said before digging into his political views. “Of course now he’s a Republican and goes with the NRA.”
Lewis said she never wanted more from Voight, who at the time had won the Best Actor Oscar a few years before in 1979. “I knew that was a one-night stand,” she elaborated. “That was just some young, part of the sex addiction, part of the drama of being in my 20s … It was ‘Midnight Cowboy,’ child, please. I went in!”
While Lewis isn’t afraid of possible backlash that may come from her book, some of the names have been changed, others haven’t. “Come for me, bitch,” she ribbed. “I’m right here. I know who I am. I’m not afraid of that because I know who I am.”
In the book, Lewis discusses her sex addiction, her bipolar disorder and 17-plus years of therapy to overcome it all.
“This book damn near killed me,” she quipped. “I have kept a journal since the seventh grade. Day today. I had to go back and read all 63 of them. I’m 60 years old. But I had three filled with feelings. It was the biggest challenge of my life to write this book. There were several times I wanted to quit. It was a very difficult process, but I continued because that’s really all I really know to do.”
In the memoir — which also covers several dark moments from her past, including being molested by a pastor and calling out Jane Pauley for insulting her on the “Today” show — she also gives credit to Bette Midler for helping her career along.
“Bette has always been there for me,” Lewis said. “In my younger years, they were calling me the black Bette Midler. The quote was I was a combination of Bette Midler, Whoopi Goldberg and Mahalia [Jackson].”
If you want to grab a copy of Mother Of Black Hollywood, then get ready for November 14, 2017, when it will be in stores.
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25 Books Every African-American Should Read
25 photosLaunch gallery
1. “Annie Allen” by Gwendolyn Brooks
1 of 25
2. “Up From Slavery” by Booker T. Washington
2 of 25
3. “Assata: An Autobiography” by Assata Shakur
3 of 25
4. “Go Tell It On The Mountain” by James Baldwin
4 of 25
5. “Their Eyes Were Watching God” by Zora Neale Hurston
5 of 25
6. “Dreams From My Father” By Barack Obama
6 of 25
7. “Breath, Eyes, Memory” by Edwidge Danticat
7 of 25
8. “Hidden Figures” by Margot Lee Shetterly
8 of 25
9. “Beloved” By Toni Morrison
9 of 25
10. “Half Of A Yellow Sun” by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
10 of 25
11. “Invisible Man” by Ralph Ellison
11 of 25
12. “I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings” by Maya Angelou
12 of 25
13. “Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass” by Fredrick Douglas
13 of 25
14. “Song Of Solomon” by Toni Morrison
14 of 25
15. “Black Boy” by Richard Wright
15 of 25
16. “Role Of Thunder Hear My Cry” by Mildred D. Taylor
16 of 25
17. “The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man” by James Weldon Johnson
17 of 25
18. “Kindred” by Octavia E. Butler
18 of 25
19. “The Help” by Kathryn Stockett
19 of 25
20. “The Secret Life Of Bees” By Sue Monk Kidd
20 of 25
21. “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison
21 of 25
22. “The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr. ” by Martin Luther King Jr. Edited by Clayborne Carson
22 of 25
23. “The Blacker The Berry” by Wallace Thurman
23 of 25
24. “The New Jim Crow” by Michelle Alexander
24 of 25
25. “I Am Not Sidney Poitier” by Percival Everett
25 of 25
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