Thursday, April 16, 2020
Talking Money with Actor Wendell Pierce
Talking Money with Actor Wendell Pierce Wendell Pierce is best known for his roles on acclaimed HBO series The Wire and Treme, and countless other stage and screen acting roles. But his recent book The Wind In The Reeds tells a personal story of place, family, art, and commerce, culminating in his community redevelopment work in his native New Orleans. Itâs a moving tale â" and a great excuse to talk money. Your book is persuasive about why you had to get so deeply involved in helping redevelop New Orleansâ Pontchartrain Park â" a black middle-class neighborhood where you grew up and that was devastated by the flooding after Katrina. But on the personal financial level: Did this entail career sacrifices? Iâve been pretty fortunate to work consistently for 30 years â" but the cash flow is always inconsistent. Youâll make what turns out to be your annual income in a couple of months, and then be unemployed for six months, then work for a week, and so on. The business forces you to become an expert at cash flow. So I never really saw the work I was doing in New Orleans as a displacement of my career. I always knew the two could coexist. Itâs time-consuming, and itâs frustrating at times. But I knew that going it. I didnât think that I could complain, given the legacy of what my parentsâ generation had gone through to get that neighborhood to exist. Homeownership is the first step in building a familyâs wealth. Yes, and you have a nice anecdote about how that was comparatively rare for black families at the time, and how that was perceived: Your mom telling you and your siblings, âWeâre not rich, in case you donât know. Youâre poor.â But did you feel poor, rich, middle-class? I was taught that you reap what you sow. If there was something you desired, and it cost money, then you worked and did what was necessary to afford it. My first trip to Europe, I wanted to go with the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts drama department, so I raised the money by having a disco, as we called it in the â70s â" a party, basically. I charged admission, and used the profit to fund the trip. So, I wasnât raised rich or poor; financial well-being was associated with your work ethic. You left New Orleans for Julliard and then started to get real acting jobs pretty promptly. Did you have a moment getting that first big paycheck? For about a year after Julliard I had imposter syndrome: âI canât believe theyâre paying me.â But after a year I realized, âWait a minute, youâve only waited tables for two weeks. Youâve paid your rent by being an actor.â So it wasnât one particular paycheck, it was coming to the end of that year and declaring, to myself: âIâm a professional actor.â Once I did that, a lot of insecurities and fears went away. And you started thinking about cash-flow â" or did that take time? I believe in investment and growth. Investment for me is real estate. I own property in New Orleans, Los Angeles, New York, and rental property in Baton Rouge. And Iâve found growth in real estate to be a lot more predictable, for me, than the stock market has been. Growth means starting a business. A lot of actors say, âOh I want to direct.â But youâre still a hired hand. My leap was to producing. First off-Broadway, then Broadway, and now Iâm producing a film, called âBilly.â A producer produces: Youâre the owner. As crazy as it sounds, my steady gig is being an actor. The risk is all in the business and community development â" thatâs whatâs difficult and ever-changing. That brings us back to your work in New Orleans â" your nonprofit Pontchartrain Park Development Corporation, efforts to bring new food businesses to neglected parts of town, and so on. I really believe that the social-justice movement of the 21st century is economic development. I feel you can stop a bullet with a job. Even thinking about how to respond to this horrific ideology of the jihadists and what just happened in Paris â" you can combat that with economic development, with opportunity. I know for me the choices were clear: I had opportunities. The first wealth that you get in life is knowledge and opportunity. Thatâs where my parents told me, and they made sure that I was always rich. This interview edited for length and clarity. Rob Walker (@notrobwalker) is a contributor to Design Observer and The New York Times. Read more Talking Money with⦠â¦podcasting pioneer Roman Mars â¦best-selling chronicler of financial scandal Bethany McLean
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