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Tyler Perry Detours from Film, TV Career to Return to Stage

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Tyler Perry has come a long way since his first musical, "I Know I've Been Changed," played at a church-turned-theater in Atlanta.

 

In the intervening 12 years since that $12,000 investment, Perry has evolved into an undisputed mogul.

Actor. Director. Screenwriter. Author. Producer.

Before his financial success and fame, Perry, 40, earned a living working in restaurants and used-car lots.

In 2008, he placed No. 41 on Forbes' Celebrity 100 list after his three films that year grossed $130 million worldwide and cable network TBS bought his sitcom "Tyler Perry's House of Payne" for $200 million.

But it's Perry's signature creation, Mabel "Madea" Simmons, the wise-yet-argumentative, God-fearing, gun-toting grandmother -- based on Perry's mother and played by Perry in drag -- that has earned him high-end celebrity status and an enviable bank account.

Perry's standing in the industry is so respected that once he and Oprah Winfrey got involved in promoting "Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire," the critically well-regarded film received a crucial commercial thrust.

It's up for six Oscars next month.

Yes, it's been a fruitful decade-plus for a workaholic who used to have to sleep in his car. An overview of Perry's career MOVIES

Most of Perry's films, which he usually writes, directs, produces and stars in, haven't fared well critically. According to review compilation site Rotten Tomatoes, only two of his eight movies have scored above a 50 percent approval rating among top critics: 2008's "The Family That Preys" (51 percent) and last year's "I Can Do Bad All By Myself" (62 percent).

"Contrived," "visually pedestrian," "shallow" and "sloppy" are some of the kinder descriptions of his on-screen product.

But the high-wattage names attached to most of his films -- Angela Bassett, Taraji P. Henson, Janet Jackson and Derek Luke among them -- and subject matter that millions relate to, have buoyed box-office receipts.

His next project, "Why Did I Get Married Too," is due April 2.

Perry's characters are frequently bawdy but usually work through a pattern of sin and redemption. Based on grosses, clearly, someone appreciates his work.

•2005: "Diary of a Mad Black Woman." Gross: $50.6 million. Rotten Tomatoes score: 28 percent favorable. •2006: "Madea's Family Reunion." Gross: $65 million. RT score: 27 percent favorable. •2007: "Why Did I Get Married?" Gross: $56 million. RT score: 50 percent favorable. •2009: "Madea Goes to Jail." Gross: $90 million. RT score: 28 percent.

TV

In 2006, Perry expanded his empire by branching into TV.

His mainstream appeal was solidified when, after a 10-show syndicated run of his "Tyler Perry's House of Payne" scored attractive numbers, TBS signed a 100-episode, $200 million deal with Perry to air the show.

Its first two episodes on TBS in June 2007 broke a cable-sitcom record, with 5.2 million and 5.8 million viewers tuning in.

In January 2009, "Meet the Browns," based on Perry's play and movie of the same name, debuted on TBS to more than 4 million viewers.

If you haven't seen either show, a primer:

•"Tyler Perry's House of Payne" (airs at various times on TBS): The show revolves around the Payne family, who live in suburban Atlanta. Perry's "Madea" made appearances the first three seasons, but it's the character of Curtis "Pops" Payne who steals the attention. An arrogant, belligerent sort, Payne is a fire chief who excels at his job, despises technology and relies on his patient wife, Ella. •"Meet the Browns" (new episodes air at 9 p.m. Wednesdays on TBS): Perry's latest small-screen foray is self-created and produced and is also set in Atlanta. David Mann and Tamela Mann, who starred as Mr. Brown and his daughter, Cora Simmons, in the play and film versions, reprise their roles.


SOURCE: Richmond Times Dispatch - Melissa Ruggieri
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