in 1970 as Dana Elaine Owens. Her father was a Newark
policeman, her mother a member of Newark's famed Jubilee Choir.
She grew up a polite child, who, at eight, was bestowed with an
Arabic nickname, thanks to the area's ethnic population. "In
Newark, a lot of people have Arabic nicknames, because the
names have meaning," she explains. "Latifah means sensitive,
kind, and nice, and I thought that pretty much fit who I
was."
As a teen she worked at Burger King, starred in a high school
production of The Wiz, and sold records at the Whiz record
chain. But then something happened, as it does to so many young
people in this city where music rises up from the streets. She
began to sing, and then she began to rap, serving as a human
beat box with a group called Ladies Fresh.
Soon they were selling her single - "Wrath of My Madness," with
its flip side "Princess of the Posse" - at the Whiz. Then
record company suits began making the pilgrimage from Manhattan
to Newark, contracts in hand. When she was 17 and about to sign
a deal, Latifah added another moniker from her Jersey
upbringing: Queen. "My momma told me I was one, and every man
should treat me with that respect," she explains.
Thus, Queen Latifah was born, and her first full-length CD, All
Hail the Queen, was released to strong reviews. Hollywood would
soon beckon with roles in TV (
The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air,
Living Single) and movies (
Jungle Fever, Bringing Down
the House). This month, she stars as New York's fastest
cabbie, helping a cop chase a gang of bank robbers in
Taxi, an action/comedy costarring Jimmy Fallon.
Still, despite all her fame and fortune, Latifah's devotion to
her hometown has never strayed.
"Everything starts with Newark," she says. "Newark is the
heart."
"Okay," I tell her. "You hooked me through breakfast and Branch
Brook Park. But I'm heading back across the Hudson if you can't
convince me to stay with some culture."
Latifah doesn't miss a beat.
"We have a great museum, the Newark Museum, as well as the
Newark Library. They're right next door to each other."
Right. I'd heard about the Bruce Springsteen retrospective the
Newark Museum put on earlier this year, I say.
"I've grown up at the museum," she says. "It's a great place to
take kids, because they have a lot of interactive stuff and
things to fascinate the mind. Not just history, but cool ways
of showing it. Little gadgets and all kinds of stuff that would
turn on a kid's mind.
"Another place you'd like to go is the New Jersey Performing
Arts Center. It's a great place to catch a show. It's a
brand-new facility. They also have a fabulous restaurant
attached to it, the Theater Square Grill. Every year, they have
a great Christmas show at the Performing Arts Center. My mom
actually sings in the choir. So we go every year to the
Christmas special and it's great. Every time the snow comes
down on that stage, I feel like a little kid. I go for the fake
snow and that choir."
Latifah is at the
forefront of
what
The New York Times called a "reawakening"
in Newark. "Besides an economic resurgence and ambitious
real-estate developments, Newark is seeing a much less
publicized flowering of artists, writers, and musicians -
honest-to-goodness bohemians," reported the
Times. "It
may be transforming itself into a cool city."
And the Queen herself is part of that. "We're trying to put
together some affordable housing, as well as some commercial
development," she says. "Primarily, my dream is to make Newark
beautiful, to put some beautiful homes there, and kind of get
more of a middle-income population moving back into the
downtown area."
She insists that the distance from her current home in
Hollywood to her real home in Newark isn't all that far.
"I'll tell you one reason why you should come to Newark," she
says. "The first film was invented in Newark, New Jersey.
Invented and created. So if it wasn't for Newark, our nice
little industrial town, Hollywood might not be here."
When I dare ask for proof, for documentation, she says, "All
you gotta do is go to
www.NewarkNewJersey.com, a
website the city has that will give you the whole rundown about
what Newark is about."
She's quickly back on her Newark sales pitch. After breakfast
and Branch Brook Park, we'd resume shopping, she says. "You
can't beat downtown Newark. You've got all the clothes you want
and you can actually haggle with people."
"You mean, like you can say, 'I'll give you $5 for that $10
item?' " I inquire.
"Sure," she says. "When you're shopping in certain parts of
Manhattan, you ain't making no deals. The price is the
price."
Specifically, Dr. Jay's and Lady Dr. Jay's are her spots, she
says. "Every time my trainer comes in from L.A., she goes out
of her mind when she goes into Lady Dr. Jay's. It's like a
sporting goods store, but she can never find half the things
they have in this one store in all of L.A. And she could never
get these kind of deals."
"All this shopping is making me hungry," I tell her.
"One of Jersey's favorite foods," she announces, "is the
Italian hot dog, or an Italian sausage on a quarter piece of
round bread. You can get anything you want on it: sautéed
onions, peppers, ketchup, the works. There are a bunch of
places you can get it, including right on Bransford Place and
Holiday Street."
"And what does Newark have to drink?" I ask.
"Now there's a good question," she answers. "You can get drinks
at the Theater Square Grill, or you can go right across the
street to the Robert Treat Hotel bar and get pretty much
anything you like. Me, I like El Patron."
"A few shots of tequila might make me forget New York City," I
suggest.
"I don't think you'll make it back after too many of those, so
you'll have to crash at my place," she says. "But you shouldn't
be doing all that drinking on an empty stomach anyway," she
continues, as she begins rattling off more dining options.
First and foremost is Maize, the restaurant at the Robert Treat
Hotel. "You can get some Asian dishes, some American, some
French/Italian. It's a great mixture," says Latifah. "The head
chef there really has it going on." But the restaurant she says
that would best convince me to forget the Big Apple is John's
Place. "We gotta go to John's and get us some soul food," she
says. "There is no soul food in Manhattan as good as John's
Place in midtown Newark. I'm sorry, I have eaten at all the
spots. It's good, it's clean, it's tasty. Baked chicken and the
best short ribs around. It's also a great bar, and they make a
peach daiquiri that's off the hook."
Okay, enough, I'm telling her. It'll be midnight by now, and
I'll have to get back to New York.
"Oh, we would find an after party," she says. "The good thing
is, midnight is too early. You don't even go to a club until
midnight. Clubs don't close until 4 in the morning in New
Jersey, so you don't have to worry about that. You could sleep
at my house, 'cause we're hanging out."
So I imagine myself waking up in the palace of the Queen,
attempting to slip out the door before she rises and begins
hard-selling Newark anew. But I'm too late for that. She's
blocking the doorway before I can make a move, all dressed for
a day at the beach.
"We would get up around 9, have breakfast, and then drive out
to Jersey's beaches. We have some of the best beaches around,"
she brags. "We would go to Belmar or Point Pleasant. Or maybe
even Seaside Heights. They have a nice amusement park. If we go
to Point Pleasant, we would go onto the boardwalk, where the
stores sell saltwater taffy. Nobody makes it better than we do
in New Jersey."
We'll race into the sea, the salty spray drenching our hair.
"The water is nice and clean," she insists. "We have so many
beaches, and they're all really long and wide, and not
overcrowded. There's good surf. You can get good four- to
five-foot waves out there on a regular day. There's jet skiing,
boating, and really good fishing in Jersey. We would definitely
have to drop a jet ski in the water and play around a bit."
We'll be hungry after our swim, she says, so it's back to the
boardwalk, where a cornucopia awaits. "I go to the beach to
eat," she says. "I go there for fried shrimp, fried calamari,
pizza, and, of course, hot dogs. You can get all that at Point
Pleasant, Belmar, or Seaside Heights. Or you could go to Long
Branch or Asbury Park."
"Honestly, Latifah," I interject, "thanks for everything, but I
have to …"
"You'd be tired from swimming," she continues, undeterred, "so
you'd have to relax for a minute and maybe sack out on the
beach for a while. Or if you were really up for some fun, we
would drive right on down to Great Adventure. That's Six Flags,
man! There are rides there that would scare you [to death]. If
you want to see some animals, they have a huge safari park, and
there's a water park nearby."
After that, she insists we have dinner in Ironbound, the
neighborhood where she once lived, now a melting pot of
Spanish, Brazilian, and Portuguese culture, whose dozens of
restaurants are all heartily endorsed by the Queen.
"Spain is probably my favorite," she says. "One of my favorite
appetizers is their garlic shrimp. There's gotta be about 50
shrimp in garlic and olive oil. Another one of the staples, of
course, is the paella. Both Spain and another place called
Iberia are known for their fresh seafood, lobster, and all
kinds of fish dishes. They've got good steaks down there, too.
You'll find waiters dressed in white shirts and vests with the
little bolero jackets. They usually have a white napkin over
their arms and are ready to serve."
Once dinner is done, and before Latifah can lure me to a house
party raging until dawn, I'm back on the train to New York. I
envision her running alongside the track as the train begins to
roll.
Take a walk on the wild side! she seems to be
admonishing me.
Come to Newark! Join the renaissance!
And I'm leaping off the train, surrendering to Latifah,
succumbing to Newark.
Because where else can you party in the palace of a queen?
On The Road With Queen
Latifah