November 22, 2017 The Skanner Page 7 Arts & Entertainment Destined cont’d from pg 7 Della Reese, of TV’s ‘Touched by an Angel,’ Dead at 86 Late-life TV fame followed long career as a singer and actress LOS ANGELES (AP) — Della Reese, the actress and gospel-influenced singer who in middle age found her greatest fame as Tess, the wise angel in the long-running televi- sion drama “Touched by an Angel,” has died at age 86. Reese’s co-star on the series, Roma Downey, said in a statement that the actress died peaceful- ly Sunday evening in her home in the Los Angeles area. No further details were included. Before “Touched by an Angel” debuted in 1994, Reese was mainly known as a singer, although she had costarred on “Chico and the Man,” ‘’Charlie and Company” and “The Royal Family” and host- ed her own talk show, “Della.” “Touched by an Angel” was a gamble for CBS from the start. The story of an apprentice angel (Roma Downey) and her supervisor (Reese) being sent to Earth to solve peo- ple’s problems appeared to have little chance in a TV world dominated by sitcoms and police dra- mas. The first season brought mediocre rat- ings, but slowly the show’s audience grew until it became one of television’s highest rat- ed dramas. It lasted until 2003. “Through her life and work she touched and inspired the lives of mil- lions of people. She was a mother to me and I had the privilege of work- ing with her side by side for so many years on ‘Touched By An Angel,’” Roma Downey wrote in a statement. “I know heav- en has a brand new angel this day.” She had been ordained by the Chicago-based Universal Foundation for Better Living, and when co-star Downey got married, Reese per- formed the ceremony. Reese’s singing career also began in church, ‘Destined’ Della Reese when she joined the ju- nior gospel choir at the Olivet Baptist Church in her hometown of De- troit. Soon she was sing- ing at other churches, at civic events and on the radio. When Mahalia Jack- son, known as The Queen of Gospel Music, came to Detroit, she needed a singer to replace a mem- ber of her troupe. She turned to Reese, who was only 13. Jackson was so im- pressed by the teenager’s voice that she enlisted her for a summer tour, and Reese went on to tour with her for five summers. In later years she would remark that she would never forget what she learned from the legendary gospel singer, including “how to communicate with peo- ple through song.” Reese is survived by her husband, Franklin Lett, and three children. The late AP Entertain- ment Writer Bob Thomas contributed to this report. FILM REVIEW: Returning WWII Vets Forge Unlikely Friendship across Color Line in ‘Mudbound’ By Kam Williams For The Skanner News D ateline: Missis- sippi, 1946, which means many of the Magnolia State’s soldier native sons are making the adjustment back to civilian life after serving overseas during World War II.. But the fighting isn’t over for Sergeant Ronsel Jackson (Jason Mitchell), a Black man reluctantly return- ing to the repressive Jim Crow system of segrega- tion. After all, since he had been willing to die for his country, Ronsel figures it’s reasonable to expect equality and all the rights of citizenship, racist tra- ditions notwithstand- ing. So, when he arrives home, he boldly enters the local general store through an entrance re- served for Whites. But despite still wear- ing his Army dress uni- form, the proud veteran is greeted with a hate- ful warning snarled by a seething customer. “You’re in Mississippi now, [N-word]! Use the back door, if you don’t want any trouble.” Ron- ‘Mudbound’ sel grudgingly obliges, ostensibly less fearful of direct harm from the el- derly white man than of the veiled threat leveled should he have the te- merity to cross the color line again. Ronsel can’t afford to take any chances, be- cause the intimidating bigot is Pappy McAllan (Jonathan Banks), the patriarch of the family which owns the farm where his parents (Mary J. Blige and Rob Mor- gan) presently reside as sharecroppers. Pappy’s elder son, Henry (Jason Clarke), subsequently pays the Jacksons a visit, demanding an apology for the transgression. The plot thickens when Pappy’s younger son, Ja- mie (Garrett Hedlund), a decorated Air Force pilot, comes back to the plantation with some new notions about race relations. He’s sudden- ly pro-integration after having fought alongside some brave Tuskegee Airmen. Thus unfolds Mud- bound, a searing South- ern saga based on Hil- lary Jordan’s best-selling, first novel of the same name. The movie marks the sophomore offering from director Dee Rees who made her own im- pressive debut with Pari- ah in 2011. Here, she coax- es a career performance out of Mary J. Blige, who might very well be re- membered come awards season. How did Nina Simone put it? ‘Mississippi God- dam!’ Excellent HHHH Rated R for nudity, eth- nic slurs, brief profanity and disturbing violence Running time: 134 min. Production Studios: Ele- vate Films / MMC Joule Films / Armory Films / Zeal Media Distributor: Netflix To see a trailer for Mud- bound, visit: TheSkan- ner.com. er jettisoning one-half Production Studio: and fleshing out the Whitewater Films / other into a full-length Tilted Windmill Pro- feature. Instead, we’re ductions / Confluential treated to a one-trick Films pony that repeatedly il- Distributor: XLrator lustrates the diverging Media fates of a guy who kept To see a trailer his nose clean and that for Destined, visit: of an identical strang- TheSkanner.com. er who ventured to the dark side. An amusing idea that runs out of steam not long after the premise is established. Fair H1/2 Unrated View movie trailers at Running time: 91 min. TheSkanner.com