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MEET THE CAST

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Dear Dumbs,

Dear Dumbs,

Steven Yahr Playing Lee Hills

Skills: voice overing (at Bonaroo), martial arts, seeing the silver lining, accidentally joining a sixpart movie saga

Credits: “Octagona,” “Section 8,” “SoulHood Saga,” “Luke Hills” and “ Luke & Lee”

How did you get involved in the SoulHood Saga?

“Solo, Solominati, the one that plays Luke Hills, we’ve been friends since high school. We grew up together. He called me up, and I was here. He was like, ‘Hey, I need a ride to this movie shoot.” And it was for the first “SoulHood.” He was like, “We’re halfway done with production, but, he’s like, if you want, you can be an extra.” And I was like, “Well, if I’m going to be waiting on you anyways, I might as well.” And so, we got there. He introduced me to everybody. I could kind of see, with Los and, you know, some of the other guys that do film here, I could see, like, wheels turning. A few months went by and Solo called me up and he said, “Los wants to use you in the sequel for this movie as my brother.” I was, like, “Sure.” Up to that point, If you had asked me then or even before then, “Hey, how would you like to be an actor, I would have said hell no. It was never something I really thought about that I wanted to do. I mean, yeah, it looked like a cool idea, but I’m not a limelight type of guy, at least I don’t feel like I am, but then it just turns out, you know, I was really good at acting.”

How did you see the films progressing with each installment? How did you progress across the films?

“The quality of everybody’s acting increased with each film and even through the films because it’s all pretty much been the same cast. We’ve all become really really tight-knit like a family pretty much. I would compare us to like, you know, Adam Sandler has his little crew of people like if it’s his movie, you know these select people are going to be in it in some way, shape, or form. That’s kind of how things are with us because we’ve developed these relationships with these other actors, so we know how they act. We vibe off each other pretty well. I think that alone helps catapult the SoulHood Saga.”

MICHAEL ANDRE CARTER PLAYING TROY HILLS

Skills: singing, being a theater kid, winning Best Actor in the “Folio” Best of Readers Poll, being extremely punctual

Credits: “What Goes Around Comes Around,” “I Do I Don’t,” “First Coast Affair,” “Guilty Victim,” “Broad Day,” Single Sh*t (play), “The Color Purple” (play), “Wedlocked “(play), “Sibling Rivalry” (play), “What’s to Be Expected,” “The Lives We Live” (series), “Lotta Lies,” “Badge of Betrayal,” “Sacred The Movie,” “SoulHood Saga” and “ Luke & Lee”

What did you learn in school and how did it contribute to where you are now?

“I always did plays as a young guy. My mother kept me in plays because I sing, so she kept me in entertainment and stuff like that, so I did a lot of plays. I did The Wiz, The Wizard of Oz, Raisin in the Sun, and I did a couple out here. But when I was in the military, I used to sing with the military for a couple of years and I was always on stage performing, doing something that dealt with performing and things like that. And so, when I retired in 2017, a friend of mine […] he had called me to be in a film with Tall Paul Productions. And once I was in that film and I watched myself on the screen, I was like, oh wow, this would be something that I would be interested in and I met Carlos and we went from there.”

When I was watching Part 1 of the finale, I felt the anger in your character and a sense of betrayal. Does your military career fuel a bit of the aggression that we see in Troy and influence your acting?

“Yes, it does. My military career, kind of how I came up in Mississippi and stuff like that, the fighting, the anger, and things like that [influence my acting]. The military just teaches you how to channel that anger into something different. That’s what I’m able to do, so I let the beast out and I am able to channel it and place it somewhere else for positivity.”

LOUIE “BROADWAY LOUIE” ROBINSON PLAYING RICK

Skills: rapper, occasional singer, and overall natural performer, mega-multi-tasker, jokester

Credits: Lotta Lies, Badge of Betrayal, The Policy, How I Got 20, Off-Season, I Do I Don’t, Musicology, SoulHood Saga, Luke & Lee, L.Y.F.E; upcoming: Magick, Transformed, Voices in My Ear, Queen Pin III, Flesh and Greed, Never Too Late

Why Broadway Louie? What does the Broadway mean?

“So, I’m from Paterson, New Jersey. I was born on Broadway Ave., so I was born on Broadway Ave. I had a house that was on Broadway Ave. like right around the corner from my school. I’m walking home one day. I see smoke coming from around the corner. There’s a store right there next to my house, so I’m assuming it’s the store. As I get closer, I realize it’s actually my house, so that was like a family house where a lot of us lived at and in my mind, my life kind of changed from that moment because me and my mother got separated from our family, so we kind of moved on our own from house to house to house and never really settled from that, so Broadway is kind of like to keep me grounded and remember where I came from. And Louie is just my name.”

What are you showing or telling the Black community in Jacksonville with the Saga?

“[We’re] giving our community something else to believe in, not just the actual idea of the film, but the idea of us actually shooting a film in Jacksonville six times and highlighting different landmarks, highlighting the history, highlighting what we go through here, highlighting the poverty, highlighting everything that we’ve gone through, people dealing with families. The thing about it is, yes it’s in Jacksonville, but we go through these issues in every community, so it’s also showing them and relating, like ‘hey, we’re going through the same things you’re going through, we’re just doing it in Jacksonville.’ I think the big message is whatever you experience, you can grow out of it.”

TODD JACKSON JR. PLAYING TJ

Skills: also accidentally joining a 6-part movie saga, having let’s get it energy, fake chopping someone’s hand off

Credits: Off-Season, Tyler Perry’s Sistas (series), Black Aceldama (Series), Queen Pin II, Lotta Lies, My Wife and Me (series), Homeboys: MTC, SoulHood Saga, Luke Hills, Luke & Lee; upcoming: Da Bait, Queen Pin III

What does SoulHood mean to you?

“To me, when I think SoulHood, I instantly think that it’s something that’s going to make me feel good. When I hear the word soul, I immediately think that it’s going to be something that’s, you know, body-touching. Something that’s going to, you know, instantly touch your soul [...] I see where Carlos was going with it. I see it as a pamphlet, as a story. I see SoulHood as a story. It’s not a movie, it’s not a series, it’s a story. Carlos put together a story of, actually, it was ten individuals.”

What did you learn throughout all of these films?

“I learned teamwork, imma say that. Like I played sports all my life. I’ve always been, like, the person that the coach can depend on. Well, acting was something that was new to me and it was new to a lot of guys that were on the set and a lot of females that were on the set. We grew together. We taught each other things. We studied our script together. Some of us got there, like, we’re on the set and we’re literally like, ‘yo, let me see your phone real quick. Yo, can you text me the script.’ It’s, like, it’s a family and, you know, being with a cast for so long, it makes it easy.”

SOLOMON (SOLO) MINATI PLAYING LUKE HILLS

Skills: martial arts, loves challenges, roping family members into the film industry, accidentally giving away major movie spoilers

Credits: Octagona, Section 8, The Co-Signer, SoulHood Saga, Luke Hills, Luke & Lee

What was your most challenging experience on set?

“As far as challenging, that’s me. I like a challenge. I wouldn’t call anything a challenge. If it’s not a challenge, I can’t grow from it. In martial arts you want to be like that. You want to challenge yourself a little bit more every time in order to get better, so I don’t really see that there was a challenge ever making anything film-wise because I’m over there to have a good time. There’s a lot of other things that you can do to make money or that you can do for fun, but I like to do that, you know.”

What was your most fun experience on set?

“Ooh. The most fun we’ve had on set haha, geez, we’ve had a lot of fun times on set. I had a real good time in Miami. We had such a great time, I don’t know if anyone shared this story, but the van, we parked the van somewhere, just jumped out of the van, and we went to the beach. We’re flying the drone. We’re filming stuff and then we just started hanging out and we went to go back to the van and the van wasn’t there, so we were having a good time because we didn’t look at the tow away zone sign. We didn’t look at anything, we just parked and started having a great time, you know, for hours until the car was towed for hours already. But no, I don’t know if we had a one specific great time. I have a good time with those guys every time and it seems to get better because it’s deeper, especially because we’ve been in six movies together, you know what I mean. That’s literally hundreds of scenes together. We’ve been in a hundred scenes together. [We’ve] been working a lot. We have a lot of shared experiences and a lot of celebrations.”

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