Jennifer Hudson Takes Home Best Supporting Actress at NAACP Image Awards

J. Matthison
Academy Award winner Jennifer Hudson is on a winning streak. Hudson won Best Supporting Actress for her role in "Dreamgirls" at the NAACP Image Awards on Friday (March 2, 2007).

"There is nothing like being recognized and honored by your own." said Hudson, who won in the same category at the Oscars on Sunday.

Hudson first gained notice as one of the finalists on the third season of the FOX television series American Idol.

Hudson was born in Chicago, Illinois. She attended Dunbar Vocational Career Academy, where she graduated in 1999.
In November 2005, Hudson was cast in the prized role of Effie White, the role originally created in a legendary Broadway performance by Jennifer Holliday, for the film adaptation of the musical Dreamgirls. Hudson won the role over hundreds of professional singers and actresses including, ironically, Fantasia Barrino who had beaten out Hudson, among thousands of others, to win American Idol. Hudson had to gain 20 pounds in order to play the role. Filming of Dreamgirls began on January 9, 2006, and the film went into limited release on December 25, 2006 and national release on January 12, 2007.

Hudson has won particular praise not only for her unabashedly curvy figure, but also for her show-stopping onscreen rendition of the hit song, "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going", the signature song of the role, which had earlier been recorded, and had already reached the status of musical standard, because of the definitive performance of Jennifer Holliday. The New York Observer described Hudson's performance of the song as "five mellifluous, molto vibrato minutes that have suddenly catapulted Ms. Hudson... into the position of front-runner for the best supporting actress Oscar." Newsweek said that when moviegoers hear Hudson sing the song, she "is going to raise goose bumps across the land." New York Daily News proclaimed, "When she sings 'And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going' -- one of the most heartfelt cries of pain ever written for a musical -- Hudson inscribes her name on an Oscar." Variety wrote that Hudson's performance "calls to mind debuts like Barbra Streisand in Funny Girl or Bette Midler in The Rose, with a voice like the young Aretha."

As Effie White, Hudson has garnered more than twenty four awards and nominations from film critics as Best Supporting Actress and Breakthrough Performer of 2006.

She won a Golden Globe Award as Best Actress in a Supporting Role, dedicating the award to Florence Ballard (upon whom her Dreamgirls character was based), as well as friends Jasmine Trias, Fantasia Barrino, and the rest of the American Idol Season 3 finalists. In addition, she has been named Best Supporting Actress by the Broadcast Film Critics Association and also by the Screen Actors Guild. On February 7, 2007, Hudson was named Best Supporting Actress and Best Breakthrough Performance by the Black Reel Awards, awarded by the Foundation For The Advancement Of African-Americans In Film.

On February 25, 2007, she won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in this film. At 25 years old, Hudson became the eighth youngest winner of the Best Supporting Actress Oscar. She also became only the third African-American to win the Best Supporting Actress Oscar, after Hattie McDaniel for Gone with the Wind and Whoopi Goldberg for Ghost. During her acceptance speech Hudson said through tears of joy, "Oh my God, I have to just take this moment in. I cannot believe this. Look what God can do. I didn't think I was going to win" "If my grandmother was here to see me now. She was my biggest inspiration." She also concluded her speech by thanking Jennifer Holliday.

Hudson's version of "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going" debuted at number 98 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the January 13, 2007 issue. The "Dreamgirls" track has since become Hudson's first Top 10 hit, albeit not on the Hot 100, as the track registered a new peak at #7 on the Billboard Hot Adult R&B Airplay chart on February 24, 2007; the track also entered new peak positions on the Hot R&B/HipHop Songs and Hot R&B/HipHop Airplay charts, rising 17-16 on both surveys. Remixes of the song saw Jennifer reach the #2 position on Billboard's Hot Dance Club Play Chart.

SOURCES:

Yahoo! News (http://www.yahoo.com)

Published by J. Matthison

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