“I’m quite a perfectionist. I think I’ve over the years been able to release some of it … there are times when that really works in your favor,” she tells NPR.
After earning a Tony award for her work in the play Caroline, or Change, Rose drew critical acclaim for her portrayal of “Maggie the Cat” in the Broadway revival of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. She was also thrilled to be the voice of Disney’s first black princess in the long-awaited animated film, The Princess and the Frog.
“I have always wanted to do a voice and it is a joy,” she says, adding that she is happy that black children will have a cartoon role model that looks like them.
“I think it’s a wonderful thing to not to have to throw the towel over your head to create some hair that matches the television screen.”
“I was a Disney kid,” she told Vanity Fair, “My first Disney film was Fantasia, which I thought was phenomenal. I just loved that world. The world of voices, and pretend.”
“I remember talking to my mother and seeing Snow White and wondering if there’d ever be ‘Chocolate Brown’ or something like that. But my parents were very good at making sure I had dolls that looked like me, and books with brown children in them, and birthday cards with brown children on them. They were very aware. When you discount a child from fantasy, it’s a very strong statement. You think, Wow, somebody made an entire movie with elves, and trees that talk, and things that fly, and there was no room for me.”
But Disney made room for her and it paid off with being critically acclaimed and one of the highest grossing princess movies in the last decade.
Now, the busy actress doesn’t let anything stop her – not even her asthma.
Rose joined the American Lung Association to share her story and speak out for those with asthma.
Asthma is one of the most common chronic diseases among children, affecting some seven million kids in America. But it can also strike adults. Anika was one of them, and she remembers it well.
Check Out: The New Spa Treatment You Must Try
“It was my last year in grad school. I couldn’t stop coughing, and couldn’t clear my chest. I had several courses of antibiotics, but to no avail,” Anika explained. “I had a performance where I sang a song that…
… I’d been singing for some time and was completely off pitch, losing my breath and embarrassed. By the end of the night I had no voice left.”
“I went back to the doctor and was shocked when he told me that I ‘may have asthma.’ A second opinion and an allergy test confirmed that I had asthma, and was allergic to cats, dust mites and some types of trees,” she said.
MUST READ: Stop Coughing This Winter!
Anika still had doubts. She thought asthma only happened to children, and had always lived around cats without any allergic reaction. But the reality of her condition soon hit home, in a very personal way.
“I didn’t believe the doctor. Then one day I was sitting in my living room and I kept hearing this high-pitched whistle – one of those background noises that can drive you batty! I went around the house checking the stove, the heater and even turned off the TV. I finally realized it was me. It was my chest whistling! That was the beginning of my journey with asthma, which attacks the very thing that makes my living – my voice, my air.”
For more information on how to fight asthma, click here.