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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

With movies, the man is ready to usher in a whole new career


Usher
 (The Spokesman-Review)
Roger Moore The Orlando Sentinel

Usher Raymond IV just turned 27. That’s a pretty good time to step back, maybe take stock of his life.

“That’s kind of what I’m doing right now,” the R&B singer says. “Stepping back from the music, a little, just to see what’s there.”

He has a new three-disc DVD based on his “Truth Tour,” with a behind-the-scenes documentary, which he narrates, and footage of his blockbuster concert stop in Atlanta, his hometown.

There’s a clothing line, custom gift cards, and more copies of his hit CDs – “Confessions,” “8701” – to move.

And a new movie, “In the Mix,” which opened Wednesday.

The man gets around.

“You know, I was just in Orlando,” he says.

And guess what he was doing?

“Shopping.”

It’s a standing joke among his fans. Usher runs late to this chat show or that autograph signing because he loves to shop. He’s so personable, a funny blend of too-cocky and self-deprecating, that he manages this without being obnoxious – even when he’s buying things his fans could only dream of.

It’s good to be Usher, what with the Top Ten hits, the sold-out tours, and now a major motion picture.

The move to movies isn’t a sudden one. A performer since childhood, he has dabbled in films, from “The Faculty” (1998) to “Texas Rangers” (2001).

But “In the Mix” is a starring role, “a guy I could relate to, a guy I think my fans can relate to,” he says.

Darrell, his character, is a New York club DJ who saves the life of a mob boss (Chazz Palminteri) by accident.

The mobster puts Darrell on the job, protecting his fetching daughter (Emmanuelle Chriqui). And, as they say, the sparks fly.

“I want to be a little bit of everything on the screen,” Usher says. “A little romantic, a little funny, maybe a little tough, too.”

The romantic thing comes easily. Famous for his onstage bumps and grinds and PG-13 pop – songs like “My Boo” and “You Make Me Wanna”– he plays to packed, screaming, mostly female audiences from Atlanta to Adelaide.

Usher has had sound advice as he branches out into more than just music. His godfather is Tony-winning “triple threat” Ben Vereen, an actor who could sing and dance as well as act.

“Ben gives me advice on everything,” says Usher. “People talk about me doing things very similar to the way Will Smith did them.

“But as much as I respect what Will’s done in movies, I’m more about the music and the dancing, right now. Ben is my mentor.”

The discipline it takes to polish dancing moves, to bend his voice to that perfect girls-will-squeal croon, is good preparation for the film world, he says.

He has the focus to do the work, to manage a career that includes all manner of products, including his own record label with a growing stable of rising stars.

And he has the need for work. Any man shopping for jets has some pretty serious overhead.

He has a line he likes to use in explaining that: “I am, like the DVD says, a ‘single black male addicted to retail.’ “

The birthday bunch

Actor Ricardo Montalban is 85. Soul singer Percy Sledge is 65. Actor John Larroquette is 58. Singer Amy Grant is 45. Actress Jill Hennessey is 37. Actress Christina Applegate is 34. Presidential daughters Barbara and Jenna Bush are 24.