By Kam Williams, Special to the NNPA from the Afro-American
Meagan Good stars in NBC’s midseason drama Deception as Joanna Padget Locasto, a San Francisco narcotics detective with childhood ties to a notoriously secretive and powerful New York family, the Bowers. When her childhood best friend, Vivian Bowers, is found dead under mysterious circumstances, Joanna is enlisted by the FBI to help to find the killer, agreeing to go undercover into the opulent lifestyle she thought she’d left behind.
Meagan has become one of Hollywood’s most sought-after young actresses, recently completing a season-long arc on Showtime’s acclaimed series Californication, as well as a role in Think Like a Man, the feature film based on the best-selling book by Steve Harvey. In 2011, she starred alongside Angela Bassett and Paula Patton in Jumping the Broom.
The versatile actress has mastered a variety of film genres, ranging from horror, with The Unborn, opposite Odette Annable and Gary Oldman, to comedy, with The Love Guru, co-starring Mike Myers, Jessica Alba and Justin Timberlake. She rose to fame as a result of her work in Stomp the Yard, but was recognized earlier for her acclaimed performance opposite Samuel L. Jackson in the eerie family drama Eve’s Bayou, for which she received an NAACP Image Award nomination.
Additional feature film credits include the critically-acclaimed cult film Brick, opposite Joseph Gordon-Levitt, You Got Served, D.E.B.S, Waist Deep with Tyrese Gibson, Queen Latifah’s The Cookout, Biker Boyz, Deliver Us from Eva, Friday with Ice Cube, Roll Bounce and the horror film Saw V.
Besides acting, Meagan has produced independent films such as Miles from Home, which she starred in opposite actor/director Ty Hodges. The picture screened at the Pan African Film & Arts Festival, the Washington D.C.
Independent Film Festival and the Atlanta Film Festival, where it swept all of the awards—Best Feature, Best Director, Best Actor and Actress (Good). More recently, she produced and starred in Video Girl, the Gia-esque film that depicts the sordid and misunderstood life of a music video superstar.
Born in Panorama City, Calif., Megan began appearing in commercials at the age of 4 and to date has made more than 60. She made her prime-time television debut on the WB series Raising Dad, and her first major television role was as a regular on the hit show Cousin Skeeter.
Meagan recently married DeVon Franklin, an executive for Columbia Pictures who is also a preacher and motivational speaker. Here, she talks about her new show, Deception, which airs Monday nights on NBC at 10 PM ET/PT. (Check local listings)
Kam Williams: Congratulations, newlywed! How was the honeymoon?
Meagan Good: It was fantastic, especially considering we were celibate until marriage!
KW: What interested you in Deception?
MG: The script was incredible and there were so many elements that appealed to me creatively and physically, and the cast seemed like an amazing group of people.
KW: Tell me a little about the show?
MG: My character…worked for the Bowers family and she grew up in the house and was best friends with Vivian. They had a strange falling out when they were 17 and I moved to San Francisco and went on to become a narcotics officer with the SFPD, while Vivian went on to become a “celebutante.” The show opens with Vivian’s murder and the FBI brings me in undercover to find out who did it.
KW: Will solving this murder take up the whole first season?
MG: Yes, but the show is so crazy and there are many other things that unfold while the murder is being solved.
KW: How would you describe your character, Joanna Locasto?
MG: Tough, ballsy, and vulnerable, with a strong moral compass.
KW: How did you prepare for this role? Did you consult your father, since he was a police officer in the LAPD?
MG: Yes, I did, and also his wife who is currently in the FBI.
KW: Is there any question no one ever asks you that you wish someone would?
MG: I wish someone would ask if I was “saved” before I met my husband. A lot of people assume I had a spiritual awakening when I met him and it bothers me that people think that happened overnight.
KW: What advice do you have for anyone who wants to follow in your footsteps?
MG: Keep God as your main focus. Make sure your desire to do what you’re aspiring to do is deeper than just fame and being a celebrity. Be willing to work hard, and don’t believe that when a door closes it’s anything personal.