50 Fascinating Facts About Tyler Perry: From Living in His Car to Running a Studio and Sheltering Royals

Prolific producer-actor-writer-director Tyler Perry, back with A Madea Homecoming, attributes his massive success to exactly one thing.

By Natalie Finn Feb 25, 2022 11:00 AMTags

Tyler Perry is simply one of the most important people working in all of entertainment. Full stop.

A prolific studio mogul who acts, writes, directs and produces, Perry's empire is estimated to be worth at least $600 million—quite the happy returns for a guy who was living out of his car when he staged his first play.

"Hollywood wanted nothing to do with me," the 52-year-old recalled to Variety in January 2019 as he was making the theater rounds with Madea on what was supposed to be a farewell tour for the gun-toting, hard-truth-telling grandma who—as channeled by Perry—has become nothing short of a folk hero, let alone an iconic character.

Alas, three years later, Madea's signature brand of medicine is still needed as much as ever.

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Tyler Perry's Best Roles

"So much is going on in the world, you know, the pandemic, politics, division everywhere," Perry explained to E!'s Francesca Amiker on Daily Pop Feb. 21. "I just wanted to do something to make people laugh."

And Netflix was happy to help.

Netflix

Perry's first to acknowledge just how far he's come since the early '00s, when he was taking meetings about turning his play Diary of a Mad Black Woman into a movie and one studio exec after another said, "'Nope, we don't want this,'" he recalled to Variety.

"This is the one that got me: a white man at one of the big studios sat behind his desk and said to me, 'Black people who go to church don't go to movies, so this will never work.' That was a moment for me. Because I'm seeing thousands of people all over the country come out for these shows."

Since then, he's been busy proving guys like that wrong at every turn. An underserved audience, after all, is an audience in need of something to watch.

Chris Pizzello/Pool/Shutterstock

So, Tyler Perry started making movies and TV with Black audiences in mind, and he's got the box office numbers, the ratings, the awards and, yes, the money to show for it.

Now, "They just call, which is great," he said.

And when he calls, you can bet people pick up.

In honor of the return of his most famous creation in Tyler Perry's A Madea Homecoming on Feb. 25, here are 50 utterly fascinating things to know about the once homeless, struggling kid who became one of Hollywood's biggest game-changers:

1. Tyler Perry was born Emmitt Perry Jr. on Sept. 13, 1969, in New Orleans.

2. He has a brother and two sisters.

3. Perry has talked candidly about his childhood, describing his carpenter father, Emmitt Perry Sr., as a man "whose answer to everything was to beat it out of you."

4. At one point, the beatings got so bad that his mom's sister, Mayola, pointed a gun at his father and told his mother, Willie Maxine, that she better take Perry with her whenever she left the house on errands from then on. "That's when I started going to Lane Bryant and beauty salons and everywhere else with my mother," Perry said in an interview with dear friend Oprah Winfrey in 2010 for O magazine.

5. He legally rechristened himself Tyler to distance himself from Emmitt Sr.

6. Following through on a nagging suspicion he'd had since he was a child, Perry underwent DNA testing after his mother died in 2009 and found out that Emmitt Sr. wasn't his biological father. "From a child, I'd always known that this man despised me, and I could not figure it out for the longest," he said on Oprah's Master Class in 2017. "I could not figure out why he hated me so. And every action was about his hatred or his disdain for me."

7. Perry was also a victim of a sexual abuse outside the home, on more than one occasion. "Didn't tell a soul," he told Oprah. "But felt completely guilty about it. Felt betrayed."

8. He told Winfrey that he attempted suicide twice, once when he was around 12 and again at 22.

9. Perry was a good student but was kicked out of high school after an argument with a counselor turned nasty, and he never went back. He eventually earned his GED.

10. He defines the concept of creating your own opportunities if none immediately arise: He quit his job as a bill collector (he was also a bartender, waiter, used car salesman and many other things) and, with $12,000 he had painstakingly saved, he directed, produced and starred in his own musical, I Know I've Been Changed, which premiered in 1992 when he was 22. About 30 people showed up the first weekend, he estimated.

11. At times was so broke he had to live in his car. "Can you imagine a 6-foot-5 man sleeping in a Geo Metro?" he quipped to Essence in 2009.

12. He toured with I Know I've Been Changed for years and, on its seventh staging, at the House of Blues in Atlanta in March 1998, people started lining up. He attributed the abrupt change in the play's reception to a turn his life had taken offstage. "I think, spiritually, I'd gotten to a better place in my life," he told Variety in 2019. "It was about adult survivors of child abuse who have forgiven their abusers and I hadn't forgiven my father. Once I forgave him, the show took off. My hand to God. It went from being nobody in the audience to selling out. So when people asked what changed? I became in truth about it."

13. He was inspired to write I Know I've Been Changed by none other than Winfrey after hearing on her daytime show when he was 19 or 20 that writing about personal trauma could be cathartic. It was the first thing he ever wrote.

14. His signature creation, Mabel "Madea" Simmons—a composite of his mother Willie Maxine and his gun-toting Aunt Mayola—made her first appearance in Perry's 2000 play I Can Do Bad All by Myself when an actress didn't show up to a performance in Chicago. Perry, who was only supposed to be onstage as Madea for a few minutes, beefed up his role with the other performer's lines and stayed on the whole time, stealing the show.

15. Perry cites Eddie Murphy playing his whole family, including the women, in Nutty Professor II: The Klumps for allowing him to think he could even get away with playing a female character.

16. His play Diary of a Mad Black Woman is the production that first caught Hollywood's eye, and he went out to L.A. to discuss a possible film adaptation in 2001.

17. In 2005, Perry produced (but did not direct) Diary of a Mad Black Woman, which also marked Madea's first appearance on the big screen. It cost $5.5 million to make and grossed $50.6 million.

18. He established Tyler Perry Studios in Atlanta in 2006. "People who are not getting their due need to be in the positions of power, from women to people of color," he told Variety. "That's what I was doing in Atlanta, building that sense of power for myself so that I can hire more people of color, hire more women, and open the door to diversity."

19. The same year, the first of the TV series he has created and executive produced, House of Payne, premiered on TBS after he signed a reported $200 million deal with the network. Madea showed up in a few episodes, too.

20. Also in 2006, Perry directed his first feature film, Madea's Family Reunion. He won't watch it, knowing, as he has admitted, that he didn't really know what he was doing as a filmmaker yet.

21. But the year wasn't over: Perry also had a best-seller in 2006 with the humorous Don't Make a Black Woman Take Off Her Earrings: Madea's Uninhibited Commentaries on Love and Life. Another book, Higher Is Waiting, about the importance of spirituality and family, came out in 2017.

22. Along with Winfrey and director Lee Daniels, Perry served as an executive producer on the Oscar-winning 2009 drama Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire.

23. Perry's first movie role outside of his own productions was playing Admiral Barnett in J.J. AbramsStar Trek.

24. Perry continued to look out for Emmitt Sr. financially, partly because his mother asked him to, but they didn't have a relationship. "I believe in being respectful because that's what the Bible says you're supposed to do," he told Winfrey in 2010. He started writing more about his childhood around then, he explained, because "that's what I do when I need freedom from something. Because it's hard to keep smiling."

25. Talking to People in 2017, he said he was better able to understand Emmitt Sr. the more he learned about the man's own terrible, violent childhood. "[His] was way more horrific than mine," Perry said. "So it kind of formed the person that he was."

26. In 2010, he talked about having been in love "with the wrong woman" a few years prior. "And it was really bad for me and hurtful," he told Winfrey. "Maybe I'm still dealing with that. 'Cause I never cried in a relationship before."

27. That bad breakup was certainly no impetus to publicize his private life. So few were the wiser up until a couple months before Perry became a dad to son Aman in 2014 with then-girlfriend Gelila Bekele. Winfrey and the late Cicely Tyson are the boy's godmothers. Perry let it be known he was single in December 2020, but the two continued to amicably co-parent.

29. Perry also told Winfrey that he didn't like the spotlight that came with great wealth, but he topped Forbes' list of the highest-paid men in entertainment between 2010 and 2011 all the same, with $130 million.

30. And it's not as if he didn't enjoy having the money. A New York Times profile from 2007 noted that, in addition to being in the middle of building a 30,000-square-foot home in Atlanta, Perry's real estate portfolio included three other homes in Atlanta, a place in the Hollywood Hills and an apartment in Manhattan. And he drove a Rolls Royce.

31. He sold the massive Atlanta mansion in 2016 for $17.5 million, at the time the largest sale price on record in the area. It went back on the market in 2019 for $21 million. He sold that house in the Hollywood Hills for $11.25 million in October 2012 while he was building the24,545 square-foot Tuscan villa in Beverly Hills where Prince Harry and Meghan Markle camped out for a few months when they first moved to California in 2020.

32. Perry was honored with the Chairman's Award at the 2010 NAACP Image Awards, and the following year won for Outstanding Directing in a Motion Picture for For Colored Girls.

33. Perry was a close friend of Whitney Houston and was among those who spoke at her 2012 funeral. During her toughest days battling drug addiction, he would regularly communicate with her family, lend his plane and do anything he could to get her the help she needed. "I felt a huge responsibility to do all I could to help her," he later said on Oprah's Next Chapter.

34. When Houston's daughter, Bobbi Kristina Brown, told him she wanted to try acting, he had her appear on his sitcom For Better or Worse. "I wanted to keep an eye on her," he admitted to Winfrey, but also, "I know what it's like to lose a mother, and that child has had a lot of pain in her life—a lot of pain." He said they were still in touch and she had just texted him that morning. (Bobbi Kristina died in 2015, three years after her mother, having never recovered after being found unconscious under water in her bathtub at home.)

35. Perry credits his casting as a telegenic lawyer in David Fincher's Gone Girl in 2014 for changing how Hollywood thought of him as an actor, paving the way for more interesting opportunities.

36. The idea for Boo! A Madea Halloween, or at least the title, came from a joke Chris Rock's character makes in Top Five—which he reached out to Perry for permission to include in his film. When a Lionsgate executive heard the crack about audiences going to see "Boo! A Madea Halloween," he thought that sounded like a great movie—or two, with a sequel following in 2017.

37. Perry signed a deal with Viacom in 2017 that included an exclusive first-look deal with Paramount Pictures and an expectation of 90 episodes of original content for BET and the company's other TV networks, the latter of which kicked in in May 2019 after his deal with OWN expired. After The Paynes only lasted one season, Tyler Perry's House of Payne was rebooted on BET in 2020, while another Perry creation, The Haves and the Have Nots, stayed on OWN through its series finale in July 2021.

38. When he was cast as Gen. Colin Powell in Adam McKay's Vice, Perry called the former secretary of state to get his blessing. Apparently they clicked. "He sent me his book, I sent him mine, he texts me now and then," Perry told Variety in 2019. (Powell died in 2021.)

39. "He's got skills," McKay told Variety about Perry, describing how well he played a heavily improvised scene with Steve Carell as Donald Rumsfeld. "There's no question we'll be seeing him in many more dramatic roles, if he wants." McKay also recruited Perry to play a morning show host who's laughing off the end of the world in his Oscar-nominated 2021 satire Don't Look Up. 

40. Not everyone's an admirer. Perry is also a 17-time Razzie nominee (or 20 if you count being nominated at the same time for two different roles on three occasions) and a two-time "winner" for worst actress, for A Madea Christmas and Boo 2! A Madea Halloween. He was, however, in the running for the Redeemer Award—a kiss-and-make-up nod for past nominees who prove themselves as respectable artists—in 2019 for Vice. After which he was slapped with four more nominations in 2020 for various offenses in A Madea Family Funeral.

41. Perry's very aware that his body of work has its critics, with many accusing him of trading in, and profiting from, the perpetuation of Black stereotypes and not accurately depicting the complexity of Black lives. "To be honest, I try not to see as much of the criticism as I can," he told the Los Angeles Times in 2016. "But, of course, some of it gets through. Of course it's hurtful. I'm thinking, 'They're right to some degree. But I'm always looking for truth in that criticism. And I know the answers to why I made those choices... If you look at everything I do—even in Boo, there's a message, and it's always 'faith, family, forgiveness.' That's the greatest gift that I've been given. I can get a message to the very people I grew up with, the millions who love what I do. I can get a message to them when others can't."

42. Asked what the secret of his success was in 2012, Perry told CBS This Morning, "I celebrate simplicity. I celebrate where we come from, and...we're all in need something of something so simple. We all want to know how to forgive. We all want to know how to love. We all want to know how to laugh. And that simplicity, I think, is what has resonated with so many people with me around the world." That's why the mantra at Tyler Perry Studios, he said, was "the place where even dreams believe."

43. A decade after Tyler Perry Studios first opened in Atlanta, Perry moved the whole operation to the historic 330-acre site of the former Ft. McPherson Army base, making it one of the largest studio complexes in the country. The compound boasts 200 acres of green space and 37 buildings constructed between 1889 and 1910 and he planned to build 14 sound stages. The Los Angeles Times noted photographs of him with Winfrey and President Obama on display in his office.

44. Perry isn't the first Black person to head up a studio, but, as he pointed out to the Times, "no other African American has had something of this size, of this degree, without a partnership or conglomerate or some major company behind it."

45. Asked that question about success again (he gets it a lot), Perry said in a video posted in 2013 that "truth be told, it was nothing but the grace of God." He said it again. "You can plant seeds all day long, you can go around giving your business card to people, you can go around knocking on doors and auditioning. You can do that every day of your life and nothing, for most people, happens. When a seed is planted in the ground, all you can do is water it…and believe. That is what allowed me to be in the position I am in now. I planted my seed, I worked really hard. I had one idea, and that was to do a play."

46. Since 1998, Perry has written and/or directed at least one play and one film a year. Per the Times, Perry was one of only three directors, the others being Robert Zemeckis and Steven Spielberg, to have had nine of his films open with more than $20 million.

47. In 2019, after promising on social media that he would help out the hurricane-devastated Bahamas as soon as it was feasible, Perry came through, sending his own plane on at least two trips to deliver water, diapers, personal hygiene items and other supplies.

48. Meanwhile, fatherhood certainly suited Perry. "He's so beautiful and strong and amazing," he gushed about his son, Aman, on The Real in 2016. "And he's a healer for me 'cause I look at him and see myself as a little boy. And I'm able to give him all the love and all the things that I never had."

49. From day one, Perry's plan has been to leave his studio one day to Aman. "[My dream] for him is to be the best that he can be," he said in 2018 on Essence magazine's Yes, Girl! podcast. "All that he wants to be, no matter what that is. In my mind what I would love to say is, 'Here are the keys to the studio. I'll be somewhere smoking a joint on an island, you go do this. I'm 80 years old now, go do your thing. 'But, if that's not his dream I just want whatever it is that he does to be special and amazing."

50. Madea had been in nine plays and 10 films that altogether grossed more than $500 million worldwide, and Perry originally planned for 2019's A Madea Family Funeral, her 11th big screen appearance, to be her swan song.

"I'll be 50 this year and I'm just at a place in my life where this next 50 I want to do things differently," Perry told CNN that March. "This character has been amazing. So many people have loved her. It's been a great franchise."

Moreover, he added, "She's also run out of things to say in my point of view. So if there's something else for her to say maybe one day she'll return but for right now, no, I think I'm done."

Well, Madea had something to say about that.

Enter Tyler Perry's A Madea Homecoming, premiering Friday, Feb. 25, on Netflix, Madea's 12th film appearance and Perry's first movie to go straight to streaming.

"Don't come to this movie looking to be spiritually moved," Perry advised on Daily Pop. "Just come, laugh yourself happy. That's what it's all about."

And you won't be hearing any more of that retirement talk from him or Madea.

(An earlier version of this article was published Sept. 13, 2019, at 9:01 a.m. PT)