![]()  | 
The first time nona gaye appeared
                in front of the camera was on an episode of the ’70s dance show, “Soul
              Train.” Brought out on stage to introduce her father, the
              late, great Marvin Gaye, Nona blinked at the audience, thrust her
              chin
              out and spoke her lines like a vet.
“He came back out after he performed,” Gaye
  says of her father, “and
  he said, ‘This is my little girl, Nona, and she also sings
  quite well.’”
This compliment was more than enough encouragement
  for Nona. Choosing to follow her dad’s lead, she began
  to pursue her own singing career at an early age.
“I think it was just second nature,” she
  admits. “I’d
  grown up in a musical family and there was music and singing going
  on in my house ever since I can remember. But it was difficult,
  because my father’s legacy was so strong and he was so influential
  to so many millions of people that I didn’t want to let them
  down. Sometimes I feel that pressure still. But I’ve learned
  to deal with it.”
Gaye overcame her inhibitions quickly, recording
  her first demo at age 14 and releasing her debut album, “Love for the Future,” with
  Atlantic Records in 1992.
“I just had to do it, despite what people were
  going to say,” explains
  Gaye. “And it helped that I never felt like I wanted to do
  anything else.”
Except acting, that is, which Gaye stumbled into almost by accident.
  After taking a two-year hiatus from music to focus on her son, Gaye
  returned to her agents at William Morris, ready to jump back into
  the fray.
“They asked if I was interested in acting,
  as well,” says Gaye, “and
  I said, ‘Yes, terribly interested.’ So they sent me
  out on my first audition and they told me, ‘You don’t
  have experience and won’t get the part, but don’t be
  upset. Just get your feet wet.’ And that audition was for
  Ali.”
Gaye defied her agents’ expectations and got the part, going
  on to star opposite Will Smith as Muhammad Ali’s second wife.
“There were moments on that set where I thought, ‘What
  am I doing?’” laughs Gaye, “I was so nervous
  and so inexperienced. But everyone in that cast welcomed me like
  an equal
  and, in the end, it felt the same way music did.
It was like food.
  It feeds you and it nourishes you and it’s the only thing
  I know that gives you that feeling.”
  The critical acclaim Gaye received for Ali lead the way to high
  profile roles in The Matrix: Reloaded and The Matrix: Revolutions as well
  as a starring turn opposite Tom Hanks in Robert Zemeckis’ The
    Polar Express, due out next year.
Gaye is also in the process of recording her next album.
“I could never stop singing,” she says, “and
  I’m
  lucky that I had an album out before all this. Now I can go back
  to it without people saying, ‘Oh, here’s another
  actress trying to sing.’ Basically all I want to do is
  keep learning and growing. I want to be ready for anything.” MM
Share:
