Naturi Naughton (Brief Breasts) & Beverly Sade [1],[2] (Sexy Bootie) in Power [S2E2]
[ PW: lfghrus33 ]
Sometimes you gotta separate yourself from everyone and focus on you because elevation requires separation.
— Beverly Sade (@BEVERLYSADE) June 5, 2015
We see you @beverlysade doing your thing on @Power_starz !!! Great acting job!!!!
— Hip Hop Weekly (@HipHopWeekly) June 14, 2015
— JR (@HipHop_247) June 14, 2015
Check out my sis @Beverlysade on @Power_Starz doing her thing!!! ✨✨✨
— Jackie Christie (@JackieChristie) June 14, 2015
Beverly Sade’ on Instagram: “Me and 50 last night after wrapping a long day of shooting. #Power #Season2” |
‘Power’ Creator Courtney Kemp Agboh Talks Sex Scenes
IBTimes: You mentioned on the red carpet at the ATX Festival that Season 2 will feature more sex — how do you get away with that?
Kemp Agboh: I have rules about sex in the show. The sex has to tell a story. There has to be a reason for the sex, and the sex scene itself has to tell a story within [it]. So, for example, on broadcast, you can start sex and then you go to commercial because you’re not going to show it, then you come back. That’s because the sex is the story. In our show — the sex act — there is something that happens in every single one of them. The intercut scene [in Season 1] with Angela and Greg, and Ghost and Tasha, the point of that scene was that they were thinking about each other. It was not the sex.
I think as a female storyteller, sex isn’t a blackout. There is something that happens during a sex act between two people that the story keeps going, and I think that’s really interesting. I really want to stay in that and tell the story. You know, just like violence — it’s not just about shooting somebody. It’s also about what happens with the body after you clean it up: What happened with the blood, and getting s–t on your clothes? What’s the price of pulling that trigger? I’m just interested in all the other stuff. So, [Starz] lets me get away with it because it’s crucial to the story. Anytime it’s not — like we write a sex scene and it does not feel crucial — I cut it. I don’t even shoot it.