Haddish Book, ‘I Curse You with Joy,’ Comes Out in November

Tiffany Haddish appears at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures Gala in Los Angeles on Sept. 25, 2021. (AP)
Tiffany Haddish appears at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures Gala in Los Angeles on Sept. 25, 2021. (AP)
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Haddish Book, ‘I Curse You with Joy,’ Comes Out in November

Tiffany Haddish appears at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures Gala in Los Angeles on Sept. 25, 2021. (AP)
Tiffany Haddish appears at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures Gala in Los Angeles on Sept. 25, 2021. (AP)

Tiffany Haddish’s next book will be in part a story of laughing through the tears.

Amistad, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, announced Friday that Haddish’s essay collection “I Curse You With Joy” is scheduled for Nov. 29.

“‘I Curse You With Joy’ includes stories of how Haddish uses comedy to metabolize pain and turn it into art, auditioning for ‘Saturday Night Live’ before being the first Black female comic to host it, how the trauma in her own life has made her more compassionate, and her complicated relationship with her father, whom she reunited with after 20,” Amistad’s announcement reads in part.

Haddish’s first book of essays, “The Last Black Unicorn,” was a bestseller published in 2017. She has a picture book, “Layla, the Last Black Unicorn,” scheduled for May.

“After my first book, I knew I wanted to share more of myself in ‘I Curse You With Joy,’” Haddish said in a statement. “I want to bring readers on a journey with me that is hahahas and highs and lows, so people know even through the hurt you can spread joy.”



Michelle Yeoh Brings Chinese Blockbuster ‘Ne Zha 2’ to Life in English Dub

Michelle Yeoh appears at the 76th British Academy Film Awards, BAFTA's, in London, on Feb. 19, 2023. (AP)
Michelle Yeoh appears at the 76th British Academy Film Awards, BAFTA's, in London, on Feb. 19, 2023. (AP)
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Michelle Yeoh Brings Chinese Blockbuster ‘Ne Zha 2’ to Life in English Dub

Michelle Yeoh appears at the 76th British Academy Film Awards, BAFTA's, in London, on Feb. 19, 2023. (AP)
Michelle Yeoh appears at the 76th British Academy Film Awards, BAFTA's, in London, on Feb. 19, 2023. (AP)

When Michelle Yeoh first saw “Ne Zha 2” in Hong Kong, she walked away dreaming about a dubbed version.

The Chinese blockbuster, which this year became the highest-grossing animated film of all time with over $2.2 billion in ticket sales, had seemed to her like an ideal movie for a global, all-ages audience. But even she, who had the benefit of knowing Mandarin, was having trouble keeping up with the subtitles and all the spectacular things happening on screen. How would a kid stand a chance?

The Oscar winner, who is fluent in English, Malay and Cantonese, wasn’t alone in thinking a dub was a good idea. The film studio A24 was already making plans to broaden the audience with an English-language version in collaboration with CMC Pictures. Not too long after, Yeoh got a call asking if she wanted to voice Ne Zha’s mother, Lady Yin. Her response?

“Hell yes,” she told The Associated Press in a recent interview. The English-language dub opens in over 2,500 North American theaters on Aug. 22.

The film tells the story of a rebellious little child, Ne Zha, born as the reincarnation of a demon to mortal parents, who is out to prove his fate is not predetermined. In the first film, he sacrifices himself. In the second, he’s put to the test to try to save his friend and his village. Don't worry if you haven't seen the first either — the sequel tells the audience everything they need to know.

And while this character might be new to American audiences, the mythology is well known in China. Yeoh grew up watching various TV and movie versions, but had never seen it done so vividly.

The making of “Ne Zha 2” took five years and required the work of some 4,000 people from 138 Chinese animation companies. The finished film, which runs an epic 143 minutes, includes 2,400 animation shots and 1,900 special effects shots.

“I think the director and his amazing team, they pushed all the boundaries,” Yeoh said. “They created this magical world that I hadn’t seen to this level of superb animation before. The intricacies are mind-blowing.”

Yeoh also put her stamp of approval on the translation, which she admits is a tricky art.

“With translation, a lot of the times the nuances are lost, right? Because also you have to sync and find the right number of words to say the same thing. And with the Chinese language, especially with the folklores and things like that, the way they say it is very poetic as well. So it is not easy,” she said. “I think they struck a very good balance of not making it too classical, but also more contemporary.”

North American audiences already showed interest in “Ne Zha 2" earlier this year, when the subtitled version earned over $20 million. Some Chinese communities in the US even rented theaters to screen the film. Now, Yeoh believes that the English version will help it resonate globally.

“It’s such a universal language of family, of love, of the underdog, of someone who’s ostracized, misunderstood just because you’re born different,” Yeoh said. “It immerses you into our culture. And it’s such a beautiful way to cross that bridge.”