Morgan Freeman's Always Wanted More – He Found It In Movies

Morgan’s stillness in "Invictus", like Madiba’s, was radiant.
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Morgan Freeman poses with the 54th annual Screen Actors' Guild Life Achievement Award.
Monica Almeida / Reuters

"Learning how to be still, to really be still and let life happen - that stillness becomes a radiance."

My old friend Morgan Freeman has just won the Screen Actor's Guild (SAG) Life Achievement Award for his work in movies and - even more impressive - his humanitarian accomplishments. The prestigious award is given annually to an actor who fosters the "finest ideals of the acting profession".

The announcement said: "He is innovative, fearless and completely unbound by expectations... It has been a privilege to see his genius at work." Back in the early seventies, Morgan and I were neighbours on New York City's upper west side. At the time, I was a TV news producer for PBS, while Morgan played Easy Reader on the Children's Television Workshop'sElectric Company (a role he hated).

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Actor Morgan Freeman accepts the Life Achievement Award from actress Rita Moreno. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
Mario Anzuoni / Reuters

He wanted more. Much more. He wanted movies.

While he waited for his movies, we started writing a novel together. It was about a new race of humans – just like our own children – whose DNA had been forever altered by nuclear explosions and their radiation. We called them new race mutants.

Inevitably, Morgan's own philosophy, integrity and optimism defined the mutants: "They saw clearly the evils of such poisons as racism, colonialism and capitalism, while understanding the lack of contradiction between the practised political systems of both capitalism and socialism."

He wrote that the mutants advocated "a system in which all people serve joyously as they seek the greater good of humanity through communal decisions reached between equals; a system wherein each person is both an island and part of the whole, and where happiness is more important than success and service more valued than power."

Morgan owned a sailboat. In the spring we spent long hours together, scraping barnacles off its hull, getting it ready it for the waters of Long Island Sound.

And Morgan's stillness [in "Invictus"], like Madiba's own, was radiant.

He was happiest when sailing. He wrote about our book's hero and his sailboat: "He loved every inch of her. Every bolt and cotter pin. As she cut her way through the sea, the sun sparkled on the deep blue water and the air grew pleasantly warm. Now and then a wave rose up and slapped the sloop on her transom as if in appreciation of her fine figure, and she hurried on her way with an appreciative dip of her bow as the wave slid under her.

"He felt a keen sense of oneness with the boat. Sometimes, lying in the cockpit or inside the cabin on a lee bunk, he could feel her nosing through the sea, feel the wind tug and pull at the sail as if the mast were struck in his own back. Feel the push and swell of the sea as she held them gently to her."

He once told me that when he died he wanted a viking's funeral – laid out on the deck of his flaming sailboat, sailing off into the sunset. In 2001 I was in South Africa training SABC journalists, and was invited to former president Nelson Mandela's 83rd birthday party.

Madiba and I talked briefly. I mentioned that I'd heard my old friend Morgan Freeman was being considered to play him in a movie. We agreed that Morgan was a fine actor, a man of considerable stature and respect – and perhaps the only actor who could play Madiba.

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Actor Morgan Freeman (L) and Nelson Mandela attend the 'Unite For A Better World Gala Dinner' on September 2, 2007 at the Hotel de Paris in Monte Carlo, Monaco.
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Nine years later came to the movie "Invictus", starring Morgan Freeman as Nelson Mandela. I remember sitting in a Toronto movie theatre watching it. There on the screen was my friend merging with the man I most admired in all the world, the man whose integrity and courage helped save South Africa from fascism.

I wept.

In our book, Morgan philosophised about life and death: "Once, there was no death... how can the plant-scum on top of the water die? It splits into two... and four... and eight. It has no oneness. It is eaten and merely changes form. It splits forever. It is food and it is life... but it cannot die, even though it is alive."

Watching Invictus, I knew Morgan wasn't just acting – he was turning into his own and Madiba's better angels, and offering us a glimpse inside the souls of each of them.

"Then, long ago, something happened... a great noise and a great explosion. Then another and another until the seas boiled and fire tore off from the land and disappeared into the sky and never came back."

"This we know... we understand, so we know. It happened. Because of it, there was death and change and the scum changed so that it could die as well as live. And it could move and grow... and die. That was the price worth paying."

We never finished the book. Life intervened. Morgan won a role in his first movie, "Who Says I Can't Ride a Rainbow!" To escape U.S. wars and racism, I took my family off to Canada. Morgan went on to play in some 84 films. He won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in the film "Driving Miss Daisy", an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor in "Million Dollar Baby", and five Oscar nominations (including Best Actor for "Invictus") along with numerous movie and humanitarian awards.

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Morgan Freeman, winner Best Actor in a Supporting Role for 'Million Dollar Baby' (Photo by M. Caulfield/WireImage)
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He's come a very long way from playing Easy Reader to number four on Business Insider's list of top U.S. box-office grosses of all time. His movies have earned a staggering $4.521-billion. The movie critic Pauline Kael reviewed his film "Street Smart" and asked rhetorically: "Is Morgan Freeman the greatest American actor?"

Maybe his is. How to judge?

But I can tell you when I sat weeping in that movie theatre in Toronto watching "Invictus", I knew Morgan wasn't just acting – he was turning into his own and Madiba's better angels, and offering us a glimpse inside the souls of each of them.

And Morgan's stillness, like Madiba's own, was radiant.

Tim Knight is an Emmy and Sigma Delta Chi-winning filmmaker, writer and broadcast journalism trainer. He's the author of the book "Storytelling and the Anima Factor", now in its second edition, and lives in Cape Town.