The Chronicle Arts & Entertainment * Janet, not Jesse Comedian Chris Rock says ho has no intorost in poli tics, despite urgings from the Rev. Jesse Jackson that he become more involved. "I'm in show business," Rock told TV Ouide in its July 10 issue. "I wanna hang out with Janet Jack son, not Jesse Jackson." Rock also reflected on the deaths of comedians Chris Farley and Phil Hartman, with whom he worked on "Saturday Night Live," call ing them victims of a come dians' curse. "We're performers - a bunch of geeks no one liked," Rock said. "Now, people finally like us, and , we're willing to put up with a tremendous amount ... and make ourselves miser able to maintain it. Then, you know, we explode. Our wives shoot us, we OD or whenever." North Carolina native hopes film will break mold for black films By LEE HUBBARD Special to THE CHRONICLE SAN FRANCISCO - When Rick Famuyiwa moved from North , Carolina to Inglewood, Calif., in the mid-1980s, he experienced culture shock. He went from a conservative country atmosphere to a fast life of Jherri curls, street gangs and It Swiss tennis shoes Despite this cultural shock, he was able to adjust and learn to appreciate the area as he grew up. TTiis is apparent in his film "The Wood," which opens in theaters on , Friday. The concept for the movie came up when a close friend of the filmmaker announced he was get ting married. "A couple of years ago a buddy of mine told me he was getting mar ried, and we immediately started talking about our childhood," said Famuyiwa in an interview at the Ritz Carlton Hotel in San Francis co. "Two hours later we were still talking." Famuyiwa knew a reflection into his childhood would make a good film. So he sat down with his former USC film school professor, Todd I Boyd, during the summer of 1997 at 1 the Sundance Institute's screenwrit- i ers and directors labs session, and ' the two developed the story and the ! script. , I While "The "Wood" is the first i feature film for both Famuyiwa and Boyd, it isn't the first time the two have worked together. "Rick was in one of the first film courses that I taught at USC. and the relationship between us grew from there." said Boyd. "We would talk about everything, from film, to hoops, to rap, and over time we were throwing ideas out about film. The next thing you know we were at the Sundance Film Festival with 'Black Top Lingo.'" "Black Top Lingo" debuted at the festival in 1995. It was a short film that dealt with complex charac ters who meet on a basketball court in the Los Angeles area. The film created a buzz for Famuyiwa and his storytelling ability, and helped to cement the business relationship with Boyd. / . 'U# Set in the 1980s and moving to ;he present, "The Wood" stars Taye Diggs, Omar Epps, Richard T. Jones ind Sean Jones. It focuses on the wedding of Roland (Diggs) and the surprise that Mike (EppS) and Slim [Jones) feel seeing their friend dressed in his tuxedo on the big day. The event also surprises Roland, who walks out on his wedding a few hours before it is scheduled to be held. Mike and Slim run across town to get a drunken. Roland, who is lying on his high school sweetheart s couch. They sober him up and head back to the chapel. On the way, the three relive their childhood and wonder if their bond will be broken by Roland's impending marriage. Central to the bond between the three men is the city of Inglewood, a predominately black middle class area near Los Angeles. The city was the home - up until this year ? of the Los Angeles Lakers. It is also home to the notorious street gang the Bloods. Inglewood's street life is often portrayed in the music of rappers like Mack 10, and See 'The Wood' on C9 I The Chronicle - i Subscribe today and read the newspaper that has been recording Winston-Salem's history for 25 years! EThe Choice For African American News and Information Since 1974 722-8624 . 1 Orginal Supreme loses trademark suit . * ?. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SAN FRANCISCO - An original member of the Supremes lost an appeal of her trademark suit Tuesday against three women who joined the singing group later and still per form as "Former Ladies of the Supremes." The rights to the group's name are owned by Motown, and not by former members such as Mary Wilson, said the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The court said Motown had allowed Former Ladies of the Supremes to keep their name, and there was noth ing Wilson could do about it. A federal judge had earlier dismissed Wilson's claims against another spinoff group, "Sounds of the Supremes," whose members include Karen Ragland, another singer from the Supremes' post-Diana Ross era who performed before the group broke up in the mid 1970s. Lawyers for both groups said Tuesday's ruling was a byprod uct of Wilson's court battles with Motown in the 1980s that ended with a settlement granting Motown exclusive rights in the Supremes' name and trademark. Her suit claimed the groups were misleading members ot the public into believing they were the authentic Supremes. The court's conclusion to the con trary wasn't surprising, said Walter Allan, lawyer for Former Ladies of the Supremes - Lynda Laurence, Scherrie Payne and Jean Terrell. "She really didn't have a case and she shouldn't really have taken an appeal," Allan said Allen Hyman, Wilson's lawyer, declined comment, say ing he hadn't seen the ruling. 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