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My Date with Legendary Singer and Actress MAY 12, 2014

By K.L. CONNIE WANG @BeTheBuddha

Touched by an Angel producer Martha Williamson with Della Reese on the set of Williamson's new show, Signed, Sealed, Delivered.(Katie Yu/Hallmark)

From singing in her family’s bathroom to singing backup for Mahalia Jackson at the tender age of 13, Della Reese, who has a storied history as a and gospel singer, is probably best known to television audiences as Tess fromTouched by an Angel. I recently had the opportunity to talk to Reese, who is currently guest starring as visiting supervisor Cora Brandt on the Hallmark Channel series Signed, Sealed, Delivered (Sundays, 8/7c).

Hi, Della—how are you? I’m marvelous and so are you!

You were just a child when you began to sing backup for Mahalia Jackson. What was that experience like?

I found out I could sing—I didn’t have any lessons or anything. Just one time I opened my mouth and I could sing and I loved the feeling of it. I wanted to sing boisterous. I didn’t know any lyrics, so I kept getting my mother in trouble. For example, the man who was the landlord of the apartment building we lived in was Mr. Jones. Mr. Jones drank, and I would get in my singing mood and I would sing, [singing] “Oh, Mr. Jones is drinking in the basement. Mr. Jones is drinking in the basement. He loves it when he drinks in the basement. Ooooh, ooooh! Ooooh, ooooh!” I had to stop singing about Mr. Jones, but I sang about Miss Louise. She was the next-door neighbor. My mom had to sit me down and said, “If you want to sing, I’m going to take you to the church. You can sing in the church but you can’t sing in the bathroom.” I loved singing in the bathroom because it made it big, you know?

You asked me about Miss Mahalia. She was very important in my life. She taught me how to communicate with people—to sing so that people would appreciate it and get a feeling from it, because I was a lyric soprano at the time and I found out early that if you hit a high-enough note, somebody’s going to go, “Oooh!” I would see her; she would sit in a chair and just moan. Then she would begin to rock. The lady would play the piano and she would begin to rock and she would begin to moan a tune and the people, it was like, one person over here would get to moaning too. And another person over there would get to moaning too. Eventually, the audience would be her instrument. Am I making sense to you?

Yes—like she was conducting the audience? Absolutely. Never said a word. Just the feeling she was having from singing what she was singing. She made me understand that my high note was just a high note. What I really needed was to be able to communicate with the people so that they could feel what I was feeling. She kept saying to me, all the time, “You don’t feel it. Nobody’s going to feel it. If it doesn’t come from your heart, it ain’t going to touch nobody’s heart.”

Do you consider your work on television as an extension of your ministry? No, the work that I do on television is the extension of whoever wrote that, whoever had that feeling. My job is to depict that feeling so that what they wrote and what comes to you has the feeling they desired it to have.

In what way does the Gospel influence your work? Everything. My mother was a personal friend of God’s. I lived on her faith. I was trained on her faith. For example, I was born in 1931, in the middle of a depression. Two years later I had rheumatic fever and they told my mother I was going to die—I was not a well child. My mother just stood on her faith and trusted in God and kept saying, “My baby’s going to live.” I’m now 82, so what so what she was doing must have been right.

You just joined Twitter (@iamdellareese). Congratulations! How has your experience been so far? Well, it’s my first. I’m an old-fashioned person. By the time I learn to use the machines, they’d have made a new one.

What do you think of television today? There seem to be a lot of adult themes and violence in prime- time TV. How do you think shows like Signed, Sealed, Delivered are filling the void left by shows likeTouched by an Angel? I think that people choose what they want to see and Touched by an Angelwas not violent, not any of that. People still say to me today that something happened that they saw that helped their families, that helped them—that some of the shows we did were the exact problems that they had and their problems were solved and they got another way to look at it from looking atTouched by an Angel. I think there will always be a space like that. The young people seem to like a lot of different stuff. When I was young I liked a lot of different stuff too.

You’ve accomplished so much—successful recording artist, actress, you’re a minister… Is there anything you still want to do that you haven’t done yet? No, because everything that I have asked God for that was for my highest good, He made arrangements for me to have it. Sometimes I have to go through stuff, but I find that’s a learning process—you go through obstacles and when you get to the other side you’re stronger than you were when you started through the obstacle.

What’s your favorite music, artist or song? Well, I like a piece of this and a piece of that. At this moment right here… Let me kind of explain this to you. I’m a lyricist, and the trend of the music nowadays is rhythms and moving sounds. I like to tell a story. There are not many people around now telling stories because they don’t sell records. They have the drums and the 19 people singing, which is wonderful, but I want to hear some more . I want to hear more oneness with orchestra and not just everybody doing what they want to do. I want to hear some cuddly songs, some sentimental songs, some sweet songs, some loving songs.

What’s the book or author you recommend I read? Well, I’ve written five books and I think they’re doing pretty good. They’re about the UP Church—that’s the name of my church. It’s about having relationships with God—wonderful relationships to wake up in the morning and greet him like you wake up in the morning and greet your son or your daughter or your husband, of sharing love, of knowing it’s a pleasure, it’s a good thing. I was raised that God was going to get you—you know, which I never understood because if God is as powerful as he was what did he have to worry about getting me? I survived anyway.

Do you prefer coffee or tea? Both! I like green tea with honey in it. Every once in awhile I need a cup a coffee, you know what I mean? I don’t have to get it every morning and get a cup, but sometimes I just gotta have a cup of coffee.

Who was your first celebrity crush? Well, I don’t know that I have… Oh, well, the man that I prayed to God [chuckles to herself] to give me [chuckles again]—and I was serious when I was saying this prayer too—was . I told God—this is true—that I knew he had a wife and children, but that I would work and take care of the wife and children if He would give me Nat King Cole.