Madea christmas kkk scene
Lacey doesn't want to tell her mother, and the very gentle Conner goes along with this ruse.
What she doesn't know is that Lacey and Conner are secretly married. Eileen is displeased that Lacey lets her farmhand Conner (Eric Lively) live with her. Lacey doesn't want to come home for Christmas for another reason. This client is offering a $10,000 sponsorship in exchange for good publicity, and Lacey and the City Council eagerly accept. Her school is facing a financial crisis that might cancel the Christmas Jubilee celebration, and Oliver's PR firm is handling a mysterious client that needs good publicity. However, a chance to surprise her comes her way when Oliver (JR Lemon), an old boyfriend of Lacey's, is going to see her. Madea suggests it's to get away from her overbearing mother, but Eileen won't believe that. When she isn't, she boldly goes to the register, takes out what she thinks she's owed, and takes a dress without paying as part of her 'salary' before storming out of the department store, horrifying everyone including Eileen.Įileen, a hypochondriac, is upset that her daughter Lacey (Tiki Sumpter) isn't coming home to Atlanta from her teaching job at a small Alabama town for Christmas. No surprise that she's fired, but no matter: Madea expects to be paid for her hard work instantly. She suggests to one customer that she is too fat for lingerie and leaves another in the middle of her inquiry to take her break. She ignores customers asking for assistance, takes personal calls while on the floor, and talks badly to just about anyone who comes her way.
No surprise: Madea fails spectacularly in her one day of work. Madea (Perry) gets talked into working as a department store guide for Christmas by her friend/great-niece Eileen (Anna Marie Horsford), complete with a "Mrs. In retrospect, it is not a good film (certainly not in the same league as one of his best Madea-centered films, Diary of a Mad Black Woman), but as mindless Yuletide fare, this isn't the worst you could choose. Good thing Tyler Perry is very, very rich.Ī Madea Christmas has a Christmas setting, but apart from a minor subplot the film could have been set at any time. In that same spirit, I will do the same with this review. This year, I've selected A Madea Christmas, starring Tyler Perry as the blunt, gun-toting wisdom-spouting black woman who tells it as it is. Welcome to Rick's Café Texan's annual Christmas film review, where on the day we commemorate the Birth of Christ, we examine a Christmas-centered film.