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| Jamie Foxx accepts the award for Outstanding Male Artist during the 37th
NAACP Image Awards in Los Angeles, Saturday, Feb. 25, 2006.
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Jamie Foxx's quest for musical stardom got a boost Saturday at the 37th Annual NAACP Image Awards, where the
Oscar-winning actor was picked as best male musical artist.
Foxx, who received an Oscar last year for portraying Ray Charles in the movie
"Ray," has begun performingtracks from his album "Unpredictable."
"It's good to be surrounded by black folks," Foxx said. "Black folks are
music."
Foxx said after the show that music was "what I always wanted to do."
The awards honor black artists in movies, television, music and literature.
"Crash," about racial tensions in
Los Angeles, took the top movie award. The hometown film led movie contenders
with six nominations, including best picture, four of the five supporting-actor
slots — for Terrence Howard, Chris
"Ludacris" Bridges, Don Cheadle and Larenz Tate — and for Thandie Newton as
supporting actress.
Howard beat out his colleagues for the supporting actor nod , and also took best actor in a TV movie or
miniseries for "Lackawanna Blues."
Samuel L. Jackson took best actor award for "Coach Carter," a story of a
basketball coach who forced his players to emphasize studying over hoops.
Mariah Carey, nominated for four awards, kept her comeback streak going when
her "Emancipation of Mimi" won best album. Carey's win came just weeks after she
took home three Grammy Awards.
Alicia Keys, who tied Carey for Image Award nominations, took home three
awards: top female musical artist, top song and video awards for "Unbreakable."
Two stars of the long-running soap
opera "The Young and the Restless" won honors, with Shemar Moore
and Victoria Rowell taking actor and actress awards for daytime drama.
Moore talked about feeling moved after meeting Coretta Scott King, the widow
of Martin Luther King Jr. who died earlier this month. "I think she is sitting
up there with her husband smiling as we continue to chase the dream," Moore
said.
In a brief speech, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said he felt the Image Awards
were special in a town full of award shows because they stand for racial equality.
"We are not just reveling in the power of Hollywood, but challenging
Hollywood to use that power for good," Villaraigosa said.
Carlos Santana, who performed at the show, received the NAACP Hall of Fame
Award while the Neville Brothers received the Chairman's Award. Writer and
businesswoman Susan Taylor was honored with the President's Award.
The 37th Annual Image Awards, hosted by Cuba Gooding Jr., will air March 3 on
Fox.
(Agencies)
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