Annalise Keating got away with a lot. A lot, a lot. But, ultimately, How to Get Away With Murder's cutthroat attorney and criminal law professor was after something akin to what most of us are seeking.
"I love the idea that she's just searching for love and intimacy and whoever will give it to her," Viola Davis told E! News of the character she inhabited from 2014 up until the end of the ABC series' six-season run in 2020. "I love that it's not coming from a place of damage and being screwed up because I don't think it's screwed up. I think it's an interesting, liberating thought to just seek the person who is seeking you."
Fortunately for Davis, though, her real-life happy ending is already wrapped up.
Though the star shares scant few commonalties with her fame-making character ("She's messy, almost sociopathic, sexual, mysterious, highly intelligent, a big personality. She's all of those adjectives that are not associated with me," she told People in 2019), a love life in near constant upheaval was once one of them.
Then Julius Tennon answered her prayers. Quite literally, the then-struggling actress having actually put out a spiritual call for help back in 2000.
"I was the loneliest woman in the world, and someone said, 'You should just pray for a husband,'" she revealed to Page Six in February 2013. So she thought hard and asked for "a big Black man from the South who looked like a football player."
For the 58-year-old, born on her grandmother's South Carolina farm on Aug. 11, 1965, he also had to be "emotionally available, someone who was older, someone who maybe had a family before," she told Essence months later. "Someone from the South. Someone who loves God more than he loves himself."
Three-and-a-half weeks later, she stumbled across Tennon on the set of the short-lived medical drama City of Angels. A father of two and 12 years her elder, he had grown up in Travis County, Texas, and played football at the University of Tulsa. Frankly, she couldn't have drawn it up any better.
Davis credits more than a little of her success to the life she built with Tennon. As she put it on the 2017 premiere of the OWN series Black Love, "I always tell people after my first date with Julius, my life got better. In every way. Anxiety went away, fear went away. He just made my life better."
Good thing he had his ears open that day at craft services.
Having finished their shared scene, "I just overheard her talking to a girl and found her saying, 'I don't like L.A. I don't know anybody here.' Just kind of complaining. And I was dating a girl who was a little bit of a monster and I was kinda like, 'Oh, wow. She seems like a nice lady, she doesn't know anybody. I'm kind of ready to meet somebody else,'" Tennon said on Black Love. "So at the end of the day, I gave her my card."
Davis' first reaction, after she wiped away the bagel crumbs, "The only thing I thought was, 'He's good-looking. He's really good-looking,'" she shared in a 2016 episode of The Jess Cagle Interview. Then she felt immediate relief that he wasn't one of those actors. "He had his shirt on," she recalled on OWN. "That was a big deal. A lot of actors have their shirts off in their little cards."
Still, she didn't immediately accept his offer of a guided trip to the Santa Monica Pier. Having grown up in such abject poverty in tiny Central Falls, R.I. that she has talked about digging through maggot-infested dumpsters for food and wrapping bed sheets around her neck at night to avoid rat bites, she was embarrassed of her bad credit and the anxiety she felt over navigating L.A.'s packed streets: "I had to work out some personal issues first."
But after six weeks, her friends' nudging wore her down. "Everyone said, 'You gotta call him. You gotta call him,'" she recalled on Black Love. "I said, 'You know what? I'm going to call him.'"
He won her over with one date that took place, appropriately, at church.
Following an incredibly candid evening ("I was terrified, because he told me exactly who he was—he was absolutely honest about his past," she said on Black Love), he was forthright as he dropped her off at home. "He just said, 'You are a very beautiful and nice woman, and it was a pleasure spending time with you,'" she remembered. "And he shook my hand."
Then he called 20 minutes later. "I said, 'You got home already?'" she shared. "He said, 'No, I'm at the Ralph's down the street, but I just wanted to tell you again what a great time I had and what a beautiful woman you are.'"
And another 20 after that. "He called again: 'I just want to tell you I got home, and you are a beautiful woman. I'm about to go to sleep, and I just wanted to tell you to have a good night," Davis recalled.
His charms haven't abated since. Marrying in 2003 first in front of 15 guests at their condo, then with a crowd of 100 in Rhode Island, the pair maintain that loving feeling through frequent acts of kindness.
"It's about the everyday," she told People at a 2016 event. "I think that, that's what people forget when they fall in love with someone and it's exciting. You have to get back to the everyday—the taking the garbage out, the cooking, the cleaning—and it's something that I think really works with me and my husband. Every day is like a date."
Of course some are grander than others. Telling the outlet that it's the "simple things that are very, very special," she shared that Tennon "just gave me a book. It says, 'How Do I Love Thee Viola? Confirmations Of Love By Julius.' I have it in my bag, and I bring it with me every day to work, and each day is another love affirmation."
Perhaps the biggest romantic affirmation to date, though, came when they decided to renew their vows five years after bringing daughter Genesis, now 13, into their lives in late 2011. "I wanted to have another ceremony that was pretty where I got to wear the fabulous dress with the fabulous food," she explained on Jimmy Kimmel Live!. So she found a silk embroidered gown by Carmen Marc Valvo and booked a ballroom at Santa Monica's Hotel Casa del Mar for the evening before Valentine's Day.
"I love the rituals of weddings. What can I say?" she explained on the Today show. "It's a time in my life when I feel the most alive and that's the thing that I don't always feel that way. I love what I do but sometimes I'm on a sound stage for 17 hours a day and I'm tired and I'm hot but with Julius, it just reminds me of what's beautiful about my life and I think that's worth it."
This time around she was able to include the entirety of her How to Get Away With Murder cast and new pal Oprah Winfrey (who came through with an invite to her palatial Montecito spread), trappings of the life they've spent the last two decades building together.
"Viola, you've just been amazing. Incredible," Tennon said in a toast shared to social media. "She teaches me every day how to man up, how to agree to disagree but let's get it done, don't let the sun go down on your anger." He continued, "Some doors have been slammed. Some anger has been exuded. But it's reconciled. Always reconciled."
That next chapter saw Davis take on Michelle Obama for Showtime's anthology First Ladies, produced with Lionsgate through their shared company JuVee Productions. "I lost my damn mind for about five minutes, and I made a decision I can't take back," she explained to host Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show. "The woman is a damn goddess. Everybody knows her, everybody feels like they want to protect her. Here's the thing: I'm just going to do the best I can."
While these days she has far more highs than defeats, she's mastered the art of rolling with whatever comes.
Speaking to research professor and author Brené Brown in 2018, she opened up about a particular breakthrough. "One day my therapist asked me a pivotal question: 'What if nothing changes—your looks, your weight, your success—would you be okay?' For the first time, I thought, 'You know what? Yes, I would. I really would,'' she shared.
Of course it helped that she had a partner to remind her of just how fantastic she was. "I also got married to an amazing man who really saw me," she continued. "He was my gift for working so hard on myself."
(Originally published April 2, 2020, at 3 a.m. PT)
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