Current:Home > ScamsHow M. Night Shyamalan's 'Trap' became his daughter Saleka's 'Purple Rain' -ProfitEdge
How M. Night Shyamalan's 'Trap' became his daughter Saleka's 'Purple Rain'
View
Date:2025-04-16 06:56:11
It sounds like a plot for one of her dad’s thrillers: When Saleka Night Shyamalan started taking classical piano lessons, practice was mandatory. Three hours a day, every day. It was always there, whether at home or on vacation with her parents. There was no escape.
“Oh, yeah, that wasn't a choice for me,” Shyamalan says, laughing. “I cried many times. And they were like, ‘No, no, you keep going ...’ ”
Her Oscar-nominated father, director M. Night Shyamalan, chuckles when confirming this. “It was intense. It was definitely an Asian tiger parents kind of thing.”
All that time spent has interestingly paid off for both of them. Saleka, 28, is now an on-the-rise R&B pop singer and a prolific songwriter, crafting a soundtrack of original tunes for her dad's new movie “Trap” (in theaters now).
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
She also has a role in the film: Serial-killing father Cooper (Josh Hartnett) takes his teen Riley (Ariel Donoghue) to a concert by megastar Lady Raven (Saleka), who becomes caught up in Cooper’s escape attempt when he discovers the show is a large-scale trap to capture him.
While getting to play a main character is “very exciting,” Saleka acknowledges that it was “definitely out of my comfort zone.” Like her filmmaking sister Ishana, who recently directed the thriller “The Watchers” (and several of Saleka’s music videos), she’d rather be behind the camera.
“In a studio producing a song, recording by myself, writing by myself – that's my happy place,” Saleka says. “In our family, we are all in love with the art of filmmaking and also the art of music. Bringing those two things together is such a magical experience.”
“Trap” is part concert film, with Saleka singing and dancing as Lady Raven through several numbers. Both she and Shyamalan love Prince’s “Purple Rain,” and Shyamalan wanted a soundtrack where “the buoyancy and the artistry of the music is affecting the movie in a significant way,” he says.
So Shyamalan wrote a script that called for 14 songs that Saleka would write, perform, mix and produce, plus learn a bunch of choreography. “It was insane,” he says. “I was saying to her, ‘I'm not sure how many people on the planet could do what I'm asking you to do, but I'm asking you to do it anyway.’ ”
Saleka figures it was the “fastest” she’s ever written a batch of songs, not only because she was on a timetable but also because she was inspired by everything happening in the movie. And while it’s not exactly a concept album, the “Trap” soundtrack does have a flow that coincides with the film.
“In the beginning, it's kind of fun and witty, then it moves into this darker and more intense, upbeat space where things are getting crazy,” Saleka explains. “It comes back into this more intimate moment at the end and then a celebration as the last song.”
The songs she wrote are also the genre and sound she aims to move into. “The R&B influence is still in there and there's a little bit of Latin and Indian influence,” Saleka says. “Because I was imagining it in a stadium and thinking of this big pop star, it did have this bigger pop feel than my other records.”
While her dad and sister’s domain is film, “music was always my thing,” says Saleka, who toured with R&B singer Giveon in 2022 and also opened for Boyz II Men. By her midteens, she was writing songs, combining the music theory from 11 years of classical piano with the inspiration of jazz and blues singers like Nina Simone, Billie Holiday, Frank Sinatra and Etta James to “improvise and riff and be spontaneous and create my own things."
Shyamalan says he never could have imagined those piano lessons would turn into this.
“Her brain got wired in this way from those thousands and thousands of hours," he says. “We've always been a little bit in awe of her musical ability from when she was a baby till now. Just being around her process, being side by side with another artist that I admire … it was just exciting.”
And if an “Eras Tour”-style Saleka concert film comes to pass, who’s directing it: Her dad or her sister? “Whoever says yes,” Saleka laughs. “They'll probably both be too busy for me at that point. I'll have to beg one of them.”
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Lionel Messi and the World Cup have left Qatar with a richer sports legacy
- Chiefs are in their 6th straight AFC championship game, and this is the 1st for the Ravens at home
- Amber Glenn becomes first LGBTQ+ woman to win U.S. Women's Figure Skating Championship
- John Galliano out at Maison Margiela, capping year of fashion designer musical chairs
- Virgin Galactic launches 4 space tourists to the edge of space and back
- The popularity of a far-right party produces counter-rallies across Germany
- Khloe Kardashian's Son Tatum Bonds With Their Cat in Adorable Video
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Why Crystal Hefner Is Changing Her Last Name
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Ukraine says corrupt officials stole $40 million meant to buy arms for the war with Russia
- 2 masked assailants attach a church in Istanbul and kill 1 person
- Who was St. Brigid and why is she inspiring many 1,500 years after her death?
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Police: Philadelphia officer shot after scuffle with person in store; 2nd officer kills suspect
- Barcelona loses thriller with Villarreal, falls 10 points behind Real Madrid
- Everything You Need To Enter & Thrive In Your Journaling Era
Recommendation
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
Revelers in festive dress fill downtown Tampa, Florida, for the annual Gasparilla Pirate Fest
Who was St. Brigid and why is she inspiring many 1,500 years after her death?
Houthi attacks in the Red Sea are idling car factories and delaying new fashion. Will it get worse?
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Native tribes don't want statue of William Penn removed. They want their story told.
Plastic surgery helped murder suspect Kaitlin Armstrong stay on the run
Remembering the horrors of Auschwitz, German chancellor warns of antisemitism, threats to democracy