The pandemic hit working moms hard. In her new TV role, Danielle Brooks records the toll

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Actress Danielle Brooks

Danielle Brooks wanted to find a way to stay creative during quarantine. So she's starring in a TV show about it.

Set in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, "Social Distance" is an eight-part anthology series — focusing on one person or family each episode — about navigating the uncertainty and unexpected circumstances of this singular moment in history. In the third installment, the former "Orange Is the New Black" star plays Imani, a working single mom trying to figure out how to care for her daughter while also keeping her job.

Now streaming on Netflix, "Social Distance" was shot remotely under various stay-at-home orders designed to limit the spread of the coronavirus. That meant Brooks, a new mom to daughter Freeya, filmed her episode from her parents' home in South Carolina — and shared the screen with her mother Larita Brooks, who plays a patient with ALS that Brooks cares for at a nursing home.

Now back at her home in Brooklyn, where construction was underway, Brooks chatted with The Times in her backyard via video conference about the way quarantine has helped her relationships with her family, how being a new mom has opened her eyes to the disparities mothers face, and how this year has her thinking about the work she pursues. The following has been edited for clarity and condensed.

It feels like 10 years ago at this point, but what do you remember about those early days of the pandemic?



Imagine moving back in with your parents, with a baby, without your fiancé — because he has to work and figure out our house stuff back in New York. But I had a great time. I got to know my parents as an adult and a mother. I got to understand them as grandparents. And my brother was there. Growing up, we didn't get to spend that much time together, so we're getting to hang out, with him as an adult. And just watch Freeya grow at a slower pace. At the time, they weren't closing down the parks. So I would get up every morning and walk two, three miles around the park, in the neighborhood, just get to be in nature and get Freeya to enjoy fresh air. It's been cool to not have that pressure of being a new mom, of the bounce back, and trying to be everything that society tells you you're supposed to be.

What was the show you were working on? Do you have a sense of when production will resume?





Did you learn anything about yourself through this time?



I'm super-jealous of everybody getting to home-edit their houses and stuff because I was at my parents' house, so getting to do the whole spring-cleaning thing happened really late for me — it didn't happen until the end of summer. I came back to my space with a very clear mind [about] what I wanted to do. Part of what I wanted to do was find routine. As an actor you don't really have much of that. That's what I love about my job, the fact that I get to float and be a free bird. But there has to be some consistency that leads to peace and happiness. I've really been able to nail down a skin care routine and get my baby on a sleep routine. Those little things that we take for granted, I've really been able to do.

Did you bake any sourdough bread or banana bread?



Actress Danielle Brooks.
Actress Danielle Brooks. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

In those early days of the pandemic, it became something of a joke guessing how long before this time would be the basis of a TV show or movie. "Social Distance" was the first to be announced back in April. Why was this project appealing to you?



And then the other layer of it was when they asked if my mom would be involved. First of all, my mom is a fantastic actress. Unfortunately, they didn't give her any lines because she would have slayed them. She played a woman with ALS, and she has a lot of 'tude. I just wanted to make memories with her. And my brother is in it as well, he has a very small cameo. I just wanted to create things that we can look back on and say, "We did that together during a pandemic." And because it's on television and on Netflix, it's something that we would tell Freeya about when she is old enough to understand what was happening during this time. She'll get to say: "Oh, look at what mama and grandma and uncle created together." And my mom opened her home for this, which was very generous of her because it can feel very invasive. It was cool because my family was able to understand a little bit more about what I do. I remember my mom saying, like, "I [have] a lot more respect for you, Danielle, and what you do because this is not easy."

You play Imani, a single mom trying to figure out how to keep her job while making sure her child is taken care of — a situation so many parents find themselves in.



The same with the character Marsha [that] Stephanie Blake plays. She's trying to figure things out as well — teaching and trying to figure out how to maneuver and make lesson plans online. It's just a whole new world that people are having to step into and navigate. What I think we find through this episode is that we're all in it together. And how can we really look out for our neighbors and be there for each other during this time. It takes a village to stay afloat.

There's been some research showing that more women are leaving the workforce because they are carrying the childcare load during the pandemic. Do you think the childcare issues get enough attention?



started conversations about ICE

I've been blessed to be financially stable, but it's not cheap, to have someone look after your child and to continue trying to reach for the dreams that you have; trying to continue to work at the level that you want to work at. I think that's why women start to lose themselves, is because you might not have the resources to help you continue to be yourself. I think the part that is left out of the conversation is the sacrifice that women make being mothers, and a part of that is giving up the things that you enjoy and love and that bring you happiness. Some of that comes from not being able to afford childcare. That's something that, when we first had Freeya, we were definitely debating on, like, "What do we do?" And I knew I wasn't not going to work. But that light bulb does kind of flicker. Do I just sit out for a year? Do I sit out until she can go to preschool, just to save money? And I'm not willing to sacrifice that. So she is coming with me everywhere I go. Everyone has different situations. But speaking for myself, it's taught me to advocate more for myself, and to advocate for what I need. So I definitely try to add that into contracts: "You want me, I come with a baby and a nanny."

Danielle Brooks, right, shares the screen with her mother for the first time
Larita Brooks as Ernestine, left, Danielle Brooks as Imani, and Marsha Stephanie Blake (bottom right) as Marion in a scene from the third episode of "Social Distance." (Netflix)

And I would assume it puts things in perspective, in terms of even have the ability to make a choice, because a lot of people can't make the choice.





Between the coronavirus, the racial injustice protests, the upcoming election, this year has caused a lot of people to reflect about their life, their work, and what changes they want to make. How has it got you thinking about the projects you want to pursue?



I've kind of always led with that mentality: What you're doing is bigger than you, so be careful what you put out there or be aware of what you're putting out there. So with everything that I do, who I am, the uniqueness of how I've been created, I will always be pushing the needle in a way — just being a plus-size Black woman, dark skin, natural hair. That alone will always kind of change the game. Everything that I do in my career has to be light years away from the box I am supposed to be put in. That's my goal.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.