Queen Latifah told Barbara Walters on ABC's 'The View' that she was
'totally serious' about wanting to adopt a child. She would be in good
company – both in the celebrity world, and among Americans overall.
Could Queen Latifah soon be a mom? That’s what the actress and rapper said to Barbara Walters on ABC’s “The View” yesterday, saying she was “totally serious” about adopting a child.
“I think I saw one of those specials... you know those movies of the
week. And it was like – and I just always wanted to bring a child home,”
she said.
When Walters pressed, asking Queen Latifah if she was
really serious about adoption, the actress said yes, and that she was
“actually kind of working on that.”
Are you a Helicopter Parent? Take our quiz!“I’m
totally serious,” she said. And then, because it’s Queen Latifah: “so
if you got a kid that you don’t... just give me a year – let me set up
camp and then send me the kid.”
(She’s got a lot on her plate – she’s set to star in a television movie version of
Steel Magnolias next year.)
But she said again that she was really serious about adopting.
She would be in good company.
The celebrity world is filled with star-studded adoptions. There’s the
Jolie-Pitt clan, of course, with kids hailing from
Cambodia,
Ethiopia and
Vietnam.
Katherine Heigl and husband
Josh Kelley adopted a daughter from
South Korea. And
Madonna, who fought to adopt daughter Mercy James from
Malawi.
Latifah wouldn’t even raise eyebrows as a single celebrity mom adopting. Think
Charlize Theron and
Sandra Bullock.
But
as the Monitor has reported, adoption is far more than a celebrity
trend – it’s an American phenomenon. In 2010, there were 52,891 domestic
adoptions reported through public agencies in the
US, and 11,058 international adoptions, according to the
State Department. In 2002, the National Survey of Family Growth estimated that 18.5 million American women ages 18-44 had considered adoption.
As Modern Parenthood editor
Clara Germani wrote recently,
in her introduction to the heartwarming – and, we’ve discovered,
controversial – series about a Monitor editor and his family’s journey
to
China to adopt their second daughter, most of these adoptions go right.