As for her biggest role models, Williams says she really doesnât have to look beyond her own mother and four sisters. However, âI definitely look up to a different, interesting set of women,â she says. âOf course, who doesnât love Oprah and Michelle Obama.â
Someone else Williams greatly admires is Anni Albers, the late German artist known for her bold, geometrically patterned textiles and prints. âShe ended up having to work in textiles because that was what was kind of accepted during that time,â says Williams. âBut she was an incredible artist who really just broke down barriers for women.â
Williams also singled out the late multiple world-record-holding Olympic champion Wilma Rudolph, who despite being diagnosed with polio as a child and told she would never walk again, pursued her dream to be an international track and field star: âI donât know how you become an Olympic champion having polio, but she did. Incredible.â
Williams, of course, is herself an Olympic champion, and on Feb. 25, 2002, became the first Black tennis player to be ranked No. 1 in the world. At 41, she is training for a forthcoming tournament, details of which she declined to discuss at this time.
I asked if sheâs thinking about retiring sometime in the near future. âI canât imagine itâs that far [off] now,â she acknowledges. Williams hasnât played in a major tournament since competing at Wimbledon last year, so sheâs had a small taste of what life might be like when she wraps her career as a tennis pro, having had some time âto do things outside the court.â That included serving as a hands-on executive producer of the Oscar-nominated movie based on her own family, âKing Richard,â alongside her sisters Serena and Isha Price.
Williams says she was very motivated by that experience to pursue more entertainment projects with Isha. âAnd there are so many amazing women in Hollywood that would be great to work with,â she says, noting sheâd love to collaborate on a scripted project with director Ava DuVernay, who directed ESPNâs 2013 documentary âVenus Vs.,â chronicling Williamsâ fight for pay equity in tennis.
âI want to continue to tell sports stories because thatâs my nature, but I donât think you always have to tell a sports story through the lens of sports,â says Williams. âI want to continue to tell stories that resonate with me,â including those aimed at children. While Williams enjoys wearing a producer hat, she is very clear about what she doesnât want to do on projects: âI will never, ever be an actor. I donât want to be in front of the camera â ever.â
She loves consuming movies â everything from kids films from Pixar to period pictures like âThe Kingâs Speechâ â and she says sometimes in bed she finds it âextremely comfortingâ to watch a TV show like âHow I Met Your Motherâ repeatedly. âIâve seen it so many times, and itâs just like 15 minutes and then youâre off to dreamland.â
And, it turns out, sheâs musical. When I asked her to tell me something about her that many may not know, she said: âIâm a karaoke queen. I love to sing throughout the day, and I also have a karaoke mic I travel with.â