Tyler PerryknowsCicely Tyson’s worth.TheJazzman’s Blueswriter/director chatted withAARP The Magazinefor its August/September cover story, where he revealed he once paid Tyson, whodied last year at age 96, “a million dollars” for a single day of work on his 2007 movieWhy Did I Get Married?.“This woman had done so many amazing things, but she wasn’t well compensated for it,” he said. “She made $6,000 forSounder, you know? I wanted to make sure she knew that there were people who valued her.“Perry, 52, also said he “loved working with Tyson” onWhy Did I Get Married?. “It makes me feel great that I was in a position to givethis incredible womansome security in her latter years,” he shared.Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories.Cicely Tyson and Tyler Perry in 2019.Matt Baron/ShutterstockTyson and Perry worked together on several films beginning with 2005’sDiary of a Mad Black Womanas well asWhy Did I Get Married?,Madea’s Family Reunion(2006) andWhy Did I Get Married Too?(2010).After Tyson’s death, Perry dedicated a heartfelttribute to the screen legendon Instagram. “My heart breaks in one beat, while celebrating her life in the next,” he wrote in part. “To think that she lived for 96 years and I got to be a part of the last 16 brings me great joy. She called me son. Well, today your son grieves your loss and will miss our long talks, your laughter from your belly, and your very presence.““Always so regal, always so classy,always a lady, always a queen,” he added. “Every time we would talk I would ask, ‘How are you?’ and you would say, ‘I’m still here. He must have something he wants me to do.’ Well, I think it’s safe to say you have done all you were put here to do, and we are all better for it.“Tyson’s career spanned more than 60 years. With more than 95 credits to her name, she never tired of entertaining audiences, becoming famous for playing resilient, strong Black women.Tyler Perry coversAARP The Magazine’s August/September 2022 issue.Shayan AshgarniaDuring hisAARP The Magazineinterview, Perry also reflected on his own struggles, including how he once “spent all [his] money” to produce a play that “didn’t work.““After that, I tried again — many, many times — to produce the play,” he recalled. “I would get different jobs between those times, but I’d quit to work on the play, and Iended up homeless. For three months, I lived in a Geo Metro that I was hiding from the repo man.“While discussing his childhood in Louisiana, Perry also admitted he has “some survivor’s guilt,” as “there are a lot of people I went to school with who did not make it, who ended up in prison, who ended up murdered, especially during the time of the crack cocaine infusion into America.““I credit my getting out to my mother, my aunts, my grandmother — all these incredible women who prayed and taught me things and believed in me,” Perry said. “Had I not had their examples and their straight-up backbone — their insistence that I make something of myself — I don’t know where I’d be.”

Tyler PerryknowsCicely Tyson’s worth.

TheJazzman’s Blueswriter/director chatted withAARP The Magazinefor its August/September cover story, where he revealed he once paid Tyson, whodied last year at age 96, “a million dollars” for a single day of work on his 2007 movieWhy Did I Get Married?.

“This woman had done so many amazing things, but she wasn’t well compensated for it,” he said. “She made $6,000 forSounder, you know? I wanted to make sure she knew that there were people who valued her.”

Perry, 52, also said he “loved working with Tyson” onWhy Did I Get Married?. “It makes me feel great that I was in a position to givethis incredible womansome security in her latter years,” he shared.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories.

Cicely Tyson and Tyler Perry in 2019.Matt Baron/Shutterstock

Cicely Tyson and Tyler Perry Vanity Fair Oscar Party, Arrivals, Los Angeles, USA - 24 Feb 2019

Tyson and Perry worked together on several films beginning with 2005’sDiary of a Mad Black Womanas well asWhy Did I Get Married?,Madea’s Family Reunion(2006) andWhy Did I Get Married Too?(2010).

After Tyson’s death, Perry dedicated a heartfelttribute to the screen legendon Instagram. “My heart breaks in one beat, while celebrating her life in the next,” he wrote in part. “To think that she lived for 96 years and I got to be a part of the last 16 brings me great joy. She called me son. Well, today your son grieves your loss and will miss our long talks, your laughter from your belly, and your very presence.”

“Always so regal, always so classy,always a lady, always a queen,” he added. “Every time we would talk I would ask, ‘How are you?’ and you would say, ‘I’m still here. He must have something he wants me to do.’ Well, I think it’s safe to say you have done all you were put here to do, and we are all better for it.”

Tyson’s career spanned more than 60 years. With more than 95 credits to her name, she never tired of entertaining audiences, becoming famous for playing resilient, strong Black women.

Tyler Perry coversAARP The Magazine’s August/September 2022 issue.Shayan Ashgarnia

Tyler Perry Says He Paid Cicely Tyson $1 Million for a Day of Work: ‘She Wasn’t Well Compensated’ in Past

During hisAARP The Magazineinterview, Perry also reflected on his own struggles, including how he once “spent all [his] money” to produce a play that “didn’t work.”

“After that, I tried again — many, many times — to produce the play,” he recalled. “I would get different jobs between those times, but I’d quit to work on the play, and Iended up homeless. For three months, I lived in a Geo Metro that I was hiding from the repo man.”

While discussing his childhood in Louisiana, Perry also admitted he has “some survivor’s guilt,” as “there are a lot of people I went to school with who did not make it, who ended up in prison, who ended up murdered, especially during the time of the crack cocaine infusion into America.”

“I credit my getting out to my mother, my aunts, my grandmother — all these incredible women who prayed and taught me things and believed in me,” Perry said. “Had I not had their examples and their straight-up backbone — their insistence that I make something of myself — I don’t know where I’d be.”

source: people.com