(CNN) In an interview filled with one bombshell after another, Meghan Markle and Prince Harry revealed their fears and struggles with racism in the royal family. But one unlikely hero emerged in the saga: Tyler Perry.
Perry has built an entertainment empire as a writer, actor, producer and director.
But one of his biggest legacies involves swooping in to help the wealthy and those in need -- from paying for Christmas layaways to providing a private jet for Whitney Houston's funeral.
During the CBS interview that aired Sunday night, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex detailed their relocation to Canada and later to California where they now live -- and the role Perry played in their move.
Soon after the couple announced they were stepping back from their royal duties last year, they told Oprah Winfrey, they lost security protection from the British royal family. They were in Canada's Vancouver Island at the time, and started panicking about security threats after their home's location was revealed.
As the coronavirus pandemic intensified, they knew they had to move fast before the borders shut down.
"It dawned on me ... we're going to have our security removed, who knows how long lockdown is going to be. The world knows where we are; it's not safe... We probably need to get out of here," Harry said.
Perry offered his house in Southern California, where the couple stayed for several months with full security.
"We didn't have a plan," Markle told Oprah. "We needed a house and he (Tyler Perry) offered his security as well so it gave us breathing room to try to figure out what we were going to do."
About two decades ago, Perry was a high school dropout living in his car while working on his first play. He grew up in New Orleans, where he was physically and sexually abused, an experience that enraged and confused him, he told Winfrey a few years ago.
His efforts to stage a play failed several times, leaving him broke and homeless. But he never gave up.
Now the man once known for his role as an outspoken, gun-toting grandmother in movie adaptations of his popular "Madea" runs his Atlanta-based production company, Tyler Perry Studios. The studio built on 330 acres on a former Confederate Army base is the first studio fully owned by an African American in the US.
And he went from "poor as hell" to a billionaire.
Through it all, Perry has built a reputation as someone who rushes to the rescue of strangers and celebrities alike.
Two years ago, he paid for layaway items worth over $430,000 at Atlanta area Walmart stores during Christmas.
"I know it's a hard time, a lot of people are struggling and I'm just really grateful to be able to be in a position to do this," Perry said in a video at the time.
Over the past decade, he has spread kindness in Atlanta and beyond.
After the 2012 death of Whitney Houston, he provided the plane to transport her body from Los Angeles to her home state of New Jersey for the burial.
And he's not wavered in his support of others.
In 2019, he helped a series of people -- from an American couple stuck at a Mexican hospital after they were unable to pay their bill after treatment -- to a Georgia family struggling to pay rent, debt and school fees after their mother's murder.
Audrey Turner, whose mother was killed by her boyfriend, recounted the initial conversation this way:
"It was a call I wasn't even going to answer. ... I answered and the person on the other end said, 'This is Tyler.'
"I said, 'Who?'
He said, 'This is Tyler.'
I said, 'Tyler who?' and he said, 'Tyler Perry.' At that point, I just broke down crying."
Last year, Time Magazine named Perry one of its 100 most influential people and Forbes added him to its list of billionaires.
One of Perry's most important roles recently was reassuring Black people to take the coronavirus shot.
With the pandemic killing Black people at higher rates, he hosted a show in which he interviewed experts and asked questions on the vaccine's safety, testing and development. During the show, which aired on BET in January, he rolled up his shirt and got his shot.
He also provided groceries for thousands of elderly people in Louisiana and Georgia at the height of the pandemic in April. "I wanted to do something immediate that got out to people immediately," he said at the time.