Skip to main content

Black writers ignored by Hollywood, says Oscar winner Barry Jenkins

PARIS: African American writers have been ignored for too long by Hollywood but “things are going to change radically”, declared the Oscar-winning filmmaker of “Moonlight”, Barry Jenkins.

The director said James Baldwin, one of the greatest American novelists of the last century has never been adapted for the big screen in his homeland, while Toni Morrison — “one of the greatest US authors to have ever lived” — has only made it once with her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel “Beloved”.

“Black writers in general are not adapted as often as their white counterparts in the US,” said Jenkins, in Paris promoting his new film “If Beale Street Could Talk” — based on a book by Baldwin — which is in the running for three Oscars this year.

The 1974 story of a young black man and women in Harlem whose lives are turned upsidedown by an unplanned pregnancy and a false accusation of rape, was previously filmed in France.

Director Robert Guediguian transposed the story to the port of Marseille in “A la place du coeur” (Where the Heart Is) in 1998, but made the relationship at its heart an interracial one.

Baldwin, who died in 1987, lived most of his life in exile, mostly in France.

“I Am Not Your Negro”, a documentary drawn from his unfinished history of racism in America, “Remember This House”, by the Haitian-born director Raoul Peck, was nominated for an Oscar in 2017.

– Out of shadows –

Jenkins insisted that black stories and the work of black writers are about to step out of the shadows in Hollywood.

“I think now, with what’s happening in cinema, particularly in black cinema, it’s going to radically change that. The industry has just caught up with Baldwin and not the other way round,” he said.

He said the success of his “Moonlight”, the story of a young black boy in Florida coming to terms with his homosexuality, was a pointer of things to come.

“What nobody ever acknowledges is that the Academy, this group that we think has been overwhelmingly white and male and conservative actually voted for a film (“Moonlight”) made by the filmmaker no one had heard of, featuring a character struggling with sexual identity. That actually happened.”

The success of blockbuster films like “Black Panther” with its black superheroes is also remaking the landscape, he said.

“‘Black Panther’ made more than a billion dollars. It is already a great year for black cinema,” said Jenkins, who is now adapting Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize-winning historical novel, “The Underground Railway”, about black slaves escaping the American South in the 19th century.

The post Black writers ignored by Hollywood, says Oscar winner Barry Jenkins appeared first on ARYNEWS.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

US coronavirus death toll passes 3,000

The US death toll from the coronavirus pandemic passed 3,000 on Monday, according to the running tally compiled by the Johns Hopkins University, with more than 163,000 confirmed cases. The United States has recorded 3,008 deaths, according to the tally, while its 163,429 cases are by far the highest national number ahead of Italy, Spain and China. President Donald Trump has been criticized for an initially slow response by the federal government to the now-accelerating pandemic spread. Harrowing scenes from hospitals in New York and elsewhere revealed a health system unprepared with basic supplies such as face masks, as well as life-saving devices like respirators. On Sunday, Trump cancelled his plans to re-open much of the country by Easter — April 12 — and extended social distancing guidelines until the end of April after his top scientists confronted him with data on the rising coronavirus crisis. Trump said America’s death rate was likely to increase for two weeks, describing...

India’s coronavirus cases rise by a daily record of 55,078

BENGALURU: India reported another record surge in daily COVID-19 cases on Friday, taking the total to 1.64 million, as the government further eases virus curbs in a bid to resuscitate the economy, while also trying to increase testing. Infections jumped by 55,078 in the past 24 hours, while the death toll rose by 779 to 35,747, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare said on its website. The ministry also said it aimed to raise the country’s capacity to 1 million coronavirus tests per day in the medium term, from a record 600,000 on Friday. The federal government this week announced the reopening of yoga institutes and gymnasiums, and removed restrictions on the movement of people and goods. The post India’s coronavirus cases rise by a daily record of 55,078 appeared first on ARY NEWS .

Punjab education minister asks private school owners to reduce fees

LAHORE: Punjab Minister for Schools Education Dr Murad Raas on Tuesday asked owners of private schools in the province to cut 20 percent fees amid coronavirus spread. The request has been made for the months of April and May. Murad Raas chaired a meeting to review the fees of the private schools. The minister requested the private school owners not to fire any teacher from job due to present circumstances. Punjab authorities have also started preparations for introducing an online system for conducting academic sessions and classes in universities across the province. The decision was taken to reduce burden and educational loss of the students amid the closure of all institutions due to coronavirus pandemic . A committee had been established to complete the task over the directives of Punjab’s Minister for Higher Education Khawaja Yasir Humayun. PHEC Chairman Professor Dr Fazl Khalid is appointed as convenor of the committee which has been tasked to finalise the suject-wise sche...