Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Finding her Harriet

Writer-director casts British stage star for film biopic of escaped slave leader

- ANGELA MOORE

NEW YORK When director Kasi Lemmons started work on the first major movie about Harriet Tubman, the 19th-century slave turned hero of the Undergroun­d Railway, she decided to focus less on the brutality of slavery and more on human stories.

“I really felt that I wanted to speak about a different kind of violence, which was family separation, which I hadn’t seen as much of but is very much the Harriet Tubman story and what she was motivated by,” said Lemmons, who co-wrote the screenplay.

“This image of her sisters being taken away, her brother having to leave his wife right after childbirth, her sister saying, ‘No, I can’t leave my children.’ The choices that people had to make and the fact that she was motivated to go back to rescue her family.”

Tubman was born into slavery in the early 1800s in Maryland. As a young adult, she escaped slavery by running nearly 160 kilometres through forests and fields. She then risked her life several times to return to Maryland and lead dozens of slaves to freedom via the Undergroun­d Railroad.

Tubman is played by Cynthia Erivo, a London-born actress with Nigerian parents who won a Tony award in 2016 for her lead role in the Broadway revival of the musical The Color Purple.

Casting a British actress to play a woman seen as an African-american icon has caused controvers­y in the United States, but Lemmons said she thought Tubman’s story “was big enough to share.”

Lemmons said she was struck by Erivo’s “physical stature and her athleticis­m and her singing voice and those cheekbones . ... I felt like, ‘Oh, I’m looking at somebody who really, really could make me believe it.’ And I really think that that’s what it’s about. I think the most service that I can do to this character is to bring, help bring this perfectly realistic performanc­e.”

 ??  ?? Kasi Lemmons
Kasi Lemmons

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