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The iconic figures in 'One Night in Miami'

Regina King's film "One Night in Miami" imagines what happened on the night Malcolm X, Cassius Clay, Jim Brown and Sam Cooke hung out together in 1964.

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On February 25, 1964, Malcolm X, Cassius Clay, Jim Brown, and Sam Cooke spent a night together in a hotel in Miami to celebrate Clay's surprise title win in the world heavyweigh­t championsh­ip, in a fight against Sonny Liston, who was widely regarded as unbeatable. Ten days later, the 22-year-old boxer took on the name of Muhammad Ali.

One Night in Miami fictionali­zes what might have happened when the four legends met that night.

Based on a stage play by Kemp Powers, it is the directoria­l debut of actress Regina King, who won an Oscar for her role in If Beale Street Could Talk( 2018).

After its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival in September 2020, the film had a strong festival run. Seen as an important Oscar contender, One Night in Miami is now released on Amazon Prime Video.

Some people of the younger generation might not be familiar with the four larger-thanlife figures at the center of the film: Malcolm X, who is portrayed by Kingsley Ben-Adir, Cassisus Clay (Eli Goree), Jim Brown (Aldis Hodge) and Sam Cooke

(Leslie Odom Jr.), so here's a brief round-up:

Cassius Clay/ Muhammad Ali

Cassius Clay, born in 1942, became the youngest boxer to take the title from a reigning heavyweigh­t champion that night in 1964 (a record since broken by Mike Tyson).

His change of name came along with his conversion to Islam, affiliatin­g with the Nation of Islam, an African-American political and religious movement founded in 1930, whose selfstated goal was to improve the spiritual, mental, social, and economic condition of African Americans.

Nicknamed "The Greatest," Ali was not only celebrated as one of the top boxers of all time, but was also a towering cultural icon who contribute­d to society as a civil rights activist, entertaine­r and philanthro­pist.

Muhammad Ali died in 2016.

The renowned civil rights activist born in 1925 committed a series of burglaries during his youth, ending up in prison in 1946 at the age of 21. He was released six years later, after having spent his sentence learning and reading books. He also joined the Nation of Islam while imprisoned, adopting the name of Malcolm X — the "X" standing for the "true African family name that he could never know."

It is Malcolm X who inspired Cassius Clay to join the Nation of Islam, as portrayed in the film One Night in Miami.

However, different events led the influentia­l activist to leave the religious movement on March 8, 1964 and found his own Islamic organizati­on, Muslim Mosque, Inc., four days later.

His views clashed with Martin

Luther King's. Malcolm X rejected the civil rights movement's strategy of nonviolenc­e, advocating instead that Black people should rather defend themselves "by any means necessary" — a phrase that's now part of popular civil rights culture.

Malcolm X was shot and killed in 1965, at the age of 39, during a speech in New York. Three members of the Nation of Islam were convicted of his murder, but new evidence questions their culpabilit­y.

Jim Brown

Now aged 84, Jim Brown was the football star of the Cleveland Browns from 1957-1965. Despite his impressive sports achievemen­ts, he was a victim of racism within the team.

By 1964, during the Miami meeting, he already had his eyes on Hollywood. He was 30 years old and at the top of his game when he retired from football. After starring in The Dirty Dozen (1967), he took on several lead roles in Blaxpoitat­ion films in the 1970s, and later appeared in movies such as Tim Burton's Mars Attacks!( 1996) and Oliver Stone's Any Given Sunday (1999).

As a social activist, Brown has founded and run different community programs to foster American minorities.

Sam Cooke

Commonly known as the King of Soul, singer Sam Cooke is seen

as a musical pioneer who contribute­d to the rise of other Black legends, including Aretha Franklin, Al Green, Stevie Wonder and Marvin Gaye.

He was at the height of his career at the time of the February 1964 meeting. Having scored a string of hits since 1957, Cooke had just signed a lucrative five-year recording deal.

In the film, Malcolm X accuses the singer of building his financial success within the white supremacis­t music industry and urges him to take on a more radical approach.

Today the singer is perhaps best remembered for the song "A Change Is Gonna Come," an anthem of the civil rights movement — yet the single was actually released posthumous­ly as a B side, shortly after his death at the age of 33.

Cooke's corpse was found in a Los Angeles motel in December 1964. The motel's manager, Bertha Franklin, claimed to have shot him in self-defense. To this day, there are conspiracy theories surroundin­g Sam Cooke's killing.

 ??  ?? Director Regina King on set with actor Kingsley Ben-Adir
Director Regina King on set with actor Kingsley Ben-Adir
 ??  ?? A scene from 'One Night in Miami'
A scene from 'One Night in Miami'

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