Miami Herald (Sunday)

HAMPTON HOUSE IN THE SPOTLIGHT

Film breathes new life into Brownsvill­e’s Historic Hampton House

- BY C. ISAIAH SMALLS II csmalls@miamiheral­d.com

New film ‘One Night in Miami’ breathes new life into Brownsvill­e’s Historic Hampton House. The movie follows Muhammad Ali, Malcolm X, Jim Brown and Sam Cooke.

To successful­ly bring a stage play to the silver screen, the filmmaker must overcome the limitation­s of a confined set.

Denzel Washington did it with “Fences.” Sidney Lumet with “The Wiz.” Barry Jenkins with “Moonlight.”

“One Night in Miami” — a fictionali­zed take on the meeting of boxing legend Cassius Clay, civil rights activist Malcolm X, football star Jim Brown and soul singer Sam Cooke at the Hampton House — is no different. An adaptation of the eponymous stage play by Kemp Powers, the film utilizes its set to showcase the beauty of Blackness even in the darkest of times.

“The Hampton House is a silent star in the movie,” said Dr. Enid Pinkney. The former Brownsvill­e lounge and hotel is now the Historic Hampton House Cultural Center, thanks to founder Pinkney, who spearheade­d its reopening in 2015.

Directed by Academy award-winning actress Regina King, the story follows the four friends during the night of Feb. 25, 1964, after Clay’s upset victory over Sonny Liston, before the upstart changed his name to Muhammad Ali. The fight took place at the Miami Beach Convention Center, but segregatio­n prevented African Americans from staying nearby — even if they had just became heavyweigh­t champion of the world. So X, Clay, Brown and Cooke headed eight miles west to the Hampton House, a highend hotel for African Americans that also doubled as a place of refuge during times of racial animus, for a night of heated discourse.

“We had a place here in this community that was a first-class place that had air conditioni­ng, that had a swimming pool,” Pinkney said. “... There was just pride in this building because of its elegance.”

With limited access to luxury in the Jim Crow South, African-Americans spent their leisure time in Green Book-approved places like the Hampton House. King showcased this history with images of Black guests relaxing poolside and the unbridled glee on the faces of patrons at the hotel dining room, despite the racism awaiting them just outside the door. It’s also why, even in the film’s most tense moments, the four men always

looked sharp inside the motel.

“It was very important that the men always look good in this room,” said King, who is making her film directoria­l debut with “One Night in Miami.” “And in order to do that, we took a big risk and completed the set at the last minute because we wanted to see each actor in front of different colors of wood to make sure that the choice compliment­ed all four complexion­s.”

Looking good was a priority for anyone staying at the hotel. Visitors never knew who might be in town: One night it might be Jackie Robinson, the next Nat

King Cole, another Sammy Davis Jr. Between its dazzling out-of-town clientele and its in-house jazz club, the Hampton House was once a buzzing nightlife spot for Miami’s in-crowd.

“The Hampton House was a bridge in the community that brought the community together, no matter what your race was or your color or your religion,” Pinkney said. “Wherever you came from, you were welcomed at the Hampton House.”

That was part of its mission when owners Harry and Florence Markowitz, a white Jewish couple, opened the Hampton

House in 1961. The twostory motel closed sometime in the 1970s.

When it came to bringing the Hampton House to the screen, production designer Barry Robison told Architectu­ral Digest that the film’s art department remade the hotel’s exterior at a Louisiana motel, while the guest and dining room were made on the set.

“All of the sets were custom-made,” Robison said. “… We built the motel room from the ground up so that Regina [King] could have freedom of camera movement.”

That freedom — aided in part by some creative licensing in the form of making the motel room bigger than it would’ve been in 1964 — allowed King to better control the viewer’s emotions, she says.

“The moments that needed to feel claustroph­obic, I wanted to be able to control when those moments happened as supposed to it feeling claustroph­obic throughout,” King explained.

Set to release Jan. 15 through Amazon Prime, the film shines a renewed spotlight on the Hampton House, a place that has changed dramatical­ly in the past decade. Once an abandoned motel on the verge of demolition, the real-life Historic Hampton House benefited from Pinkney’s work, culminatin­g in a $6 million restoratio­n project that opened as a nonprofit cultural center in 2015. Complete with a museum, a restaurant area and suites once occupied by Ali and Martin Luther King Jr., the former motel can come to life at night, says interim director Imani Warren.

“When you come up in here, you hear [Sam Cooke’s] ‘A Change Is Gonna Come,’” Warren said. “I don’t know what it is about this place, but you hear Muhammad Ali talking smack in his room. You hear Martin Luther King’s ‘I Have A Dream’ speech when you’re in this space.”

Having already resurrecte­d the Hampton House once, Pinkney believes its transforma­tion is far from over. She envisions the motel becoming a community hub that provides recording studios, a rehearsal space and, of course, an education for not just the city of Miami but anyone looking to take a walk back in time.

As with many cultural institutio­ns, a lack of funding has prevented Pinkney’s dreams from becoming reality. But she’s hoping that the film will change that.

“We don’t have the appreciati­on for our local history and we need to teach it,” Pinkney said. “We need to learn it. And this should be the citadel where that takes place.”

 ?? COURTESY OF THE HAMPTON HOUSE
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com
CHARLES TRAINOR JR. ctrainor@miamiheral­d.com ?? Former director Enid C. Pinkney in the grand lobby of the Hampton House. Pinkney was instrument­al in the preservati­on of the Hampton House and its renovation. Left, Muhammad Ali, center, inside the historic motel’s cafe, featured in ‘One Night in Miami.’
COURTESY OF THE HAMPTON HOUSE CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com CHARLES TRAINOR JR. ctrainor@miamiheral­d.com Former director Enid C. Pinkney in the grand lobby of the Hampton House. Pinkney was instrument­al in the preservati­on of the Hampton House and its renovation. Left, Muhammad Ali, center, inside the historic motel’s cafe, featured in ‘One Night in Miami.’
 ?? PHOTOS BY CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Hampton House director Imani Warren, above and below, inside the two room suite where Muhammad Ali stayed.
PHOTOS BY CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Hampton House director Imani Warren, above and below, inside the two room suite where Muhammad Ali stayed.
 ?? COURTESY OF THE HAMPTON HOUSE ?? Malcolm X, far left, photograph­ing Muhammad Ali, far right, inside the historic motel’s cafe.
COURTESY OF THE HAMPTON HOUSE Malcolm X, far left, photograph­ing Muhammad Ali, far right, inside the historic motel’s cafe.
 ?? COURTESY OF THE HAMPTON HOUSE ?? Malcolm X, far left, photograph­ing, Jim Brown, Muhammad Ali and Sam Cooke.
COURTESY OF THE HAMPTON HOUSE Malcolm X, far left, photograph­ing, Jim Brown, Muhammad Ali and Sam Cooke.
 ??  ??

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