The Morning Call

‘Genius: MLK/X’ suggests ‘we need both’ civil rights leaders

- By Alicia Rancilio

Much has been written about the one-andonly time the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X met. It was March 26, 1964, and the two civil rights leaders were in Washington for a Senate debate on the Civil Rights Act.

The moment is also depicted in the latest installmen­t of National Geographic’s anthology series, “Genius: MLK /X,” with all episodes are now streaming.

Kelvin Harrison Jr., who plays King, and Aaron Pierre, who plays Malcolm X, can be at ease now about being scheduled to shoot the scene on the first day of filming. At the time, it was intimidati­ng. “I was like, what kind of prank are the producers trying to play on us,” Harrison recalled. “We barely even knew what we were doing yet.

“We kind of went into separate corners ... and we didn’t really see each other until that moment. What you see is us seeing each other for the first time in character,” he said.

Looking back, Pierre thinks it was a smart scheduling decision. “Had we had four months (of shooting) under our belt, I think we might have gone into that differentl­y, but we had no choice but to just lean into the present moment,” he said.

Executive producers Gina Prince-Bythewood and Reggie Rock Bythewood kept a photo of the real-life introducti­on on their two sons’ walls while they were growing up. Their hope is that with “Genius: MLK/X,” viewers will recognize the contributi­ons of both men to civil rights and U.S. history.

“One misconcept­ion is that we’re told we have to choose. Either you align

with Malcolm, or you align with Martin, you know, but our offering is that we need both,” Bythewood said. “While they challenged each other, they also learned from each other, and they were aligned in many ways.”

Past seasons of “Genius” have covered Albert Einstein, Pablo Picasso and Aretha Franklin. “Genius: MLK/X” examines each man’s origin story and what led them to make the choices they did to lead a movement. “We know the speeches. We know the interviews. We know the famous moments. But we wanted to explore what happened in the lead-up to those moments and what made these men believe they had the capacity to do the things they did,” Pierre said.

Another priority: to “amplify” their wives Coretta Scott King and Betty Shabazz. “Too often they’re thought of as just the wives or the sidekick. They were so integral not only to the genius of the two men, but to the movement itself,” Prince-Bythewood said.

The fifth episode of the season tells each woman’s back story and how they evolved into leaders.

“We shine a powerful, beautiful light on those women and the equal

role they played in these movements,” Pierre said. “I think that’s something really special.”

Harrison originally believed that he was not up for the challenge of playing King.

“I said no at first,” Harrison said. “The producers asked me to read the first episode at least, and I met with them and expressed my feeling of basically impostor syndrome, that I didn’t think I had what it takes to do it. They said, ‘That’s the reason why we want you to do it, because at the age that Dr. King was, when he had to step into this big movement, he also didn’t know if he had what it took.’ ”

Pierre hopes that people finish this “Genius” installmen­t with a fresh understand­ing of Malcolm X, a man about whom he says “there is a considerab­le amount of misinforma­tion about.”

“Malcolm X, el-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz, he operated from a place of love. He operated from a place of light. He wasn’t advocating someone to see out physical confrontat­ion. He was advocating for the cause of his deep love for his family, his friends, his community, his loved ones, anyone in the world that looked like him,” Pierre said.

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP ?? Kelvin Harrison Jr., left, and Aaron Pierre, seen Jan. 29, star in the title roles of “Genius: MLK/X.”
CHRIS PIZZELLO/AP Kelvin Harrison Jr., left, and Aaron Pierre, seen Jan. 29, star in the title roles of “Genius: MLK/X.”

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