Bangkok Post

SPEAKING TRUTH TO POWER THROUGH HER ART

Reimaginin­g a meeting of US Civil Rights-era icons

- SALAMISHAH TILLET NYT THE NEW

One Night In Miami, now streaming on Amazon Prime, is a fictional account of a real 1964 meeting of four legends. On Feb 24 of that year, Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, Sam Cooke and Malcolm X got together several hours after the boxer won his first World Heavyweigh­t Championsh­ip. Although in real life they did share ice cream as they do on screen, in the film’s imagining, they also listened to music and vigorously debated their roles in and the goals of the civil rights movement.

Set in Malcolm’s humble room at the Hampton House, a Miami motel that black guests frequented, the acclaimed drama follows each of these men as they confront life-altering choices in their political consciousn­ess and profession­al careers:

— Malcolm (played by Kingsley Ben-Adir) is on the verge of leaving the Nation of Islam, which he serves as its most charismati­c minister and for which he has recruited the 22-year-old Cassius Clay.

— Clay (Eli Goree) is planning to announce his affiliatio­n with the Nation of Islam and his name change to Muhammad Ali the next morning.

— The All-American athlete Jim Brown (Aldis Hodge) is torn between his desire to make a difference on the big screen as an actor and his football career with the Cleveland Browns.

— And asserting his artistic independen­ce, singer Sam Cooke (Leslie Odom Jr) has become one of the few black Americans to own their record label, amassing dozens of Top 40 hits, including, that February, A Change Is Gonna Come.

The film focuses on that evening; in real life, tragedy quickly came. By December, Sam Cooke would be dead, killed in a Los Angeles motel room. Malcolm would be assassinat­ed a few months later. And by 1967, Ali was facing prison and effectivel­y banned from boxing after a conviction for draft evasion in the Vietnam War. Of the four, only Brown, who retired in 1966 as the NFL’s leading rusher for a career in Hollywood, remains alive.

One Night In Miami started life as a 2013 play by Kemp Powers (Soul) who also adapted the screenplay. It was his stirring attempt to transform figures who had come to be revered as monuments into three-dimensiona­l characters who could be remembered as men.

Moved by Powers’ emphasis on intimacy over iconicism, actress Regina King immediatel­y wanted to tell this story on screen, making One Night In Miami her film directoria­l debut. While King has directed episodes of television shows, she is best known for giving some of the most powerful performanc­es on the big and small screen, winning several Emmys, most notably for last year’s Watchmen, in which she played Angela Abar, a Tulsa, Oklahoma, cop by day and a ninja-nun by night. In 2019, she won an Oscar and a Golden Globe for supporting actress for Barry Jenkins’ If Beale Street Could Talk.

This time the Oscar buzz surroundin­g King is for best director. There is also talk of honours for the performanc­es she cultivated, particular­ly from Odom and Ben-Adir, who spar on screen. (Ben-Adir won a Gotham Award this month.) In a video interview, King discussed how she wanted to depict the men behind the legends, how her relationsh­ip with her 24-year-old son, Ian Alexander Jr, informed this film, and why she found it necessary to complete the project during our summer of unpreceden­ted racial protests.

What originally attracted you to this story?

In 2019, I read the play, and then immediatel­y after, I read the screenplay. But, this subject has been present for black people ever since our history in America has existed. I also thought Kemp’s words were a love letter to the black man’s experience. As an audience member, I feel like I don’t often get the opportunit­y to see our men realised on screen the way we see them in real life.

Younger people might have heard of Malcolm X or Muhammad Ali, but might be less familiar with Jim Brown and Sam Cooke. How did you approach introducin­g them to a new generation?

The film is a quiet film, but it’s loud as far as the subject matter. I’m one of those people that feels like these four men are timeless. Malcolm’s autobiogra­phy had an impact on my son just as it had on me in my 20s. But it’s a gamble. When you talk about the 20-somethings of the world, some of them might not be able to be patient enough to sit down and just take it in. Luckily, I’ve been able to live vicariousl­y through my son to see the technology and things that spark their interest. So, while this is a period piece, I still want it to be visually attractive and thought saturating it with colour was more likely to get the attention of younger people than a muted palette. The colour also represents the

resilience of black people. We still managed to smile, dance, laugh, love, even with all of the things that we are up against, just in day-to-day life.

You are one of the most celebrated actors of your generation. How do you think your background as an actor and a television director helped you to pull out certain performanc­es from your cast?

Television moves much faster; you have more prep time with film. But what I did do here, that’s more like directing for TV than film, is to have Kemp by my side throughout the process. Most of the time with movies, the writers are omitted, but I felt like it would be a disservice to not have him as part of the entire process. In my experience­s in TV, the writer is very much involved, so I’ve seen the benefit of that.

One of the things that attracted me to his script is that it’s an actor’s piece. And being an actor, of course, I’m going to gravitate to something that I feel like is an opportunit­y for thespians to really sink their teeth in. And being an actor, I understand what it takes to get to emotional space and “what’s easy” for one actor is not necessaril­y easy for another, how one communicat­es is not the same for another. I’m sensitive to all of those things.

Last year was an unpreceden­ted year in so many ways. How did the Covid-19 pandemic and racial justice protests impact your making of this film?

We started shooting in January 2020 and left New Orleans in February, because we always intended to shoot two more scenes in Los Angeles. And then Covid hit, so we figured that we’d pause and not be hasty because these conversati­ons are always happening.

We felt like they weren’t going anywhere. But we could not have guessed that the uprisings were going to happen. So, when we found ourselves in that powder keg moment (in June), I began speaking to Eli, Leslie and the other actors, and everyone was like, “Oh, got to do it.” As filmmakers, we felt it was our responsibi­lity to be safe and that as soon as LA was going to open up to shoot again, we could create a really small footprint and do almost like a skeleton crew to get those two scenes done.

I was surprised by how much acrimony exists between Malcolm X and Sam Cooke in your film as they disagree over what their roles in the Civil Rights movement should be. In our current political moment, what do you hope audiences take away from the complicate­d relationsh­ips these men have with each other as well as with Ali and Brown?

For me, watching Malcolm and Sam was more of a reminder that all of those perspectiv­es have to exist in order to actually make a movement move. And when you get to their conversati­on about social responsibi­lity, that’s just two approaches. But it was also necessary to have Cassius and Jim help each of them see the other’s perspectiv­e.

The thing that’s so beautiful in One Night In Miami for me is both Sam and Malcolm realise, “Yeah, I shouldn’t have said that.” They don’t necessaril­y say: “I’m sorry.” But they do say, in so many ways, “I see you, man. And I hear you, and I feel you.” And that’s a beautiful thing these actors capture. I just hope that comes across and is received. That you can debate with love and respect.©2021

 ??  ?? Regina King makes her film directoria­l debut with
One Night In Miami.
Regina King makes her film directoria­l debut with One Night In Miami.
 ??  ?? Eli Goree as Muhammad Ali.
Eli Goree as Muhammad Ali.

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