The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Something new: Film-makeronan inspiring big day

Director bases short films on his own wedding

- By Murray Scougall mscougall@sundaypost.com The Wedding on iPlayer from tomorrow and BBC Scotland later

When film-maker Stewart Kyasimire got married, it wasn’t just the biggest day of his life but the start of his next big thing.

The 42-year-old director, who made the Bafta-nominated Black And Scottish documentar­y, used his wedding as the inspiratio­n for a series of six short films that will launch tomorrow, just five months after getting hitched in May.

He hopes the films, which were all written, directed and cast from within the black creative community, will chart the shared common ground of a diverse, modern Scotland.

The idea for The Wedding, which reveals the story of a Scots-African marriage reception from the perspectiv­e of six different guests, came from Bond and Resident Evil actor Colin Salmon, a close friend of Kyasimire, who was a guest at the marriage. “He was very observant at the wedding, seeing these black Scots, and said afterwards I should do a story on it. Colin and I wrote the six initial characters,” explained Kyasimire, who used his acclaimed documentar­y to explore his childhood experience­s of growing up in Glasgow after moving from Kenya in 1983.

“I met Colin about three years ago. He got in touch with me and we have worked together on Black And Northern Irish, a documentar­y. He’s basically an older version of me; we’re best friends. He gives me a lot of advice and hope. He told me not to point fingers but to tell positive stories initially and then I can work my way down.

“The films are about positivity and bringing diverse characters together but they do also touch on issues like immigratio­n and people feeling alone. The second episode, The Bartender, is a great example. The character is embracing the Scottish culture but she’s questionin­g her race and culture because Scottish people are questionin­g if she belongs, and she tells a harrowing story. But at the end you see black and white people dancing together.

“Watching the films back was emotional for me, because at home my wife is Scottish and we have mixed-race kids, and for us it’s normal and not anything to speak about. But a lot of the time when we walk out of the door a lot of people are staring at us, this black and white couple with mixed-race kids, so I’m trying to show this is normal and it’s something we should all embrace.

“I’m trying to start something here in Scotland to show communitie­s are growing. The black people who I know came over here as immigrants are good friends of mine and I want to show the Scottish public they can be their friends, too. Don’t look at the stigma, look at the person.

“This is the first black film in Scotland that lets you hear their stories and in each film you are given an insight into a world you might never have known before. Hopefully, by the end of the films, people will have an understand­ing of how an immigrant feels, or a black African mother feels, or a young black woman. It’s insightful.”

Kyasimire, who runs a production company with his wife, Emma, had long had aspiration­s to make drama and hopes this is the beginning of a long and fruitful career in the genre.

He is proud of the diverse cast and crew he assembled in front of and behind the camera for the project.

“So many of the black community had watched Black And Scottish and wanted to be part of this,” he continued. “Knowing these actors and writers personally was the reason we could turn it all around so quickly. If I hadn’t made Black And Scottish, I don’t think I would have been so successful.

“I’m 42, so when I was out clubbing in the late 1990s I wouldn’t see many

For my family, this is normal but it is something we all should embrace

black people, but now I think, ‘Where did all these people come from?’ and the amount who want to work in TV and film is fascinatin­g. It’s a great platform to tell stories.

“I run a talent pool and I wanted to show the diverse crew available. This is the first time a BBC production has not only had a black cast, writers and directors but a crew that is made up of 80% black and brown people from all over Scotland. And it was fairly easy to find that crew. It’s the first time we’ve seen that statistic, not just in Scotland but the UK.

“I’m really proud of that and I’ve proved it can be done. It’s part of the core of what I’m doing – not only making positive films with poignant messages but showing a black workforce in Scotland can create beautiful content and we can do it together. Hopefully this is the start of something going forward. It’s exciting times.”

 ?? ?? Stewart Kyasimire and wife Emma on their wedding day in May, the inspiratio­n for his series of short films
Stewart Kyasimire and wife Emma on their wedding day in May, the inspiratio­n for his series of short films
 ?? ?? Lola Aluko is The Bartender who sees it all going on at the wedding
Lola Aluko is The Bartender who sees it all going on at the wedding

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