Daily Press (Sunday)

TCM’s Stewart puts Black film history in focus

Co-host considers work part of larger reassessme­nt in US

- By Lynn Elber

Film scholar Jacqueline Stewart makes a rich contributi­on to TCM for Black History Month, leading discussion­s about “Selma” with its star, David Oyelowo, and highlighti­ng the work of Oscar Micheaux and other pioneering filmmakers.

The result is both celebrator­y and thought-provoking.

“Our programing runs all the way from the 1920s to 2014, almost a century of African American filmmaking,” Stewart said. “We see the same kinds of themes, a call for racial justice. People will get a much deeper sense of the complexiti­es of these questions and why we have to be raising these questions in our country.”

The February slate honoring African American films and creators is just one aspect of how Stewart, TCM’s first and sole co-host of color since 2019 and a University of Chicago professor, has upped the channel’s game.

Focusing on Black film history once a year “can’t be the full-stop experience for TCM,” said Pola Changnon, its general manager.

“Having Jacqueline at the table, she’s a voice in driving the programing selections,” Changnon said. “She’s really great in pointing us to things that we might not have thought of before, not only films, but also other experts who can really bring life to these movies.”

Stewart, whose academic focus is on silent films and Black cinema, was a TCM guest before she was brought in as the first host of the ongoing “Silent Sunday Nights” showcase for domestic and internatio­nal films and shorts.

In 2021, the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles named her its chief artistic and programmin­g executive, with a portfolio including screenings, exhibition­s and educationa­l outreach. (Stewart is on sabbatical from the University of Chicago.)

Last year, Stewart also received a fellowship from the MacArthur Foundation, an honor nicknamed the Genius Grant, for ensuring that overlooked Black filmmakers and audiences have “a place in the public imaginatio­n,” as the foundation said.

She considers her work to be part of a larger and urgent American reassessme­nt: “We all need to think more deeply about questions of racial equality and social justice” as the past several years have shown.

“We’ve had some really deep conversati­ons at TCM about what it means to

show classic films at this historical moment, and how we can reflect on the legacies of misreprese­ntation in those films and an erasure of people of color,” she said, and on “the sexism and homophobia, the transphobi­a, that we find in classic films.”

For TCM’s “Reframed: Classic Films in the Rearview Mirror” project last year, Stewart and her four co-hosts examined blatant racial stereotypi­ng and other demeaning elements in films such as 1927’s “The Jazz Singer,” 1939’s “Gone With the Wind” and 1961’s “The Children’s Hour,” which depicts same-sex relationsh­ips as shameful.

Stewart’s appearance­s as a guest expert on TCM eventually put her in the co-host lineup with Ben Mankiewicz, Dave Karger, Alicia Malone and Eddie Muller.

“We were always so impressed with not only

everything she knew coming in, but just her grace and presence in being on camera and communicat­ing with another host about what she knew,” Changnon said. “Not everyone can translate that kind of academic expertise” for viewers.

Stewart says she’s pleased by the scope of TCM’s Black History Month programmin­g, which continues Sundays through Feb. 27 and includes fellow scholars Racquel Gates and Samantha Sheppard.

“Having two films by Oscar Micheaux, two films by the Colored Players

(film company) of Philadelph­ia — they’re some of the most moving and accomplish­ed of the early race films,” Stewart said, applying the term generally used to refer to movies made by and for African Americans in the first half of the 20th century.

“I hope people take advantage of the opportunit­y to see them and to see the conversati­ons that we have about them,” she said.

Oyelowo is on board

Feb. 20 and 27, for presentati­ons including “Selma,” “Malcolm X” and the

1968 documentar­y “Black Panthers.”

“I really appreciate­d the deep ways in which he thinks about the significan­ce of the roles that he takes. He talks about playing Dr. Martin Luther King in ‘Selma’ ... and the urgency of stories like that for our contempora­ry moment,” she said.

Stewart’s research, teaching and writing, including the book “L.A. Rebellion: Creating a New Black Cinema,” prepared her to expand her audience to the universe of film buffs — which she has been part of since childhood.

Growing up in her native Chicago, Stewart and an aunt would indulge regularly in watching late-night films on TV.

“We would talk about the movies during the commercial breaks and her passion for classic movie stars,” Stewart recalled. “Her fandom really rubbed off on me.”

Her attention was caught by the Black actors who were largely relegated to minor roles in most Hollywood studio production­s.

“They may be uncredited, and they’re playing servants, but they’re there. Our eyes go to those actors, and I was always intrigued by people like Hattie McDaniel and Willie Best and Theresa Harris,” she said. “I always felt even though Black people were not at the center of the narrative of mainstream classical films, the presence was there.

“I became curious about that presence, and I wanted to know more about what those people were. And I wanted to think about the racial politics of presenting Black people in those ways on screen,” Stewart said.

Silent films also fascinated her, becoming a tentpole of her studies.

“I love silent acting styles because you’re not relying on the dialogue to tell the story. Instead, actors are really doing things in terms of their expression­s, in terms of the ways that actors interact with each other,” she said. Silent films are a “much more sophistica­ted form of artistic expression ... and they laid the groundwork for everything that comes after.”

Stewart ultimately coupled her early love of movies with the direction gained from her extended “family of teachers” in Chicago’s public schools.

“It’s a family that really believes strongly in education and (held) a lot of expectatio­ns about how best to use the gifts that you have and the privileges that you have,” she said.

 ?? JOHN NOWAK/TCM ?? Film scholar Jacqueline Stewart is co-hosting a collection of films honoring Black History Month on TCM.
JOHN NOWAK/TCM Film scholar Jacqueline Stewart is co-hosting a collection of films honoring Black History Month on TCM.

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