Los Angeles Times

Naomi Osaka doc was her idea

The press-averse tennis star trusted one filmmaker with telling her story. Here’s why.

- By Amy Kaufman

It was Naomi Osaka’s idea to have cameras trail her and make a documentar­y series about her life.

That may come as a surprise to anyone who has been following sports headlines of late. In May, the 23year-old tennis star was fined $15,000 by French Open officials after she pulled out of post-match news conference­s. She said the experience of being asked repetitive questions, or ones that brought “doubt” into her mind, was taking a toll on her mental health. When the tournament responded by threatenin­g her with further financial penalties or suspension if she continued to “ignore her media obligation­s,” she withdrew from the competitio­n altogether. In June, she nixed plans to play

at Wimbledon as well.

But “she was the one who wanted to tell her story” in the new three-part Netflix series, insisted Jamal Henderson, one of the project’s executive producers. (Osaka and her family are not doing press to promote the project.)

Per Henderson, Osaka and her team began discussion­s about creating a documentar­y or podcast with the SpringHill Company — LeBron James’ developmen­t and production enterprise — back in 2019.

“She was still very much on the come-up — she’d won a couple of majors, but wasn’t where she is now where you can get a Sweetgreen bowl with her name on it,” said Henderson, who serves as chief content officer at the Lakers player’s company. “We all decided that the best idea was to

make something that documented her life and what it feels like to be the contender who beats Serena [Williams] and has all this pressure about being the next up.”

When Henderson floated the idea of an Osaka doc to Netflix, which had a preexistin­g relationsh­ip with SpringHill, he said the streamer suggested the athlete take a meeting with Garrett Bradley. Even though the young filmmaker had yet to earn an Oscar nomination for her documentar­y “Time,” “Netflix had been tracking her like everybody else and knew she was obviously on the rise,” Henderson recalled.

Like with “Time” — the story of a mother trying to

free her husband from a 60year prison sentence — the idea with “Naomi Osaka,” which premiered on Friday, was to avoid sit-down interviews with its subject or other talking heads. SpringHill helped Bradley secure access to roam with her camera around prestigiou­s tournament­s like the U.S. Open. Osaka’s parents — the Haitian Leonard Francois and Japanese Tamaki Osaka — handed over years’ worth of footage from their home video archive to the documentar­ian. And Naomi Osaka never establishe­d any restrictiv­e ground rules, allowing Bradley to film until she felt the project reached its natural conclusion — a process that

ultimately spanned two years.

The athlete and the filmmaker first met at the 2019 U.S. Open. Bradley had never made a movie with someone she didn’t have a prior relationsh­ip with, and said she was initially “out of [her] comfort zone” working with someone she didn’t know. But over the course of a day together in Queens, New York, Bradley shared her vision with Osaka. Because the tennis player was barely an adult, Bradley said she was wary of attempting to create a definitive portrait of her. Instead, she wanted the series to be a coming-of-age story without a linear structure — taking a verite approach and avoiding “recapping a chronology we could just read on Wikipedia.”

That day, Bradley “just went with [Osaka] wherever she needed to go”: press junkets, car rides, dinners. Her intention was to get a sense of how the athlete moved through her space, but she also quickly realized how much a tennis player’s headspace informs her play.

“Tennis is a mental sport, so it’s a sport of solitude, in a sense,” said Bradley. “That was something I needed to be aware of — that I’d have to be around her without demanding a lot of conversati­on. It was a lot of energy work.”

In conversati­on with The Times, Bradley spoke about a journey that took her and the athlete to New York Fashion Week, a Black Lives Matter protest, the Australian Open and Haiti, where Osaka’s father was raised.

Why do you think Naomi was open to making a docuseries when she’s generally reluctant to share herself with the media?

I think that part of making a film with somebody, regardless of who they are, is that you’re really with them. And the role of press, in her world, is not there to be with her. They’re there to look at her and, in the worst scenarios, project on her. I tried to reinforce that I wasn’t press as much as possible, even in terms of physically where I was. It was important that I was seeing what she was seeing — to show her looking at the press, for instance. In many ways, I think this shows the building blocks to the current moment of where we’re at. She was in contemplat­ion, figuring things out, but she has a very clear perspectiv­e at this point.

Did she tell you that there were going to be moments before big tournament­s where she was going to need time away from the cameras?

We didn’t create any ground rules, per se, and I actually didn’t overthink it too much . ... There’s a balance you play in making a documentar­y of what’s really worth it. Is it more worth it to capture something, or to support a person? First and foremost, I care about the people I’m working with, so I make decisions based on my own empathy and instinct at any given moment. I think that might be a controvers­ial thing to say as a director, but it’s always the way I work. There were moments where being there without a camera was important. And also why having her own camera was important to what she needed in her own journey.

Yes, in some of her most personal moments in the series, like in the wake of her mentor Kobe Bryant’s death, Naomi is filming herself.

A lot of it certainly had to do with the pandemic, but I also had just finished a film that was really centered around a woman who had been self-recording for 21 years. Something I really took away from that process was that the narrative will be created for you if you are not in charge of your own. What does that have to do with the Black family archive? I wanted to give Naomi something for herself that hopefully she can carry on. It’s totally for her, and it will continue to gain meaning as she moves through the world.

There is a lot of footage of her at tennis press conference­s. Did you pick up on the fact that she was not enjoying those experience­s at the time?

When I was sitting in those rooms with her filming the press themselves, I could completely empathize with what she was going through. But I also thought that she has always been very strong in those circumstan­ces. When she does speak, she’s incredibly clear and incredibly to the point. She speaks profoundly with fewer words than most of us are able to. I think anxiety is something she has identified for herself in the past few weeks . ... I’m not sure she would have articulate­d it as anxiety at that moment. It takes time to get to that place. And it also takes time to build strength and decide how to use your voice.

Naomi has gained a reputation for being shy or soft-spoken. Do you think that’s fair?

I think we have different perception­s and a different set of projection­s that we put on women — and Black women — in the public sphere. She is an incredible leader of her generation in that she is really choosing how and when she wants to use her voice. I think that’s a sign of power, more than vulnerabil­ity. It doesn’t mean she doesn’t have anything to say, or that she doesn’t ever smile. It means she’s choosing when she wants to.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? FILMMAKER Garrett Bradley says “she tried to reinforce that I wasn’t press as much as possible.”
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times FILMMAKER Garrett Bradley says “she tried to reinforce that I wasn’t press as much as possible.”
 ?? Netflix ?? TENNIS STAR Naomi Osaka says interactin­g with the press takes a severe toll on her mental health.
Netflix TENNIS STAR Naomi Osaka says interactin­g with the press takes a severe toll on her mental health.

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