New York Daily News

Lupita goes from slums to ‘Queen’

- BY ETHAN SACKS NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

BEING THE FIRST African actress to win an Academy Award didn’t matter much in the Ugandan slum where Lupita Nyong’o filmed “Queen of Katwe.”

The locals working the market stalls didn’t recognize the face that adorns fashion magazines across the world — and neither did the production’s security.

“Slum dwellers, they don’t care about Oscar winners,” Nyong’o told the Daily News.

“Often times when we were on set, I would get stopped from entering a scene by the guards because they thought I was one of the market women. I blended in completely,” she recalled. “It was refreshing to be in that environmen­t and be anonymous for a change while filming.”

No such anonymity awaited her in the film industry, where Nyong’o (photo) felt pressure to match her emotionall­y devastatin­g turn in her first major role, “12 Years a Slave.” At the time, her part in “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” seemed a long time and a galaxy far, far away.

“It was daunting,” Nyong’o said. “After you’ve had such a fulfilling acting experience like I had on ‘12 Years a Slave,’ what else could inspire or electrify me in the same way?”

She found an answer in the script for “Queen of Katwe,” opening Friday, sent to her by director Mira Nair, a family friend. Nyong’o’s next move would involve chess.

The film follows Phiona Mutesi, played by newcomer Madina Nalwanga, a Katwe girl forced to hawk vegetables instead of going to school to help her widowed mother Harriet (Nyong’o) support the family. Potential escape from poverty comes when local volunteer chess teacher Robert Katende (David Oyelowo) discovers Phiona’s keen mind for the game. What makes her improbable rise through the internatio­nal ranks even more amazing is that it actually happened.

“It’s not very often you see this kind of story on a platform like a Disney movie — an African story with Africans front and center of their own narrative,” said Nyong’o. “It’s a rarity. For me this film was an oasis.”

“Because, of course, being an African myself, it’s important for me to see and be a part of stories about people like me.”

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