Tag Archives: Richard Wright

RICHARD WRIGHT IN NATIVE SON

I wrote the dialog. The producers and director gave me carte blanche in whatever concerned my role as actor. — Richard Wright, 1950

Authors have taken bit parts in the film adaptations of their novels and plays—John Irving as a wrestling referee in The World According to Garp, Stephen King in Pet Sematary, Gore Vidal in The Best Man come to mind—and F. Scott Fitzgerald was offered an acting contract during his first trip to Hollywood in the 1920s.

But only Richard Wright (in the first cinematic adaptation of his 1940 novel NATIVE SON*) and Mickey Spillane (in The Girl Hunters, 1963) got the chance to take leading roles and embody their own well-known protagonists. Spillane’s turn was perhaps the more plausible of the two—the problematic Mike Hammer and his pulp fiction creator were approximately the same age. But the 1951 film noir version of NATIVE SON—directed by Pierre Chenal in an Argentine studio—offers a richer experience. As J. Hoberman observed after a MoMA screening in 2016, the performance of this author—twice the age of the character he’s playing, quoting his own lines—takes on an avant-garde, Brechtian quality.

Bigger Thomas is a petty hood in his twenties, residing in a tenement in Chicago’s South Side “Black Belt” and hustling a living in the commercial district under the 63rd Street El (recreated in the Buenos Aires studio). A few blocks away but a world apart sit the University of Chicago and the adjacent mansions of Kenwood-Hyde Park. Bigger lands a job in one of these houses as the family chauffeur for the Daltons—rich, white liberals—and on his first night of work, the college-age daughter invites Bigger to join her and her boyfriend for an evening at a local jazz club. Desperate to prove their progressive bonafides—the boyfriend is a political activist—the couple pile in the front seat with Bigger and insist he join them at their table in the club. Toasting friendship, racial equality, and—in the words of the activist—”the world we’re going to win,” the evening spirals downward as Bigger’s employer goes overboard with alcohol consumption and cringe-making attempts at solidarity. Following a performance by the club’s singer (who happens to be Bigger’s girlfriend Bessie), Mary Dalton says, “All colored people are so gifted. Don’t you think so, Bigger?” A reaction of dread is the only thought Bigger can summon, and his fears are confirmed once he’s obliged to bring an intoxicated Mary back home and up to her room.

Presented by Kino Lorber Repertory with the Library of Congress, Fernando Martin Peña, and Argentina Sono Film, the restored, uncut, definitive version of NATIVE SON is now available for viewing on Kino Marquee. See links below for details.

NATIVE SON

Now streaming.

Laemmle

An introduction to NATIVE SON is provided by University of Chicago film professor Jacqueline Najuma Stewart (co-curator of Kino Lorber‘s Pioneers of African American Cinema) and film historian Eddie Muller (of the Film Noir Foundation), courtesy of Turner Classic Movies.

*The two subsequent film version’s of Wright’s novel were made in 1986 (directed by Jerrold Freedman) and 2019 (directed by Rashid Johnson).

Pierre Chenal, Native Son (1951), from top: Richard Wright and Willa Pearl Curtis; Wright (foreground left); Gloria Madison and Wright; Jean Wallace and Wright (2); U.S. poster; Wright and Madison; Don Dean (right) and Wright; Wright. Images courtesy and © Kino Lorber.

RASHID JOHNSON’S NATIVE SON

For his directorial debut, Rashid Johnson has shot an update of Richard Wright’s controversial 1940 novel about Bigger Thomas’ seemingly irrevocable slide into the void. The screenplay by Suzan Lori-Parks changes some of the novel’s key plot points—”It’s not the book,” Elvis Mitchell told a recent Film Independent audience at the Arclight screening in Hollywood—but the expendability of black lives in this new NATIVE SON is, tragically, still contemporary.

“One of the criticisms of the book—and one I share—is the character’s lack of agency. Wright wrote them as archetypes.” — Rashid Johnson, at the Film Independent screening of NATIVE SON

As Bigger, Ashton Sanders (Moonlight) gives a performance of cool hesitation that recalls the voice and armature of James Dean and a young Keanu Reeves. For a scene at the home of Bigger’s rich, art-collecting employer, Johnson—in an audacious move—places his own 2015 painting Untitled (Anxious Man) directly behind Sanders as an angel/devil-over-my-shoulder figure.

NATIVE SON—which premieres tonight on HBO—co-stars KiKi Layne (If Beale Street Could Talk), Bill Camp, Sanaa Lathan, Margaret Qualley, Nick Robinson, Elizabeth Marvel, and David Alan Grier.

NATIVE SON, on HBO

From April 6.

Film stills, from top: Ashton Sanders in Native Son (2019); Sanders and KiKi Layne; Sanders; Sanders and Nick Robinson (right); Sanders. Photographs by Matthew Libatique, images courtesy Sundance Institute and HBO.

Film Independent photos, from top: KiKi Layne and Rashid Johnson; Elvis Mitchell, Johnson, and Layne. Film Independent Presents HBO Screening Series—Native Son, March 20, 2019, Arclight Hollywood, photographs by Araya Diaz/Getty Images.

JULIANA SPAHR AND CLAUDIA RANKINE

DU BOIS’S TELEGRAM is a brilliant inquiry into the institutions—from the CIA to the foundations and literary magazines it funded—that inform and shape literary production. The promoted, the funded and heralded—from Richard Wright to Gertrude Stein to James Baldwin—do the work of the nation state under the umbrella of culture. Our complicit freedoms are brought out in the open in this thought-provoking and erudite book. This is not a book to agree or disagree with, but rather a compelling argument that brings relevant facts forward for clear-eyed consideration. One would be remiss to pass on such essential research and analysis.” — Claudia Rankine

Juliana Spahr—author of DU BOIS’S TELEGRAM —will be joined by Rankine for a discussion about the book, which takes as its impetus the telegram W.E.B. Du Bois sent when he was denied a passport to attend the 1956 Présence Africaine Congress of Black Writers and Artists in Paris:

“Any Negro-American who travels abroad today must either not discuss race conditions in the United States or say the sort of thing which our State Department wishes the world to believe.” — W.E.B. Du Bois

 

CLAUDINE RANKINE AND JULIANA SPAHR

Thursday, December 13, at 7:30 pm.

92nd Street Y, 1395 Lexington Avenue, New York City.

 

DUBOIS’S TELEGRAM—LITERARY RESISTANCE AND STATE CONTAINMENT, (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2018).

Above: Claudia Rankine.

Below: Juliana Spahr.