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British Black Women Write, Direct and Star in Movie ‘Belle’

Director Amma Asante, left, and British actress Gugu Mbatah-Raw

Director Amma Asante, left, and British actress Gugu Mbatah-Raw

British director Amma Asante knows how hard it is to get a costume drama off the ground — especially when it stars a Black female newcomer and is directed by a Black woman with only one previous film to her credit.

But for the 18th century-set “Belle,” Asante fought for diversity and the feminine eye in front of and behind the camera. “We need a variety of lenses in which to tell these stories,” she says. “Being in a strong position where you can make the decisions … I have a responsibility to open up those opportunities.”

Now, for its next hurdle: “Belle” opens in limited release on Friday, up against no other than “The Amazing Spider-Man 2,” the summer’s first blockbuster. But more on that later.

Based on real events, “Belle” tells the story of a mixed-race woman, Dido Elizabeth Belle, who was raised in British aristocracy at a time when such a thing was unheard of. It not only stars English newbie Mbatha-Raw in the title role, but it was penned by Black British writer Misan Sagay (“Their Eyes Were Watching God”), scored by Rachel Portman (“Chocolat”), the costumes were designed by a woman, and the film was edited by women.

Asante points out that for women and minorities, landing quality jobs is difficult in the U.K., just as it is in America, since most producers envision a director that “doesn’t come in my shape or color,” she says. Having only one film under her belt didn’t help her cause, either. (Her directorial debut, the BAFTA award-winning “A Way of Life,” was released in 2004.)

“But I’ve at least arrived at an age group that appears appropriate,” said the 44-year-old  with a laugh, during a recent phone interview from New York. Now, Asante is determined to get other ladies in the door. “My stories are about women, so why not have women help make them?”

That’s not to say that a man or somebody not of color couldn’t have done a great job on “Belle,” says Mbatha-Raw over coffee in Los Angeles. “But the nuances Amma is interested in exploring come out from that perspective,” she says. “She is very feminine and glamorous. She brings that quality and beauty out in ‘Belle.’

Intrigued by a double portrait he saw of Dido and her white cousin, Lady Elizabeth Murray, “Belle” producer Damian Jones (“The Iron Lady”) knew he wanted to bring Dido’s story to the screen — and that Asante should direct it. But, he says, “I was told, ‘a Black director with a Black lead, good luck.’ The project was a tough sale.”

According to Asante, development of a “Belle” script for HBO began, and then fell through. But with the help of the British Film Institute, production on a theatrical feature version of “Belle” began in 2012.

Still, the script went through a number of revisions before production began. “It had been a fight all the way because it was a different way of approaching the story,” said Sagay.

“Belle” weaves in the historical 1781 Zong Massacre, in which 142 enslaved Africans were drowned in the Caribbean by the crew of the British slave ship Zong. The slave owners made an insurance claim for the loss of the slaves, which was challenged by the insurers and wound up in the British courts.

The chief justice ultimately deciding the case was Lord Mansfield (Tom Wilkinson), Dido’s great uncle with whom she lived after her Royal Navy admiral father sets sail for the Indies. Mansfield ruled in favor of the insurers and his verdict led to the end of the British slave trade in 1807.

In the film, Dido influences Lord Mansfield’s decision.

“Lord Mansfield left huge footprints — journals, judgments — all kinds of things that we could have written about,” says Sagay. “And we’ve chosen to write about the person who has the fewest footprints.”

Sagay recalled past race-themed projects where producers asked for one script revision after another until eventually “you discover you are back to writing about the white male character.”

That’s why having a Black screenwriter is critical, Sagay explains. “It’s terribly important that they are at the table at the beginning of the process to talk about who and what (a film) is going to be about. Being there sets the tone,” she says.

Read the full story at bigstory.ap.org

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