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From ‘Name My Agent!’ to Hollywood Profession

At some point during the pandemic, perhaps between the debut of “Ted Lasso” last August and “Bridgerton” in December, you may have happened upon Netflix’s French import “Call My Agent!” (“Dix Pour Cent” in French), a sweet yet absurd sendup of the global entertainment complex as seen through the lens of a Parisian talent agency where the agents are mostly good-hearted lovers of cinema at the beck and call of their highly demanding clients.

If so, you were one of millions who discovered Camille Cottin, the French actress who played Andrea Martel, the hard-nosed striver with the piercing green eyes who is trying to keep her agency afloat while her personal life falls apart.

The show was one of the few joys of the pandemic, one that prompted viewers to sample additional international content like “Lupin” and “Money Heist,” overcoming “the one-inch tall barrier of subtitles” that the “Parasite” director, Bong Joon Ho, referred to during his 2020 Golden Globes speech. The success of “Call My Agent!” has prompted spinoffs in Britain, Quebec and Turkey. And there is now talk of a stand-alone movie that will see Andrea Martel headed to New York.

But Cottin, 42, whose background includes theater and sketch comedy, completely missed the phenomenon that “Call My Agent!” became in the United States while she was in lockdown in Paris with her husband and two young children. Turns out, she was just as miserable as the rest of us.

“I was quite worried in the pandemic and I was a bit paralyzed,” Cottin said in English during a recent video call. “I wanted to be creative, but I wasn’t at all. Also I had the feeling like I’m never going to work again. I was scared.”

“Now you tell me during the pandemic everybody watched ‘Call My Agent!’ I was miles away, imagining that I was buried alive,” she added with a grim laugh.

Cottin was conducting this interview in a car on her way home from a costume fitting for the Cannes Film Festival. (No “Call My Agent!” fans, the fitting did not involve a fussy feathered gown like the one Juliette Binoche awkwardly donned at the end of Season 2.) Cottin’s new film “Stillwater,” in which she plays Virginie, a working actress and single mother who guides Matt Damon’s remorseful father through an ill-conceived journey in Marseilles, has just debuted to mostly positive reviews. Manohla Dargis called her “electric” in The New York Times. Vanity Fair called her performance “bright and winsome.”

But this moment in the car was far less glamorous. Her 6-year-old daughter was fast asleep, head in mom’s lap. And when the car stopped, I could see the multitasking Cottin at work, scooping up her groggy child, a poof of pink taffeta in one arm, her video call still on in the other, a bright Parisian sky in the background. She paused for a moment to put her daughter to bed before continuing the conversation on the floor of her bathroom, a compromise she made with her child, who asked her not to stray too far. Then her husband, Benjamin, came home. “The father is here!” she exclaimed. “Virginie would have had to handle that situation alone.”

After a small role in the 2016 “Allied,” starring Brad Pitt, “Stillwater” represents Cottin’s biggest introduction yet to American audiences. It just may be the role that lets her officially cross over from obscure French actress to global sensation. Later this year she will star opposite Lady Gaga and Adam Driver in Ridley Scott’s “House of Gucci,” playing Paola Franchi, the girlfriend of Maurizio Gucci (Driver). And she’s set to reprise her role as Hélène, a high-ranking member of the assassin organization the Twelve, in BBC’s “Killing Eve.”

The international community awakened to Cottin’s charms far before all of us in the United States were stuck at home. When “Call My Agent!” showed up on British television, Cottin discovered the show had found an audience across the English Channel. It was 2019, and she was attending a casting director festival in Kilkenny, Ireland, with her own French agent. Suddenly she was the center of attention.

“They were like, ‘Oh could I make a selfie with you?,’ and I was like, ‘What? You’re the James Bond casting director,’” she said, laughing.

That trip and another to London led to her casting in “Gucci” and to her meeting the producer of “Killing Eve.”

Yet “Call My Agent!” had no bearing on the “Stillwater” director Tom McCarthy’s decision to cast Cottin. He hadn’t yet seen the show when he met her. Rather, he hired her based on an audition that he said astonished him and his co-writers, Thomas Bidegain and Noé Debré.

“You kind of can’t keep your eyes off her when she is on the screen,” he said in a recent interview from France. “She’s a bit scattered, a bit all over the place. She’s funny, she’s self-deprecating, she’s empathetic. She’s tough. She’s straightforward. And I feel like after watching her for a year and a half in the edit room, every moment with her is very lived.”

To Cottin, Virginie, who is open and nurturing and always looking for something to fix (like Damon’s Oklahoman roughneck), is a near facsimile of herself.

“Virginie is the closest character I’ve had to play to me,” she said even though it’s one of the few roles she’s played in English. “We have the same energy. And until now, I’ve mostly been counted for women with a lot of more tension. A bit more in control.”

There is a disarming ease to Cottin that is evident on initial introduction and belies the icy veneer of her “Call My Agent!” character. She doesn’t take herself too seriously — McCarthy calls her “goofy” — and you realize quickly how great her potential for comedy is. It’s a skill she exhibited in her most well-known French role, playing the lead in the prank TV show “Connasse,” which means “bitch” in her native tongue. Her exploits included scaling Kensington Palace in search of an introduction to Prince Harry.

A “Call My Agent!” producer, Dominique Besnehard, described Cottin as “the pretty, biting, bold one” who in the role of Andrea “is very good at going from harshness to fragility.”

To Cottin, it’s a character she both admires and understands, yet still finds at a remove from her own personality.

“I have much less assurance than Andrea. She is more self-confident and strategic and good at making decisions,” she said. “If I have to make a choice, it will take me too long, always too long. And I will ask everybody his opinion about it.”

Cottin is decidedly not uncertain about her career, but as an actress in her 40s she is more aware that the highs she’s experiencing today may not predict the highs she will see in her future.

“Maybe if I was 20, I would think, ‘Oh my God, maybe I’m going to have an Oscar,’” she said, laughing, in a mocking American accent. “It’s never vertical. You can make a step, you can consider that you’ve been up and then suddenly, you can go down. Nothing is a straight line. I see these projects as trips, great trips. I can’t say, ‘Oh, now that I’ve done that I can tell you what’s coming next,’ because I don’t know. And it doesn’t mean that it will happen again.”

Besnehard suggested she could have a career like Binoche, taking roles both in France and the United States. “I hope the American people would not monopolize her,” he said.

McCarthy sees a much clearer trajectory.

“I predict great things for Cami and not just because of our movie, which I think she’s sensational in but it’s just her time,” he said. “You can feel it when someone’s earned a moment in their career, and put in the work, and they’re ready to take control of it.”

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Paul Huntley, Hair Grasp of Broadway and Hollywood, Is Lifeless at 88

For the show “Diana” – a version shot without an audience during the pandemic and due to premiere on Netflix on October 1st – he created four wigs for actress Jeanna de Waal to portray the style of the Princess of Wales has changed over time, from lousy naivete to windswept sophistication.

Paul Huntley was born on July 2, 1933 in Greater London, one of five children of a military man and a housewife. From an early age he was fascinated by his mother’s film magazines. After school, he tried to find an apprenticeship in the film industry, but the flooded job market after World War II did not offer a place for him, so he enrolled at an acting school in London.

He eventually helped design hair for school productions and in the 1950s, after two years of military service, became an apprentice at Wig Creations, a major London theater company. He became the main designer and worked with Vivien Leigh, Marlene Dietrich and Laurence Olivier.

Mr. Huntley helped construct the signature braids that Elizabeth Taylor wore in the 1963 film “Cleopatra”. Ms. Taylor introduced him to director Mike Nichols, who a decade later hired Mr. Huntley to do hair for his Broadway production of “Uncle Vanya” in Circle in the Square. He eventually became a designer for plays and musicals, including “The Real Thing”, “The Heidi Chronicles” and “Crazy for You”.

Join The Times theater reporter Michael Paulson in conversation with Lin-Manuel Miranda, see a performance of Shakespeare in the Park, and more as we explore the signs of hope in a transformed city. For a year now, the “Offstage” series has accompanied the theater through a shutdown. Now let’s look at his recovery.

Mr. Huntley returned to a show on a regular basis to make sure standards were being met. He referred to himself as “the hair police”.

Tony Awards are not given for hair design, but Mr. Huntley was given a special Tony in 2003.

“Everyone says, ‘I want Paul Huntley,'” Broadway producer Emanuel Azenberg once told the Times. “He does the hair organically for the show. It’s not about him. “

Mr. Huntley saw hair not just as a decorative element, but as an expression of an era or a change in society and an integral part of character development. For “Thoroughly Modern Millie” he tried to remember New York City in 1922, his pony, his spit curls and finger waves were marked by a feeling of liberation after the First World War.

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Scrounging for Hits, Hollywood Goes Again to the Video Recreation Nicely

LOS ANGELES — For 28 years, ever since “Super Mario Bros.” arrived in cinemas with the tagline “This Ain’t No Game,” Hollywood has been trying and mostly failing — epically, famously — to turn hit video games into hit movies. For every “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider” (2001), which turned Angelina Jolie into an A-list action star, there has been a nonsensical “Max Payne” (2008), an abominable “Prince of Persia” (2010) and a wince-inducing “Warcraft” (2016).

If video games are the comic books of our time, why can’t Hollywood figure out how to mine them accordingly?

It may finally be happening, powered in part by the proliferation of streaming services and their need for intellectual property to exploit. “The need for established, globally appealing I.P. has naturally led to gaming,” Matthew Ball, a venture investor and the former head of strategy for Amazon Studios, wrote last year in an essay titled “7 Reasons Why Gaming I.P. Is Finally Taking Off in Film/TV.”

After years of inaction and false starts, for instance, Sony Pictures Entertainment and its PlayStation-powered sibling, Sony Interactive, are finally working together to turn PlayStation games into mass-appeal movies and television shows. There are 10 game adaptations in the Sony Pictures pipeline, a big leap from practically none in 2018. They include “Uncharted,” a $120 million adventure based on a 14-year-old PlayStation property (more than 40 million copies sold). “Uncharted” stars Tom Holland, the reigning Spider-Man, as Nathan Drake, the treasure hunter at the center of the game franchise. It is scheduled for release in theaters on Feb. 18.

Sony is starting production on “The Last of Us,” a series headed to HBO and based on the post-apocalyptic game of the same title. Pedro Pascal, “The Mandalorian” himself, is the star, and Craig Mazin, who created the Emmy-winning mini-series “Chernobyl,” is the showrunner. Executive producers include Carolyn Strauss, one of the forces behind “Game of Thrones,” and Neil Druckmann, who led the creation of the Last of Us game.

Sony games like Twisted Metal and Ghost of Tsushima are also getting the TV and film treatment. (Contrary to speculation, one that is not, at least not anytime soon, according to a Sony spokesman: God of War.)

In the past, Sony Pictures and Sony Interactive operated as fiefs, with creative control — it’s mine; no, it’s mine — impeding adaptation efforts. When he took over as Sony’s chief executive in 2018, Kenichiro Yoshida demanded cooperation. The ultimate goal is to make better use of Sony’s online PlayStation Network to bring Sony movies, shows and music directly to consumers. PlayStation Network, introduced in 2006, has more than 114 million monthly active users.

“I have witnessed a radical shift in the nature of cooperation between different parts of the company,” said Sanford Panitch, Sony’s movie president.

The game adaptation boom extends far beyond Sony.

“Halo,” a series based on the Xbox franchise about a war between humans and an alliance of aliens (more than 80 million copies sold), will arrive on the Paramount+ streaming service early next year; Steven Spielberg is an executive producer. Lionsgate is adapting the Borderlands games (roughly 60 million sold) into a science fiction film starring Cate Blanchett, Kevin Hart and Jamie Lee Curtis.

Buoyed by its success with “The Witcher,” a fantasy series adapted from games and novels, Netflix has shows based on the “Assassin’s Creed,” “Resident Evil,” “Splinter Cell” and “Cuphead” games on the way. Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, the duo behind HBO’s “Westworld,” are developing a science-fiction show for Amazon that is based on the Fallout video game franchise.

And Nintendo and Illumination Entertainment, the Universal Pictures studio responsible for the “Despicable Me” franchise, have an animated Mario movie headed to theaters next year — another new collaboration between a game publisher and a film company.

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Still, Hollywood’s game adaptation track record is terrible. Why should the coming projects be any different?

For a start, the games themselves have evolved, becoming more intricate and cinematic. “Games have stories that are so much more developed and advanced than they used to be,” Mr. Panitch said.

There are also signs that Hollywood has figured out how to make game-based films that satisfy both audiences and critics. “Pokémon Detective Pikachu,” which paired animated creatures with live actors, collected $433 million worldwide in 2019 for Warner Bros. and Legendary Entertainment — and was the first major game adaptation in three decades to receive a “fresh” designation on Rotten Tomatoes, the review-aggregation site. Since then, two more adaptations, “Sonic the Hedgehog” (Paramount) and “The Angry Birds Movie 2” (Sony) have been critical and commercial successes.

“Quality has definitely been improving,” said Geoff Keighley, creator of the Game Awards, an Oscars-like ceremony for the industry.

The most recent game-to-film entry, “Mortal Kombat” (Warner Bros.), received mixed reviews but has taken in $41.2 million in the United States since its release last month, a surprisingly large total considering it was released simultaneously on HBO Max and theaters were still operating with strict coronavirus safety protocols.

Mr. Panitch acknowledged that “video game movies have a checkered history.” But he added, “Failure is the mother of invention.”

Game adaptations, for instance, have often faltered by trying to rigidly replicate the action and story lines that fans know and love. That approach invites comparison, and movies (even with sophisticated visual effects) almost always fail to measure up. At the same time, such “fan service” turns off nongamers, resulting in films that don’t connect with any particular audience.

“It’s not just about adapting the story,” said Michael Jonathan Smith, who is leading Sony’s effort to turn Twisted Metal, a 1995 vehicular combat game, into a television series. “It’s about adapting how you feel when you play the game. It has to be about characters you care about. And then you can slide in the Easter eggs and story points that get fans absolutely pumped.”

“Uncharted” is a prequel that, for the first time, creates origin stories for the characters in the game. With any luck, such storytelling will satisfy fans by giving them something new — while also inviting nongamers, who may otherwise worry about not knowing what is going on, to buy tickets. (The producers of “Uncharted” include Charles Roven, who is known for the “Dark Knight” trilogy.)

“It’s a question of balance,” said Asad Qizilbash, a senior Sony Interactive executive who also runs PlayStation Productions, an entity started in 2019 and based on Sony’s movie lot in Culver City, Calif.

Unlike in the past, when Sony Pictures and Sony Interactive pledged to work together and ultimately did not, the current collaboration “has weight because there is a win for everyone,” Mr. Qizilbash added. “We have three objectives. Grow audience size for games. Bring product to Sony Pictures. Showcase collaboration.”

The stakes are high. A cinematic flop could hurt the game franchise.

“It’s risky,” Mr. Qizilbash allowed. “But I think we can do it.”

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MGM Seems to Amazon because the Hollywood Studio Tries to Discover a Purchaser

Streaming is highly competitive, Disney + is strong, and HBO Max, Apple TV +, and Paramount + are determined to move forward. This has led the original streaming disruptors – Netflix and Amazon Prime Video – to rely more heavily on broad appeal films to keep growing, especially overseas.

The 58-year-old James Bond franchise is a Hollywood crown jewel that has generated tens of billions of dollars in ticket sales, home entertainment revenue, video games and marketing partnerships. However, 007 was both a lure and a deterrent to potential MGM bidders.

That’s because MGM only owns 50 percent of the espionage franchise. The rest are held by Barbara Broccoli and her brother Michael G. Wilson. Through their all-or-nothing company, Eon, the siblings also have creative control approving any type of dialogue, casting decision, stunt sequence, TV commercial, poster, and billboard. Bond has tremendous untapped value, with TV offshoots being a potential bonanza. But Ms. Broccoli and Mr. Wilson, concerned about branding falsification, have blocked spin-off efforts in the past: Bond belongs on big screens, not small ones.

“If we find the wrong partners, it can lead to conflict,” Wilson said in a 2015 interview.

“No Time to Die,” the 25th episode in the Bond franchise, cost approximately $ 250 million and is slated to hit theaters on October 8th. (The previous film “Specter” cost about $ 900 million worldwide in 2015.) The role of James Bond is expected to be re-cast after “No Time to Die” as Daniel Craig leaves the role after 15 years.

Amazon’s entertainment strategy has evolved with the proliferation of streaming services. Indie films like “Manchester by the Sea” and unconventional shows like “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” and “Transparent” have gained a foothold in Hollywood. Dominance requires a steady supply of mainstream hits.

The problem: Amazon Studios has limited bandwidth, mostly related to television series – including an upcoming adaptation of Lord of the Rings, considered the most expensive show of all time, with a budget of $ 465 million for one season. In order to fill its shelves with large films, Amazon turned to external providers. It paid $ 125 million for the rights to “Coming 2 America” ​​and $ 80 million for “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm”. In July, Amazon will be releasing The Tomorrow War, a science fiction spectacle it bought for $ 200 million.

Nicole Sperling contributed to the reporting.

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Hollywood Would possibly Not Wish to Save the Golden Globes

For now, at least, the Golden Globes party is over.

Long marketed as the Academy Awards’ less stiff cousin, the Globes are now scrambling to clean up their plot after NBC announced it would shut down the show in 2022 due to a series of controversies that the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the constituency behind it, would not attend to broadcast the ceremony.

Citing all of these controversies may prove to be as tedious as the awards show, but here are a notable selection: The Los Angeles Times and this paper both published recently published exposés of the group’s double-dealing, a follow-up story to the Los Angeles Times revealed that the group had no black members, and a late, reluctant series of reforms proposed by the group failed to satisfy Time’s Up, causing studios like Netflix, Amazon, and Warner Bros. to issue statements that one amounted to an effective boycott.

As this test intensified, the members of the 86-strong island association continued to commit new, headline-making gaffes. One member confused Daniel Kaluuya for another black actor, Leslie Odom Jr., minutes after Kaluuya’s Oscar win, while a former president of the Hollywood Foreign Press was expelled from the group in April after he wrote a right-wing article to members with the Title Black Lives Matter had relayed a “hate movement”.

This kind of insensitive behavior has been tolerated by Hollywood for decades because the Golden Globes feature the most iconic pit stop on the way to the Oscars: when you’re ready to cuddle and snuggle (and turn) blind eyes with eccentric voters their more questionable behavior) then the group could give you the momentum you need to make it all the way through the awards season.

But with the show now on the ropes, stars have begun publicly questioning the integrity of the members: Scarlett Johansson said in a statement that she stopped attending the group’s press conferences after becoming “sexist “Asked questions and remarks from certain HFPA members that went to the limit about sexual harassment,” while Globe favorite Tom Cruise returned his three trophies in a notable rebuke.

Can the show make a comeback when its golden sheen is so tarnished? Or will Hollywood conclude that rescuing the Golden Globes may cause more problems than it’s worth?

Hours after NBC shut down the show for 2022, the group released a detailed schedule of the proposed changes, including adding many new members over the coming months. Even if the group doubles its membership and adds more colored journalists, the question remains of what to do with the longtime members who have indulged in the most criticized practices of the globes for years.

Unlike the Oscars, which are voted on by several thousand of Hollywood’s most successful artists and technicians, the Golden Globes are selected by a small group of foreign journalists with little to no profile outside the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, many of whom pull significant paychecks from the Group.

A selection of people is unlikely to add prestige, and the Golden Globes may have to completely reinvent their electoral board if they hope to win back already-troubled stars and studios. Why should actors like Johansson or Kaluuya continue to participate in the organization’s activities when the journalists who insulted them retain their influence within the group?

In the meantime, it is possible that another award ceremony could be postponed to the beginning of January in order to effectively take the place of the globes in the award calendar next year. The Screen Actors Guild Awards and Critics Choice Awards are already televised and attract big stars, although none have matched the traditional Golden Globes ratings.

If either show were scaled up appropriately and postponed to the first week of January, it could at least take advantage of an ecosystem of parties, events, and advertisements centered around a grand awards show that airs the first week of the year. And if the relaunched show has hit audience numbers better than the pandemic-ridden low of the Globes this year, Hollywood could be in no real rush to bring the Globes back to the fore.

That’s the thing about awards: these trophies are only as important as the recipients believe, and now that the illusion of the Golden Globes has been pierced, the stars may find it hard to put their disbelief back on. Could the biggest Golden Globe nudge come if Hollywood leaves the show entirely?

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Cinerama Dome in Hollywood Will not Reopen After Pandemic

ArcLight Cinemas, a popular chain of Los Angeles-based cinemas, including the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood, will permanently close all locations, Pacific Theaters said on Monday after the pandemic decimated cinema business.

ArcLight’s locations in and around Hollywood have been home to many movie premieres and are popular spots for moviegoers looking for blockbusters and prestige titles. They are operated by Pacific Theaters, which also operate a handful of theaters under the Pacific name, and are owned by Decurion.

“After closing our doors more than a year ago, today we have to share the difficult and sad news that Pacific will not reopen its ArcLight cinemas and Pacific Theaters locations,” the company said in a statement.

“This was not the result anyone wanted,” he added, “but despite a tremendous amount of effort that has exhausted all potential options, the company has no viable path forward.”

Between the Pacific and ArcLight brands, the company owned 16 theaters and more than 300 screens.

The cinema business was particularly hard hit by the pandemic. But in the past few weeks, most of the country’s biggest theater chains, including AMC and Regal Cinemas, have reopened in anticipation of the list of Hollywood films to be reopened, many after repeated delays due to pandemic restrictions. There is even an air of optimism in the air as a result of the Warner Bros. film “Godzilla vs. Kong,” which has generated revenues of around $ 70 million since it opened over the Easter weekend.

Still, the industry’s trade organization, the National Association of Theater Owners, has long warned that the criminal closings would most likely affect smaller regional players like ArcLight and Pacific. In March, the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema chain, which operates around 40 locations nationwide, announced that it had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, but that most locations would remain operational during the restructuring.

This does not appear to be the case with Pacific Theaters, which two knowledgeable people said they laid off all their staff on Monday.

The response to the ArcLight Hollywood closure has been emotional, including a pour out on Twitter.

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Why Hollywood it is staying quiet about Georgia’s new voting regulation

Tyler Perry accepts the People’s Champion Award on stage for the 2020 E! The People’s Choice Awards will be presented at the Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, California and will air on Sunday, November 15, 2020.

Christopher Polk | E! Entertainment | NBCUniversal | Getty Images

While other corporate giants like Coca-Cola and Delta were quick to speak out against Georgia’s new electoral law, the state’s film studios were less vocal.

In the past, Hollywood has used the threat of production boycotts in the state to voice its opinion on Georgian politics. This time around, however, the studios were mostly mother of the matter, which led many to wonder why.

Some speculate that the industry is hoping the federal government will step in while executives voice their concerns behind the scenes or pull other levers like the use of political donations. Another factor could be timing: after the coronavirus pandemic, studios simply can no longer trigger threats that could disrupt production.

“As a Georgia resident and business owner, I have been here a few times with the Abortion Act and the LGBTQ Discrimination Act,” Tyler Perry, who owns Tyler Perry Studios, Georgia, said in a statement Tuesday. “They all sent a shock wave through Georgia and the nation, but none of them managed to succeed. I rest my hopes on that [Department of Justice] take a close look at this unconstitutional electoral suppression law reminiscent of the Jim Crow era. “

The new law, signed by Governor Brian Kemp on March 26th, includes a restriction on dropboxing, making it a crime to provide food or water to voters who line up outside of polling stations and require mandatory proof of identity for voters the postal vote and creates stronger legislative control over how elections are conducted. Opponents say that these provisions disproportionately disenfranchise people with color.

On Wednesday, ViacomCBS became the first major entertainment company to publicly condemn the law.

“We unequivocally believe in the importance of all Americans having the same right to vote and we oppose the recent Georgian suffrage law or any effort that hinders the exercise of this vital constitutional right,” the company wrote on Twitter.

AT&T, which owns Warner Media, also issued a statement on the law.

“AT&T believes that our voting rights are among the most sacrosanct we enjoy and that free enterprise and businesses like ours thrive where elections are open and safe,” the company said in a statement. “Consistent with this belief, we partner with other companies that are members of the Georgia Chamber and the Metro-Atlanta Chamber of Commerce as these organizations support policies that promote accessible and secure voting while ensuring the integrity and transparency of elections . “

None of the companies threatened to boycott the state.

The Hollywood effect

Some have speculated that Hollywood’s silence reflected the challenges facing the industry. It can’t afford to boycott the state’s filming locations after months of production been lost to the coronavirus pandemic. Others believe Hollywood executives may just be waiting for more information before making any statements.

After all, it took a few weeks for the 2019 Anti-Abortion Act, known as the Heartbeat Law, to be signed before most actors, producers and directors began threatening boycotts in the state. A federal judge struck down the law last year.

“I think the entertainment industry is putting this on hold until the federal government brings in the vote [law] to the ground, “said Tom Nunan, a lecturer at UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television and founder of Bull’s Eye Entertainment.

“It’s a bleak mess, and I suspect executives, especially Disney, who has the largest footprint in Georgia because of the Marvel franchise of movies and series, are waiting for the federal response,” he said.

Disney did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment. Sony officials were also not immediately available.

Hollywood has a lot of weight to throw at. The state will receive nearly $ 3 billion in direct spending on film and television production and another $ 6.5 billion in additional economic impact. This money goes to hotels, restaurants, gas stations, rental cars and wood purchases, everything companies need to realize and produce their projects.

Since 2008, enticing tax incentives have turned the state into Y’allywood, a film and television production center. Georgia has developed an infrastructure for big budget productions and is home to a hugely skilled workforce of crew members, artisans, and technicians.

Ryan Millsap, CEO of Blackhall Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, told CNBC that production in the state is “booming” even with the addition of Covid protocols. He said there is more productions in Georgia than ever before and that studios must actually turn down companies looking for studio space.

Alternatives to boycotts

While the threat of boycotts can be an effective bargaining chip, ceasing production would also hurt the local crews and other businesses that rely on that income.

“The boycott threat was pretty minor at the time,” said Molly Coffee, creative director of Film Impact Georgia and a veteran of the state’s film industry. “James Mangold made a statement on Twitter that he would not film in Georgia, and that was repeated by the likes of Mark Hamill and Debra Messing. The fear is always that others will follow suit.”

Mark Hamill, left, and James Mangold

Michael Tullberg | Getty Images; Kevin Winter | Getty Images

Russell Williams, a professor of film and media arts at American University, suggested that there are other ways Hollywood could be heard.

“Hollywood is bearing the extra cost of protecting its workforce and customers (if applicable) with fewer opportunities to recoup that investment due to the pandemic. So maybe there are more targeted ways to get lawmakers’ attention,” he said. “No donation, anyone?”

Hollywood’s elite opened their wallets to fund the Georgia Senate runoff earlier this year. Federal Election Commission records showed that celebrities like Mark Ruffalo, Jack Black, Jane Fonda, Susan Sarandon, Tracee Ellis Ross, and others were spending money ahead of the January election.

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Extra Black-led initiatives might increase Hollywood income by $10 billion, McKinsey says

If Hollywood eliminated racial inequalities in the film and television industries, annual sales could rise 7%, or about $ 10 billion, according to a new study by McKinsey.

The consulting firm’s investigation found that black-led stories are underfunded and undervalued.

“A complex, interdependent value chain with dozens of hidden barriers and other vulnerabilities strengthens the status quo of the breed in the industry. Based on our research, we have cataloged nearly 40 specific vulnerabilities that black talent regularly encounter when trying to build their careers “wrote the report’s authors.

Franklin Leonard, the CEO and founder of The Blacklist, which aims to democratize writers’ access to the entertainment industry, and a former McKinsey employee, prompted the consulting giant to undergo this study last June.

“I reached out to some of my former coworkers and said if you are interested in researching racial inequality Hollywood is a place to do it,” said Leonard. “Mainly because this economic inequality is not just in our industry, but we are exporting and expanding stories around the world, which also has a material impact on the lives of blacks and people around the world.”

The leading positions in the film and television industry are disproportionately white. Ninety-two percent of all film managers are white, the report said. McKinsey noted that this is more than any other industry, including finance and energy. The TV industry is slightly more diverse than consumer goods, finance, and transportation / travel, at 87% white, according to the report.

And while the US population is roughly 13.5% black, according to the report, 6% of writers, directors, and producers of Hollywood movies are black, while 8% have at least one black producer.

McKinsey said there are important barriers to entry, including the fact that entry-level entertainment jobs often offer low or no wages. Research highlights that industrial jobs are often shared by small, predominantly white, elite networks.

Another challenge is bias – both subconsciously and overtly.

“We have an exceptionally talented black community in Hollywood and they are doing an exceptional job,” said Leonard. “One has to wonder what they would be capable of and what Hollywood would be capable of if we actually removed these barriers and allowed everyone to participate at a level that matches their ability and, frankly, their ability to make a return on the land . ” Investment.”

Leonard said he was “most shocked” by the return on investment numbers.

“Black content still delivers about 10% better ROI despite underfunding, support and subdistribution,” he said.

To level the field, the study recommends that studios adopt transparency and accountability towards their own ranks, and expand recruitment to state schools and historically black colleges and universities. This could be achieved with the help of a third party organization.

Leonard noted that the potential $ 10 billion gain that could result from diversity efforts is specifically related to the underrepresentation of black talent and executives. The overall chance is considerably greater than if other underrepresented minorities are added.

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In Australia, Hollywood Stars Have Discovered an Escape From Covid. Who’s Jealous?

MELBOURNE, Australia – In the photo posted on Instagram, actors Chris Hemsworth, Idris Elba and Matt Damon, all wearing 1980s style sweats, hug each other. You are maskless. Touch. Happy even. The headline reads: “A little 80s themed party never hurt!”

Your outraged fans peppered the post with comments. What about the pandemic? Social distancing? Masks? We are still suffering from a pandemic that has all but crippled the travel industry and prevented most people from casually flying on vacation to paradise.

However, the Hollywood Brigade was in Australia, a country where coronavirus has been effectively eradicated, allowing officials to relax restrictions on most gatherings, including parties (with dancing and finger food). Due to the near-lack of the virus and generous subsidies from the Australian government, the country’s film industry has been buzzing at an enviable pace for months compared to other regions.

Australia has managed to lure several Hollywood directors and actors into continuing film production. In fact, many celebrities including Natalie Portman, Christian Bale and Melissa McCarthy found freedom from the pandemic there.

One person wrote on Mr. Hemsworth’s Instagram post, “Before you comment, remember that not everyone lives in America.”

Although the accelerated pace of vaccination in the United States has raised hopes of returning to some semblance of normality by summer, the country is still the world leader in the number of coronavirus cases and deaths. The cinemas only reopened in New York City last week. Some fans are cautiously sneaking back while others are still cautious about contracting the virus.

But thousands of kilometers away, many stars who appear on the big screens can frolic or film on location in Australia. (Mr. Hemsworth is a fixture himself – he moved back to Australia in 2017 after several years in Los Angeles.) In the US, where hundreds still die every day, some fans watched jealously.

“These Hollywood stars have been transported to another world where the world’s problems don’t exist,” said Robert Thompson, professor of popular culture at Syracuse University in New York. He added that the temporary exodus from the United States revealed another disintegration of the myth that Hollywood was the endgame for celebrities.

Australia has become a “hip place” that “fabulous people want to go,” said Professor Thompson. “If you’re trying to be a star, you have to go to the west coast to make your bones.” When you become “a really big star” you are buying property in an exotic location like Australia, he added.

“It definitely feels like a time machine,” said Ms. Portman, who called from Sydney, late-night host Jimmy Kimmel in December. “It’s so different, all animals are different, all trees are different, I even mean the birds, there are multicolored parrots that fly around like pigeons,” she added. “It’s wild.”

A spokeswoman said the government helped 22 international productions bring hundreds of millions into the local economy. Paul Fletcher, Federal Minister of Communications, said: “There is no doubt that this is a very significant increase over previous activity.”

But even as celebrities dress up and pose on social media, some Australians grumble that the country’s strategy to fight the virus has stranded tens of thousands of citizens overseas. The strict border measures have also contributed to a shortage of agricultural labor.

Exceptions have been made for tennis players who participated in the Australian Open last month, as well as for the staff who run the tournament. The presence of Hollywood’s rich and famous has further angered critics who see a clear bend of the rules for those with money and power.

“Everyone knows that there seem to be separate rules for anyone who is a celebrity or has money,” said Daniel Tusia, an Australian who was stuck overseas with his family for several months last year. “There are still a lot of people who couldn’t get home, who don’t fall into that category and who are still stranded,” he added.

In a statement emailed, the Australian Border Force said travel exemptions for film and television productions have been considered “if there is evidence of the economic benefits the production will bring to Australia and support from the relevant government agency . “

A year ago, Hollywood Everyone’s Tom Hanks made the threat of the pandemic all too real when he and wife Rita Wilson tested positive for the coronavirus in Queensland, Australia while filming an unnamed Elvis biopic. Her illness made a personal threat, the seriousness of which was only just beginning to crystallize at this time.

But in May, Australia appeared to be well on its way to quelling the first wave of the virus, and the soap opera “Neighbors” was one of the first scripted TV series in the world to resume production. The federal government has allocated more than $ 400 million to international productions, which, along with existing subsidies, gives film and television producers a discount of up to 30 percent for filming in the country.

More than 20 international productions including Thor: Love and Thunder, a Marvel film with Hemsworth, Damon, Portman, Taika Waititi, Tessa Thompson and Bale; “Three Thousand Years of Longing,” a fantasy romance with Mr. Elba and Tilda Swinton; and Joe Exotic, a spin-off of the podcast that preceded the popular Netflix series Tiger King, which stars Saturday Night Live actress Kate McKinnon as Big Cat enthusiast Carole Baskin all filmed either in production or in preparation next year.

Ron Howard directs Thirteen Lives, a dramatization of the Thai rescue of a football team from a Queensland cave in 2018 (the Australian coast is a good proxy for the tropics). And later that year, Julia Roberts and George Clooney will arrive in the same state to direct Ticket to Paradise, a romantic comedy.

Although a number of American temporary employment stars have landed in the country, some like Ms. McCarthy, who was originally in Australia to work on “Nine Perfect Strangers,” have decided to shoot more projects, according to industry representatives. “Oh the birds!” she raved in a YouTube video. “I love seeing a spider the size of my head.”

Others, like Zac Efron, appear to have settled here permanently.

His Instagram is flush with Australiana: Here he is in a hammock in the desert of the red earth, seems to be participating in an indigenous ceremony or is wearing the Australian cowboy hat, an Akubra. Last year, Mr. Efron even got what an Adelaide barber called a “mullet,” a vicious hairstyle popular in Australia.

“Home, sweet home,” he captioned a picture of himself in front of a $ 100,000 motor home.

Chances are the stars will keep popping up. They were seen camping under the stars as they went to dinner without a mask and partied (yes, like it was 1989). Mr Damon said in January that Australia was definitely a “happy country”.

But locals in Byron Bay – the seaside town that has gone from hippie to glitter in recent years – have complained that the influx of stars over the past year has changed the city beyond repair.

“The actors and the famous people are the tip of the iceberg,” said James McMillan, a local artist and director of the Byron Bay Surf Festival. He added that the large cohort of production workers from Melbourne and Sydney had priced locals out of real estate.

“It has definitely changed more than it has ever done in the past 12 months,” added McMillan, who has lived in Byron Bay for two decades. “People have stars in their eyes.”

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20 Black film administrators who modified Hollywood within the final century

(L to R) Ava Duvernay, Spike Lee, Jordan Peele

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The films that launched the entertainment industry around the turn of the 20th century were created for white audiences by white filmmakers.

It took decades for Black directors to break into the industry and alter how Hollywood operated behind and in front of the camera and how it viewed Black content. Oscar Micheaux led the charge, launching his own studio in 1919. 

Directors such as Melvin van Peebles and Gordon Parks put Black narratives at the forefront of their storytelling in the 1970s, creating a subgenre known as “blaxploitation.” These films used Black stereotypes about poverty and drug abuse to put Black actors at the center of the action.  

Then in the ’80s and ’90s, Spike Lee and John Singleton used their films to examine urban and racial tensions, providing a mainstream audience with more nuanced Black characters. 

“I’ve been blessed with the opportunity to express the views of black people who otherwise don’t have access to power and the media,” Lee wrote in a companion novel to “Do the Right Thing” published in 1989. “I have to take advantage of that while I’m still bankable.”

During that time, Black female filmmakers were making strides. Kathleen Collins’ work in the ’80s paved the way for Julie Dash to become the first Black woman to have a film get a wide release in 1991.

Each of these directors helped push back barriers and inspire a new generation of Black filmmakers such as Ava DuVernay, Tyler Perry and Barry Jenkins, who have been recognized not only critically for their work but commercially at the global box office.

While Black filmmakers are more prevalent and celebrated in Hollywood in the 21st century, there’s still a lot of work to be done. 

2020 was a banner year for Black ensemble films. “One Night in Miami,” “Da 5 Bloods,” “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” and “Judas and the Black Messiah” stunned critics. However, none of these films was nominated for best picture or best screenplay at the Golden Globes. The Academy Awards will make its nominations in March.

Here’s a look at 20 Black directors who have changed Hollywood:

Oscar Micheaux

Hailed as the first major Black filmmaker, Oscar Micheaux directed and produced 42 feature films between 1919 and 1948. 

He was a writer-turned-filmmaker, using his first novel “The Homesteader” to launch his career in the film industry. During that time, Micheaux’s content was classified as “race film,” a genre of movies made during the Jim Crow era that were created for and by Black people.

Many of his films featured all-Black casts and his characters were not stereotypical, unlike the blackface caricatures seen in more mainstream white films. He tackled subjects such as racial violence, rape, economic oppression and discrimination within his work.

He died in 1951 but has posthumously been inducted into the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame and awarded the Golden Jubilee Special Directorial Award from the Directors Guild of America.

A lobby card for the 1921 silent film ‘The Gunsaulus Mystery,” The poster features Oscar Micheaux who was the writer and director of the film, he is regarded as the first major African-American filmmaker, the film belongs to a genre called race films which were produced for all-black audiences, 1921.

Smith Collection | Gado | Archive Photos | Getty Images

William Greaves

An influential independent documentary filmmaker, William Greaves produced and directed more than 100 films. His films captured social issues as well as key African American figures such as Muhammad Ali and Ida B. Wells. 

In the late 1960’s Greaves garnered attention for his experimental film “Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take One.” The avant-garde film chronicles a fictional documentary titled “Over the Cliff,” which is directed by Greaves, who acts in it. The documentary focuses on actors as they prepare to audition for a dramatic piece. Greaves used three sets of camera crews: One documented the audition process and the actors, the second documented the first film crew and the third documented the actors and the two other film crews.

The meta-documentary, as it has come to be called, featured a documentary, a documentary about a documentary and a documentary that documented a documentary about a documentary. 

Greaves, who passed away in 2014, is a member of the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame and the recipient of a Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Documentary Association.

Director William Greaves speaks at the press conference for the film “Symbiopsychotaxiplasm:Take 2 1/2” at the Tribeca Film Festival April 25, 2005 in New York City.

Bryan Bedder | Getty Images

Gordon Parks

Gordon Parks started his career as a prolific and famed photographer before branching out into filmmaking. He started as a consultant on various Hollywood productions in the ’50s before directing a series of documentaries about Black urban life for National Educational Television.

Parks became Hollywood’s first major Black director, bringing the iconic “Shaft” to theaters in 1971. The film spawned a number of follow-ups and helped spark a subgenre known as blaxploitation. The genre was one in which images of lower-class Blacks being involved with drugs and violence were exploited to make commercially successful films.

While this genre played on Black stereotypes, it also cast Black actors in lead roles, instead of as minor characters or sidekicks.

Director Gordon Parks and actor Richard Roundtree on set of the movie “Shaft’s Big Score!”, circa 1972.

Michael Ochs Archives | Moviepix | Getty Images

Melvin van Peebles

Melvin van Peebles directed more than a dozen films during his career in Hollywood, but he is most well known for the 1971 movie “Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song,” which he wrote, directed and acted in.

“Sweetback” tells the story of a Black man who is selected as a patsy for a murder by white police officers. The man ends up killing the cops, becomes the target of a massive manhunt and flees to Mexico. It became one of the most successful films of 1971, tallying more than $15 million in box-office sales.

The film proved that a story with a strong African-American lead character could be successful at the box office and helped usher in a new wave of Black cinema.

Actor, director, screenwriter, playwright, novelist and composer Melvin Van Peebles photographed in 1972.

Jack Mitchell | Getty Images

Kathleen Collins

A poet, playwright and filmmaker, Kathleen Collins helped break barriers for female directors in Hollywood. She had two major films: “The Cruz Brothers and Miss Malloy” and “Losing Ground,” which were released in the early ’80s.

Although “Losing Ground” was denied a large-scale exhibition, it was among the first films created by a Black woman that was feature-length and created for popular consumption. Collins helped pave the way for future Black women filmmakers to have their films get national commercial distribution. 

Collins passed away in 1988 from breast cancer. At that time, the bulk of her work was unpublished and left to her daughter. In 2006, Nina Collins began to go through her mother’s archive and have it published, restored and reissued.

Spike Lee

In the mid-’80s Spike Lee emerged in the film industry with “She’s Gotta Have It,” a film about the love life of a contemporary Black woman. Over the next 40 years, Lee would become known for his exploration of race relations, colorism in the Black community and urban crime and poverty. He has released a movie almost every year since 1986.

He was one of the few Black filmmakers making movies for a wide audience during that time and, while his films were not breaking box-office records, they were gaining critical attention.

Lee was nominated for best documentary feature in 1998 for “4 Little Girls” and best original screenplay in 1990 for “Do the Right Thing.” He received an honorary Oscar in 2016 for his directorial accomplishments. In 2019, Lee finally claimed his first Oscar for best adapted screenplay for his work on “BlacKkKlansman.”

His most recent feature was “Da 5 Bloods,” which was released on Netflix last year. The film received a number of key critics’ prizes, including best film from the National Board of Review and one of the top 10 films of the year by the American Film Institute.

Spike Lee

Steve Granitz | WireImage | Getty Images

Marlon Riggs

Marlon Riggs was an American filmmaker, poet and gay rights activist during the ’80s and ’90s. He produced and directed a number of documentary films including “Tongues Untied,” “Ethnic Notions” and “Color Adjustment” prior to his untimely death in 1994 due to complications from AIDS.

Riggs used film to examine past and present representations of race and sexuality in the U.S. One of his most controversial documentaries was “Tongues Untied.” It looked at gay Black male culture during the AIDS crisis and featured a kiss between two Black men, something that hadn’t been portrayed in mainstream media. It was selected by PBS for its “POV” series.

The documentary was partially funded by taxpayer money though the National Endowment for the Arts, leading some conservatives to use it in long-running attempts to defund PBS and the NEA.

Riggs’ work, although controversial, became a lightning rod for the culture war between conservatives and liberals that raged during that time.

Julie Dash

Just three years after the passing of Collins, Julie Dash released “Daughters of the Dust.” It was the first full-length film directed by an African American woman to get a wide theatrical release in the U.S. Dash’s 1991 film was named to the National Film Registry in 2004.

Dash has directed music videos, commercial spots, shorts and episodic television during her career. She was nominated for a Directors Guild Award for “The Rosa Parks Story,” which was released in 2002. 

Renowned filmmaker Julie Dash, who wrote and directed the acclaimed film, ‘Daughters of the Dust’, teaches filmmaking at Howard University.

The Washington Post | The Washington Post | Getty Images

John Singleton

At the age of 24, John Singleton became the youngest person ever to be nominated for best director at the Academy Awards and the first African-American. He was nominated for his film “Boyz n the Hood,” a 1991 coming-of-age drama that also earned Singleton a best original screenplay nod at the Oscars.

Many of Singleton’s films examined urban and racial tensions including “Poetic Justice” and “Higher Learning,” which were released in the ’90s. He also directed the film “2 Fast 2 Furious.”

Prior to his death in 2019, Singleton wrote, directed or executive produced a number of television shows including “Snowfall,” “Rebel,” “Empire” and “Billions.”

View of director John Singleton, wearing sunglasses and beret, while on the set of his movie ‘Poetic Justice’, Los Angeles, CA, 1993.

Anthony Barboza | Archive Photos | Getty Images

F. Gary Gray

F. Gary Gray began his career directing critically acclaimed and award-winning music videos for artists such as Ice Cube, Dr. Dre and Outkast. It wasn’t until the mid-90s that he made his feature film debut.

In the years that followed, Gray released blockbuster hits and award-nominated films including “The Italian Job,” “Law Abiding Citizen,” “Straight Outta Compton” and “The Fate of the Furious.”

Gray has directed 10 films in the last three decades, tallying more than $2.2 billion in ticket sales. He is the first Black director to have a film gross more than $1 billion at the global box office. “The Fate of the Furious” tallied $1.2 billion in 2017.

Honoree F. Gary Gray accepts the Excellence in the Arts Award onstage during BET Presents the American Black Film Festival Honors on February 17, 2017 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images)

Alberto E. Rodriguez | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

Antoine Fuqua

Like Gray, Antoine Fuqua got his start in the industry directing music videos. He worked with artists such as Toni Braxton, Coolio, Prince and Stevie Wonder before launching into feature films in 1998.

Fuqua is known for directing action and thriller films and has a consistent track record at the box office. His 2001 film “Training Day” earned actor Denzel Washington an Academy Award.

His films “King Arthur,” “Shooter,” “Olympus Has Fallen,” “The Equalizer” and “Southpaw” have garnered more than $1.3 billion at the global box office. His most recent work was a 2019 documentary called “What’s My Name: Muhammad Ali.”

Executive Producer & Director Antoine Fuqua attends the “What’s My Name | Muhammad Ali” Tribeca Premiere on April 28, 2019 in New York City.

Michael Loccisano | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

Tyler Perry

Tyler Perry built a multimillion-dollar brand by creating content for an audience that was often ignored by Hollywood. While some have derided the filmmaker for amplifying negative or stereotypical images of Black identity, particularly with his Madea films, he continues to showcase A-list and up-and-coming Black talent in his work.

Following the box-office success of his 2005 debut “Diary of a Mad Black Woman,” Perry secured a lucrative first-look deal with Lionsgate until 2014. Perry’s two dozen theatrical releases have garnered more than $1.1 billion globally.

Perry operates one of three major studios in Georgia, where he films his movie and television projects and rents out space to other filmmakers. With his studio, Perry has helped nurture the state’s film industry. He has even partnered with the Georgia Film Academy to place interns from the school on productions.

Tyler Perry accepts People’s Champion Award onstage for the 2020 E! People’s Choice Awards held at the Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, California and on broadcast on Sunday, November 15, 2020.

Christopher Polk/E! Entertainment | NBCUniversal | Getty Images

Tim Story

Tim Story is one of the most commercially successful Black filmmakers. His directorial debut came in 2002 with “Barbershop,” a comedy film that spawned two other films in the franchise.

He also directed 2005’s “Fantastic Four” and its sequel “Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer,” which together amassed more than $600 million at the global box office.

In total, Story’s films, which also include “Think Like a Man,” “Ride Along” and 2019’s “Shaft,” have hauled in more than $1.2 billion worldwide.

Director Tim Story attends the premiere of Showtime’s “White Famous” at The Jeremy Hotel on September 27, 2017 in West Hollywood, California. (Photo by Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic)

Paul Archuleta | FilmMagic | Getty Images

Steve McQueen

No, not the American actor. This Steve McQueen is a British filmmaker known for his Academy Award-winning film “12 Years a Slave.”

Born in London, McQueen spent the ’90s making short films before debuting his first feature-length film “Hunger,” about the 1981 Irish hunger strike, at the Cannes Film Festival in 2008.

In 2011, he released “Shame,” a drama about an executive struggling with sex addiction. Two years later, “12 Years a Slave” garnered him the Oscar for best picture, making him the first Black filmmaker to ever win the award.

He later adapted a British television series called “Widows” into an American-based film and released “Small Axe,” a collection of five films set within London’s West Indian community between the 1960s and 1980s.

For his work, McQueen has received the Turner Prize, the highest award given to a British visual artist. He has also been appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire.

Director Steve McQueen attends the red carpet of the movie “Soul” during the 15th Rome Film Festival on October 15, 2020 in Rome, Italy.

Elisabetta Villa | Getty Images

Barry Jenkins

Barry Jenkins directed two short films before debuting “Medicine for Melancholy” in 2008. The film received an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best First Feature. 

Following an eight-year hiatus from feature filmmaking, Jenkins returned to Hollywood with “Moonlight,” an LGBT-themed independent drama, that went on to win numerous accolades including the Academy Award for best picture. Jenkins became the fourth Black person nominated for best director and the second to win a best picture Oscar. 

His third directorial feature “If Beale Street Could Talk” arrived in 2018 and earned him nominations for best screenplay at the Academy Awards and Golden Globes.

Jenkins was most recently tapped by Disney to direct a second live-action “Lion King” film.

Barry Jenkins accepts Best Director for “If Beale Street Could Talk” onstage during the 2019 Film Independent Spirit Awards on February 23, 2019 in Santa Monica, California. (Photo by Tommaso Boddi/Getty Images)

Tommaso Boddi | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

Dee Rees

A student and mentee of director Spike Lee, Dee Rees graduated from New York University and immediately went to work. She interned on Lee’s “Inside Man” and “When the Levees Broke” in the mid-’00s, using that time to pen a script that would later be developed into her first feature film, 2011’s “Pariah.”

Her third directorial film, “Mudbound,” was nominated for three Academy Awards, including a best screenplay nod for Rees. Rees was the first Black woman nominated for a writing award at the Oscars since Suzanne de Passe in 1973. “Mudbound” also led Rachel Morrison to be the first woman ever nominated for the best cinematography award.

Rees has also written and directed television episodes for series such as “Empire,” “When We Rise” and “Philip K. Dick’s Electric Dreams.”

Dee Rees speaks onstage during the 2020 Sundance Film Festival Awards Night Ceremony at Basin Recreation Field House on February 01, 2020 in Park City, Utah.

Matt Winkelmeyer | Getty Images

Ava DuVernay

Ava DuVernay first made a name for herself in Hollywood with her 2012 film “Middle of Nowhere.” The film earned her the directing award in the U.S. dramatic competition at Sundance. She was the first Black woman to win this award.

Two years later, “Selma” helped DuVernay become the first Black woman to be nominated for a Golden Globe for best director and the first Black female director to be nominated for best picture. In 2017, she was nominated for the Oscar for best documentary feature for her film “13th.”

While her 2018 Disney fantasy film “A Wrinkle in Time” ultimately lost money at the box office and was a flop with critics, it still garnered more than $100 million domestically. DuVernay was the first Black woman to hit that benchmark.

More recently, DuVernay has had a successful run in television. Her Netflix limited series “When They See Us” told the story of the five Harlem teens who were falsely accused of a brutal attack in Central Park. It earned critical acclaim and 16 Emmy nominations. It won the Emmy for outstanding limited series.

Last year, DuVernay was elected to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences board of governors as part of the directors branch.

DuVernay also founded a film collective called Array in 2010. The company is dedicated to amplifying people of color and female directors in the film industry.

Filmmaker Ava Duvernay attends Film at Lincoln Center screening of “When They See Us” at Walter Reade Theater on May 21, 2019 in New York City.

John Lamparski | Getty Images

Ryan Coogler

“Black Panther” director Ryan Coogler has become a household name in less than a decade. In 2013, he gained critical acclaim and attention for his debut film “Fruitvale Station,” which led him to direct “Creed,” a spin-off sequel to the Rocky films.

For his third film, Disney gave him a budget of $200 million to bring the Black superhero Black Panther to the big screen. The film brought in a record-breaking $235 million during its opening weekend and went on to ring up more than $1.3 billion in ticket sales globally. He is the second Black director to have a film top $1 billion worldwide. 

In early February, Disney announced that it had struck a five-year deal with Coogler and his company Proximity Media to create television programming exclusively for Disney. He is already contracted to write and direct a second Black Panther film and will now create a TV series for Disney+ based in the fictional world of Wakanda.

Director Ryan Coogler attends the ‘Black Panther’ BFI preview screening held at BFI Southbank on February 9, 2018 in London, England.

Jeff Spicer | Getty Images

Jordan Peele

For many years, Jordan Peele was identified with the comedy show “Key & Peele,” in which the filmmaker starred alongside fellow comedian Keegan-Michael Key. However, in 2017, Peele delivered an Oscar-winning feature film called “Get Out.”

The film was a horror movie about racism that became a breakout hit and critically acclaimed. It exceeded $100 million in sales domestically within its first three weeks in theaters, making Peele the first Black writer-director to hit that mark with his debut movie.

“Get Out” was nominated for four Oscars, including best picture, best director, best actor and best screenplay. Peele won the award for best screenplay.

Peele’s second film “Us” also received critical and commercial success. He is currently working on his third feature. In the meantime, he has been an active producer of television shows including “Hunters,” “Lovecraft Country” and “The Twilight Zone” as well as films such as “Candyman” and “BlacKkKlansman.”

Writer/Director Jordan Peele attends the ‘Us’ New York Premiere at Museum of Modern Art on March 19, 2019 in New York City.

Roy Rochlin/FilmMagic | Getty Images

Victoria Mahoney

In the last decade, Victoria Mahoney has predominantly worked in television. She has directed episodes of “Queen Sugar,” “Grey’s Anatomy,” “American Crime,” “Lovecraft Country,” “Power” and “You.”

She was also handpicked by J.J. Abrams to direct the second unit of “Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker,” which makes her the first woman to direct a Star Wars film in the franchise’s more than 40-year history.

Director Victoria Mahoney arrives at the taping of “Queen Sugar After-Show” at OWN Oprah Winfrey Network on November 7, 2017 in West Hollywood, California.

Amanda Edwards | WireImage | Getty Images