NEW YORK â Like many of those involved in the making of âMa Raineyâs Black Bottom,â itâs not easy for Viola Davis to summarize what playwright August Wilson has meant to her except to answer, âEverything.â
Davis' first stage role was in Wilsonâs âJoe Turnerâs Come and Gone.â She made her Broadway debut in his âSeven Guitarsâ and won a Tony for âKing Hedley II.â After playing Rose on Broadway in Wilsonâs âFences,â she reprised the role in Denzel Washingtonâs 2016 film, winning her an Oscar. Most of all, as a drama student, a new light turned on for Davis when she first encountered Wilson -- a playwright who stood among the other greats. Arthur Miller. Eugene OâNeill. Shakespeare.
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âYouâre always trying to fit yourself in these roles, trying to make somebody else see you in these roles, transforming into -- in your brain -- some white woman,â Davis says. âWith August, when he came along, I didnât have to do that. Those roles are so much a part of my life. Itâs not fitting a square peg into a round hole. Itâs something that absolutely speaks to me, that I donât have to fight to embody. It still takes huge work and craft but I donât feel like I have to change the canvas of who I am. He is our playwright. He belongs to us.â
George C. Wolfeâs âMa Raineyâs Black Bottom,â which begins streaming Friday on Netflix, is the second movie adaptation of Wilsonâs plays in an ambitious project spearheaded by Denzel Washington. Following âFencesâ and âMa Rainey,â he intends to continue adapting Wilsonâs famed American Century Cycle, a 10-play series spanning each decade of the 20th century. (The '30s-set âThe Piano Lessonâ is on deck.)
âThese films will reach much wider audiences. A lot more people will know the name August Wilson and what his work is about,â says Constanza Romero, Wilsonâs widow and executor of his estate. âThey speak, unfortunately, to the plight of African Americans today.â
âMa Raineyâs Black Bottomâ is unique in the Century Cycle. Set in Chicago 1927, itâs the only one that takes place outside Pittsburgh. All of Wilson's plays hum with the sorrowful beauty of the blues but âMa Rainey" is soaked through. On a sweaty, summer day, a band has gathered at a white-owned recording studio to cut a new record with Ma Rainey (Davis), the pioneering âMother of the Blues,â and an unapologetically liberated woman from the South. Rainey was openly bisexual and proudly defiant despite the Jim Crow world around her.
âMe, in my life, I have a tendency to be more timid, more shy, probably have more anxiety,â says Davis. âSheâs all the things that Iâm not. Sheâs not someone who feels like she needs to hustle for her work. She knows that sheâs worthy. She knows exactly why sheâs worthy. She's unapologetic about her sexuality. So when I put it on, I felt my hips swishing more. I even felt like I walked better in heels as Ma Rainey than I do as Viola.â
Despite the title, the central, pivotal character of the play is Levee (Chadwick Boseman, in his final performance ), an ambitious trumpeter with a more updated take on Raineyâs music and big dreams of breaking out on his own. As played by Boseman, heâs a painfully tragic figure, haunted by the traumas of slavery while grasping for an out-of-reach future. In that way, he represents the struggles of 100 years ago just as he does those of today.
âOne of the only things I ever said was: It is Leveeâs story. I think the finished product shows that," says Romero. âI believe itâs something August would have said."
A number of Wilsonâs plays were on the table but Washington turned to âMa Raineyâ for its relatively condensed nature (itâs largely set in a handful of interiors) and for the appeal of casting of Davis and Boseman. Washington approached his âThe Iceman Comethâ director, Broadway veteran George C. Wolfe, about directing, and longtime Wilson interpreter Ruben Santiago-Hudson to pen the script. Preserving the poetry and rhythm of Wilsonâs dialogue was paramount.
âLangston Hughes wrote a book called âThe Ways of White Folks.â August Wilson wrote ten plays about the ways of Black folks," says Santiago-Hudson. "It was more our ways in our specific and authentic behavior in response to the wound that American had given us that makes his work so beautiful and brilliant. Itâs always a celebration. I donât mean a celebration like a fiddle-and-stopping-on-the-floor celebration. I mean: Look what I went through, and here I am to tell a story.â
But as much as âMa Raineyâ was guided by reverence for Wilson, who died in 2005, Wolfe didn't want a sense of awe to overwhelm the storytelling. To dig into the language and to the characters, he made a two-week rehearsal period a requirement.
âI wanted to, for lack of a better word, erase August Wilson and only have his characters remain. So itâs Levee talking. Itâs Cutler and Slow Drag and Ma Rainey talking," says Wolfe. "When working with actors, I ask a lot of questions. Not because Iâm really looking for answers but through the process of talking and challenging preconceived notions, Iâm instigating a questioning process that will lead to discoveries.â
What followed are two of the most acclaimed performances of the year. Both Davis and Boseman are widely expected to win Oscar nominations. For Davis, Ma isn't a character she wants to let go of, or stop admiring.
âMy favorite line of hers is: âMa listens to her heart. Ma listens to the voice inside of her. Thatâs the only thing that counts for Ma,ââ says Davis. "I mean, that takes most people a lifetime to do.â
The film is dedicated to Boseman, who died in August at the age of 43 from colon cancer. No one on the film, which shot last year in Pittsburgh, knew of Boseman's health woes. That's only furthered the esteem they share for a performance Davis calls âtranscendent."
âHeâs not playing around in the character of Levee. Heâs giving it his absolute 150%,â says Romero. âI think thereâs something about August that brings out the âAâ game in everybody.â
Romero likes to call the actors, directors, writers and filmmakers who return again and again to her husband's work âWilsonian Warriors.â She thought Boseman would remain among them. In 2013, he wrote movingly about meeting Wilson and being forever changed by his plays â of helping him âfind my song,â Boseman wrote, quoting âJoe Turner's Come and Gone.â
For the so-called Wilsonian Warriors still with us â an ever-multiplying army â âMa Rainey's Black Bottomâ doesn't mark any kind of ending but a continuation in a lifelong journey. Santiago-Hudson, friends with Wilson when he was alive, has acted in or directed every one of his plays. He's not done yet. âI want to maintain my relationship with this work, with my friend August," he says, "until I die."
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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP