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Monday, September 15, 2008 , Updated

Black Cinematheque Dallas to celebrate 100th birthday of Richard Wright

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Richard Wright

Richard Wright

Black Cinematheque Dallas and SDCC join the nation in honoring the 100th anniversary of award-winning author Richard Wright's birth with a film entitled RICHARD WRIGHT: BLACK BOY, Friday, Sept. 19, 8:00 PM at the South Dallas Cultural Center. Suggested donation is $5.00 or pay what you can. For information the public should call Marilyn Clark at 214-426-1683 or 214-939-2787.

Produced by Eyes on the Prize veteran Madison D. Lacy, Richard Wright: Black Boy is destined to become a definitive literary biography. It skillfully inter-cuts dramatic excerpts from Wright's own work with historical footage and the recollections of friends, associates and scholars such as Ralph Ellison, Margaret Walker, and Wright's daughter, Julia. They trace Wright's later development as a writer back to the brutality and racism of his Southern childhood - his father deserted the family, his uncle was lynched and he often went hungry. Wright's indelible portrayal of Bigger Thomas in Native Son and his own autobiography Black Boy lay bare the tragic connection between racism and powerlessness, despair, and self-destructive violence in many black males.

Wright overcame a childhood of poverty and oppression to become one of America's most influential writers. His first major works, Native Son and Black Boy, were runaway best sellers which are still mainstays of high school and college literature and composition classes. According to critic Irving Howe, "The day Native Son appeared American culture was changed forever."

When asked in 1945 why he wrote Black Boy, a harrowing account of his Southern childhood, Wright replied that he wanted to "give [his] tongue to voiceless Negro boys." Quoting Walt Whitman, he added, "Not until the sun ceases to shine on you will I disown you." Wright played an important role in many of the important social movements of his time. The film follows his journey through the Chicago black cultural Renaissance of the '30s, the Communist Party during the Depression, the witchhunts of the McCarthy era and the American expatriate community in Paris in the '50s. This biography urges us to take a fresh look at the often-neglected work of Wright's exile years including The Long Dream and his championing of Pan Africanism and the newly emerging nations of Africa and Asia.

By the time of his mysterious death in 1960 at age 52, Wright had left an indelible mark on African American letters, indeed, on the American imagination. This film biography demonstrates Wright's life-long belief that "words can be weapons against injustice." It will encourage students of American Literature, Black Studies and 20th Century American History to revisit Wright's work with fresh enthusiasm and deepened understanding.


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