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Wikipedia

Ava DuVernay

Ava Marie DuVernay (/ˌdjvərˈn/;[1] born August 24, 1972) is an American filmmaker and former film publicist. She is a recipient of a Primetime Emmy Award, a NAACP Image Award, a BAFTA Film Award and a BAFTA TV Award, as well as a nominee of an Academy Award and Golden Globe.

Ava DuVernay
DuVernay in 2018
Born
Ava Marie DuVernay

(1972-08-24) August 24, 1972 (age 50)
Alma materUniversity of California, Los Angeles (BA)
Occupations
  • Filmmaker
  • film publicist
WebsiteAvaDuVernay.com

After making her directoral debut, I Will Follow (2010), DuVernay won the directing award in the U.S. dramatic competition at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival for her second feature film Middle of Nowhere,[2] becoming the first black woman to win the award.[3]

For her work on Selma (2014), a biopic about Martin Luther King Jr., DuVernay became the first African-American woman to be nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Director, and the Academy Award for Best Picture.[4][5] Her other film credits include the Academy Award-nominated Netflix documentary 13th (2016) and the Disney fantasy film A Wrinkle in Time (2018), the latter making her the first African-American woman to direct a film with a budget of $100 million.

Her television credits include the OWN drama series Queen Sugar (2016) and two Netflix drama limited series: When They See Us (2019), based on the 1989 Central Park jogger case and Colin in Black & White (2021), based on the teenage years of NFL player Colin Kaepernick.

In 2017, DuVernay was included on the annual Time 100 list of the most influential people in the world.[6] In 2020, she was elected to the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences board of governors as part of the directors branch.[7][8]

Early life and education

Ava Marie DuVernay was born on August 24, 1972, in Long Beach, California. She was raised by her mother, Darlene (née Sexton), an educator, and her stepfather, Murray Maye.[9] The surname of her biological father, Joseph Marcel DuVernay III, originates with Louisiana Creole ancestry.[10] She grew up in Lynwood, California. She has four siblings.

During her summer vacations, she would travel to the childhood home of her stepfather, which was not far from Selma, Alabama.[11] DuVernay said that these summers influenced the making of Selma, as her father had witnessed the 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches.[12]

In 1990, DuVernay graduated from Saint Joseph High School in Lakewood.[13] At the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), she was a double BA major in English literature and African-American studies. Ava is an honorary member of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority.[14][15][16][17]

Career

Despite the acclaim DuVernay has garnered in the film and television industries, she did not pick up a camera until she was 32.[18] DuVernay's first interest was in journalism, a choice influenced by an internship with CBS News. She was assigned to help cover the O.J. Simpson murder trial.[15] DuVernay became disillusioned with journalism, however, and decided to move into public relations, working as a junior publicist at 20th Century Fox, Savoy Pictures, and a few other PR agencies. She opened her own public relations firm, The DuVernay Agency, also known as DVAPR, in 1999.[19]

Through DVAPR she provided marketing and PR services to the entertainment and lifestyle industry, working on campaigns for movies and television shows, such as Lumumba, Spy Kids, Shrek 2, The Terminal, Collateral, and Dreamgirls.[14][15][17][20][21][22][23]

Other ventures launched by DuVernay include Urban Beauty Collective, a promotional network that began in 2003 and had more than 10,000 African-American beauty salons and barbershops in 16 U.S. cities, expanded to 20 in 2008. They were mailed a free monthly Access Hollywood-style promotion program called UBC-TV,[24][25] the African-American blog hub Urban Thought Collective in 2008, Urban Eye, a two-minute long weekday celebrity and entertainment news show distributed to radio stations,[26] and HelloBeautiful, a digital platform for millennial women of color.[27]

Film

 
DuVernay at the 2010 AFI Film Festival

In 2005, over the Christmas holiday, DuVernay decided to take $6,000 and make her first film, a short called Saturday Night Life.[17][28] Based on her mother's experiences,[17] the 12-minute film was about an uplifting trip by a struggling single mother (Melissa De Sousa) and her three kids to a local Los Angeles discount grocery store. The film toured the festival circuit and was broadcast on February 6, 2007, as part of Showtime's Black Filmmaker Showcase.[citation needed]

DuVernay next explored making documentaries, because they can be done on a smaller budget than fiction films, and she could learn the trade while doing so.[29] In 2007, she directed the short Compton in C Minor, for which she "challenged herself to capture Compton in only two hours and present whatever she found." The following year, she made her feature directorial debut with the alternative hip hop documentary This Is the Life, a history of LA's Good Life Cafe's arts movement, in which she participated as part of the duo Figures of Speech. This is the Life won audience awards at the ReelWorld Film Festival in Toronto, the Los Angeles Pan-African Film Festival, the Hollywood Black Film Festival, and the Langston Hughes African American Film Festival in Seattle.[30]

I Will Follow

In 2011, DuVernay's first narrative feature film, I Will Follow, a drama starring Salli Richardson-Whitfield, was released theatrically. DuVernay's aunt Denise Sexton was the inspiration for the film.[citation needed] In an interview, DuVernay talked about how her real life experiences differed from the film: "I was a caregiver for my aunt, Denise Sexton, in the last year and a half of her life. She was diagnosed with stage four breast cancer. She was a fighter and was active in her treatment to the end, which was different than the character in the film who wants to fight in a different way."[30] The film cost DuVernay $50,000 and was made in 14 days.[21] Roger Ebert called it "one of the best films I've seen about coming to terms with the death of a loved one."[31][32] I Will Follow was an official selection of AFI Fest, Pan-African Film Festival, Urbanworld and Chicago International Film Festival.

It wasn't until after I Will Follow that DuVernay fully left her job in publicity. DuVernay stated: "I knew that as a Black woman in this industry, I wouldn't have people knocking down my door to give me money for my projects, so I was happy to make them on the side while working my day job."[18]

Middle of Nowhere

In the summer of 2011, DuVernay began production on her second narrative feature film, Middle of Nowhere, from a script she had written in 2003 but was unable to finance.[28] The film drew from her own experiences growing up in Compton and Inglewood.[33] The story focuses on the wife of an incarcerated man who is serving a 10-year sentence. She drops out of medical school in order to have more time and emotional energy to give to her incarcerated spouse. The film explores how the families of the incarcerated are also victims of the system and shows how commonly this burden of incarceration falls upon women of color. In an interview with the LA Times, DuVernay touched on her inspiration for the film, "The idea of looking at the victims of incarceration – the mothers, sisters and daughters -- really came out of knowing women who were going through it."[33]

The film had its world premiere on January 20 at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival, where it played in U.S. dramatic competition.[34] It garnered the U.S. Directing Award: Dramatic for DuVernay. She was the first African-American woman to win the prize. DuVernay also won the 2012 Independent Spirit John Cassavetes Award for her work on the film.[35]

DuVernay was commissioned by the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture to create a film about African-American history. Her August 28: A Day in the Life of a People explores six historical events that happened on the same date, August 28, in different years. It debuted at the museum's opening on September 24, 2016. The 22-minute film stars Lupita Nyong'o, Don Cheadle, Regina King, David Oyelowo, Angela Bassett, Michael Ealy, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, André Holland and Glynn Turman. Events depicted include William IV's royal assent to the UK Slavery Abolition Act in 1833, the 1955 lynching of 14-year-old Emmett Till in Mississippi, the release of Motown's first number-one song, "Please Mr. Postman" by The Marvellettes, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s 1963 I Have a Dream speech, the landfall of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and the night Senator Barack Obama accepted the Democratic nomination for president at the 2008 Democratic National Convention.[36]

Michael T. Martin says, "DuVernay is among the vanguard of a new generation of Black filmmakers who are the busily undeterred catalyst for what may very well be a Black film renaissance in the making."[30] He further speaks of DuVernay's mission and "call to action" which constitutes a strategy "to further and foster the Black cinematic image in an organized and consistent way, and to not have to defer and ask permission to traffic our films: to be self-determining."[30]

The DuVernay test is the racial equivalent of the Bechdel test (for women in movies), as first suggested by The Guardian writers Nadia and Leila Latif[37] and then by The New York Times film critic Manohla Dargis in January 2016, asking whether "blacks and other minorities have fully realized lives rather than serve as scenery in white stories."[38] It aims to point out the lack of people of color in Hollywood movies, through a measure of their importance to a particular movie or the lack of a gratuitous link to white actors.[39]

Selma

DuVernay directed Selma, a $20 million budget dramatic film, which is relatively low for a film of this caliber,[30] about the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., President Lyndon B. Johnson, and the 1965 Selma to Montgomery march for voting rights.[40] The movie, produced by Plan B Entertainment, was released on December 25, 2014, to critical acclaim.[41] DuVernay in an interview at Indiana University stated that Selma would be "the first major feature film in theaters that has anything to do with King's essential character"[30] making it a historical landmark in the history of biopics.

She made uncredited re-writes of most of the original screenplay by Paul Webb in order to emphasize King and the people of Selma as central figures.[42][43] In an October 2020 interview on The Carlos Watson Show, DuVernay claimed that she, not Webb, was the principal writer, saying that the biggest mistake of her career was allowing Paul Webb "to take credit for writing Selma when I wrote it.[44] In response to criticism by some historians and media sources who accused her of irresponsibly rewriting history to portray her own agenda, DuVernay said that the film is "not a documentary. I'm not a historian. I'm a storyteller".[45]

The film was nominated for Best Picture and Best Original Song, but not Best Director, at the 2014 Academy Awards. The lack of diversity among the Oscar nominations for 2014 was the subject of much press,[46] especially on Twitter.[47] This film was the only one directed by a person of color that was nominated for the 87th Academy Awards. The award for Best Original Song went to "Glory" from Selma.[48][49] DuVernay said that she had not expected to be nominated as director, so the omission did not really bother her, but she was disappointed that actor David Oyelowo, who portrayed King, was not nominated as Best Actor. She said that the obstacles to people of color being represented in the Academy Awards were systemic.[47]

After Selma, DuVernay was approached by executives to direct Marvel's first film about a superhero of color, Black Panther, but she passed. In an interview with Essence DuVernay provided insight on why she passed on the project: "I think I'll just say we had different ideas about what the story would be. Marvel has a certain way of doing things and I think they're fantastic and a lot of people love what they do. I loved that they reached out to me."[50] She also expressed her support for the project moving forward, "I love the character of Black Panther, the nation of Wakanda and all that that could be visually. I wish them well and will be first in line to see it."[50]

 
Duvernay with her Peabody Award for 13th at the 76th annual ceremony in 2017

13th

In July 2016, the New York Film Festival made the surprise announcement that 13th, a documentary directed by DuVernay, would open the festival. Until the announcement no mention of the film had been made by either DuVernay or Netflix, the film's distributor.[51] Centered on race in the United States criminal justice system, the film is titled after the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which outlawed slavery (except as punishment for a crime). DuVernay's documentary opens with the statement that 25 percent of the people in the world who are incarcerated are incarcerated in the U.S., and argues that slavery has been effectively perpetuated in the U.S. through disproportionate mass incarceration of people of color. The film features several prominent activists, politicians, and public figures, such as Bryan Stevenson, Angela Davis, Van Jones, Newt Gingrich, Cory Booker, Henry Louis Gates Jr., Michelle Alexander, and others, who discuss such issues as convict leasing, the war on drugs, and disproportionate arrests, convictions and sentencing of minorities.[52] It was also the first critically acclaimed documentary to highlight the tragic story of Kalief Browder.

It was released on October 7, 2016, on Netflix.[53] 13th garnered acclaim from film critics and has a 97% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 94 reviews. The critical consensus says: "13th strikes at the heart of America's tangled racial history, offering observations as incendiary as they are calmly controlled."[54] In a review from Awards Circuit, Angela Davis said "13th is probably the most important movie you'll ever see."[55] In 2017, the film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 89th Oscars;[56] DuVernay became the first Black woman to be nominated by the academy as a director in a feature category.[57] The film also won a Peabody Award in 2017[58] and a Columbia Journalism School duPont Award in 2018.[59]

A Wrinkle in Time

In 2010, it was announced that Disney carried the film rights to Madeleine L'Engle's 1962 novel A Wrinkle in Time[60] which follows a young girl traveling through space and time. Following the success of Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland, Disney announced the hiring of Jeff Stockwell to write the screenplay for Cary Granat and his new Bedrock Studios. Cary Granat had previously worked with Disney on the Chronicles of Narnia and Bridge to Terabithia films.[61] On August 5, 2014, Jennifer Lee was announced as the screenwriter, taking over from Stockwell, who had written the first draft.[62][63] On February 8, 2016, it was reported that DuVernay had been offered to direct the film, and she was confirmed as director later that same month.[64]

A Wrinkle in Time began filming in November 2016. DuVernay is the first African-American woman to direct a live-action film with a budget of over $100 million, and the second woman to do so after Patty Jenkins (who directed Wonder Woman).[65]

The film was released in March 2018 and brought in $33 million in its opening weekend, second at the box office behind Black Panther.[66] Following Disney's Q2 earnings report in May 2018, Yahoo! Finance deduced the film would lose the studio anywhere from $86–186 million.[67] Nonetheless, A Wrinkle in Time still made the list for the top 100 grossing movies of 2018,[68] making Ava DuVernay one of four female directors that made the list that year.[69]

Upon release, the film received mixed reviews, with critics "taking issue with the film's heavy use of CGI and numerous plot holes" while "celebrating its message of female empowerment and diversity."[70]

Television

In 2010, DuVernay directed three TV documentaries. The first, two-hour concert film TV One Night Only: Live from the Essence Music Festival, was a mix of live performances and behind-the-scenes vignettes. It aired August 28, 2010 on TV One and showcases the U.S.'s largest annual African-American entertainment gathering, the Essence Music Festival. In 2010 it was held July 2–4 in New Orleans.[71] Two days later, BET premiered its first original music documentary, My Mic Sounds Nice: A Truth About Women and Hip Hop, a 41-minute long history of female hip hop artists.[72]

On Thanksgiving 2010, TV One showed DuVernay's 44-minute documentary special Essence Presents: Faith Through the Storm, about two Black sisters who reclaimed their lives after personal devastation during Hurricane Katrina. "It was done for a client, for Essence. They wanted to talk about how faith helped them through, that was very important to them. So it is interspersed with gospel music, images of Katrina, their home and family."[73]

ESPN commissioned DuVernay to produce and direct Venus Vs., a documentary on Venus Williams's fight for equal prize money. This was to be included in their film series Nine for IX, which aired on July 2, 2013.[74]

DuVernay also directed the John Legend episode of the performance-and-interview series HelloBeautiful Interludes Live, which was shown September 14, 2013 on TV One as the series' broadcast premiere.[27]

She also directed the eighth episode of the third season of the political thriller television series Scandal. The episode, titled "Vermont is for Lovers, Too", premiered on November 21, 2013, on ABC.[75]

In 2015, DuVernay executive produced and directed the CBS civil rights crime drama pilot For Justice, starring Anika Noni Rose.[76] It was not picked up for distribution.[50]

That same year, DuVernay announced she would be creating and executive producing the drama series Queen Sugar, based on Natalie Baszile's novel.[77][78]

Queen Sugar premiered September 6, 2016 on Oprah Winfrey Network to critical acclaim.[79] DuVernay wrote four episodes and directed two. On August 1, 2016, the series was renewed for a second season ahead of its television premiere; it aired in a two-night premiere on June 20 and June 21, 2017.[80][81] The series was renewed for a third season on July 26, 2017.[82] In August 2018, OWN renewed the series for a fourth season, which premiered on June 12, 2019.[83][84]

On July 6, 2017, it was announced that Netflix had given the production When They See Us a series order consisting of four episodes. The series was created by DuVernay, who served as executive producer, co-writer, and director. Other executive producers credited, include Jeff Skoll, Jonathan King, Oprah Winfrey, Jane Rosenthal and Berry Welsh. Production companies involved with the series consisted of Participant Media, Harpo Films, and Tribeca Productions.[85] The series premiered on Netflix on May 31, 2019. Upon its release, the miniseries received universal acclaim.[86][87][88][89][90][91][92][93][94]

On June 25, 2019, Netflix announced that the miniseries had been streamed by over 23 million viewers within its first month of release.[95] It received a record number of 16 nominations for Emmy Awards for writing, directing, and acting for stars and supporting actors.

Advertising and music videos

In 2013, DuVernay partnered with Miu Miu as part of their Women's Tales film series.[96] Her short film The Door starred actress Gabrielle Union and reunited DuVernay with her Middle of Nowhere star Emayatzy Corinealdi. The film premiered online in February 2013[97] and was presented at the Venice Days sidebar of the 70th Venice International Film Festival in August.[98]

Also in August 2013, DuVernay released, through Vimeo,[99] a second branded short film entitled Say Yes.[100] The film was sponsored by cosmetic brand Fashion Fair and starred Kali Hawk and Lance Gross with Julie Dash, Victoria Mahoney, Lorraine Toussaint and Issa Rae appearing as extras.

In 2015, Apple Music and their ad agency Translation hired DuVernay to helm a series of three commercials starring Mary J. Blige, Taraji P. Henson and Kerry Washington. The first ad, Chapter 1, premiered during Fox's Emmy broadcast on September 20, 2015.[101] Chapter 2 and Chapter 3 debuted in November 2015 and February 2016, respectively.[102]

Her music video for the Jay-Z ft. Beyoncé song "Family Feud" premiered December 29, 2017 on Tidal.[103]

Film distribution and production

In 2010 DuVernay founded African-American Film Festival Releasing Movement (AFFRM), her own company to distribute films made by or focusing on Black people. DuVernay refers to AFFRM as "not so much a business, but a call to action."[104] Although she sees building strong business foundations for films is a priority, DuVernay has said that she stresses that the driving force of the organization is activism.[30] In 2015 the company rebranded itself under the name ARRAY, promising a new focus on women filmmakers as well.

DuVernay also owns Forward Movement, a film and television production company.[30]

Future projects

In 2013, she announced development on a narrative feature film entitled Part of the Sky and set in Compton.[105]

In 2015, it was announced that DuVernay would be writing, producing, and directing a fictional account which will focus on the "social and environmental" aspects of Hurricane Katrina while including a love story and a murder mystery.[106] David Oyelowo was said to be part of the project.[107]

In 2018, it was announced that DuVernay would be directing a New Gods film for the DC Extended Universe.[108] On May 29, 2019, DuVernay announced that she and Tom King would co-write the film.[109] The movie was no longer moving forward by April 2021.[110]

On October 29, 2018, it was announced that DuVernay would be working with the estate of Prince to direct a biopic covering his life for Netflix.[111] However, in August 2019, DuVernay quit as director due to "creative differences."[112]

On June 29, 2020, Netflix announced a six-episode series, created by Ava DuVernay and Colin Kaepernick, titled Colin in Black & White, centering on Kaepernick's youth and various events in his life that has led him to be the activist he is today.[113]

On February 11, 2020, news reports speculated about Ava DuVernay possibly co-producing and directing a Nipsey Hussle documentary for Netflix.[114]

In October 2020, her next film, Caste, an adaptation of Isabel Wilkerson's book, was officially announced for Netflix.[115]

Other work

In September 2013, DuVernay started a podcast series called The Call-In,[116] a series of phone conversations recorded by AFFRM of Black filmmakers of feature narrative and documentary work. DuVernay talks about her goals with The Call-In: "For people of color and women filmmakers, so often the questions we get asked are about being a woman or a person of color. So The Call-In was a space where we could just talk about craft."[117]

On October 27, 2013, DuVernay gave one of the Executive Keynote addresses for Film Independent, a non-profit organization that produces the Film Independent Spirit Awards and the Los Angeles Film Festival, at their 2013 Film Independent Form, a three-day event. She was one of two keynote speakers along with the chief executive officer of Netflix, Ted Sarandos.[118]

DuVernay, in a keynote address[119] at the 2015 SXSW Film Festival,[120][121] shared that she was the seventh person asked to direct Selma[122] and described her experience at the 2015 Oscars, while being an honor to attend, was just "a room in L.A."[123]

In February 2018 it was announced that DuVernay, along with producer Dan Lin and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, had launched the Evolve Entertainment Fund. The fund's mission is to promote inclusion and provide an opportunity for under-served communities to pursue a dream in the entertainment industry.[124]

Since May 2019, DuVernay has cohosted The Essentials, a weekly film series on Turner Classic Movies, with Ben Mankiewicz. DuVernay has appeared in wraparounds each Saturday night on the channel, discussing a wide range of films, including Marty, Ashes and Embers, Harlan County, USA and La Pointe Courte.[125]

Style and themes

DuVernay has two primary areas of interest: the first, exploring the intricacies of the Black American family, particularly "Black women's agency and subjectivity"[30] within the family and within a racist, patriarchal society. The second, is exploring the injustices that have affected, and have continued to affect, Black families and communities throughout history.

A lot of her filmography works within both of these areas of interest simultaneously. For example, Selma, a film about an important historical march and a film about Martin Luther King Jr., makes a huge effort to center and explore the important female activists that played a role in the event: "Selma does afford viewers with a variegated window into the lives of a few of the Black women that participated...Each woman is shown within the film to propel the Selma campaign--sometimes in the background, other times in the foreground, yet always in practically indispensable ways."[126] DuVernay has made it a focus of her activist filmmaking to center Black women in her work.

One of the social issues that DuVernay repeatedly returns to in her work is mass incarceration and the effects of incarceration on African American communities. This is the main topic of her Netflix documentary, 13th, which finds the roots of mass incarceration in the legal end of slavery. The film moves chronologically through history, keeping "a running total of the rapidly rising incarceration numbers since the 1970s; it works to contextualize these rising digits with a grand narrative that weaves together the racist, political, and financial motivations that paved the nation's way to mass incarceration."[127] DuVernay's television work addresses this as well: When They See Us depicts the ways in which the U.S. justice system targets Black people and other people of color, and in her show Queen Sugar one of the primary characters "is a convicted felon whose prison past makes it difficult for him to find a job and puts an ongoing strain on his relationship with his family."[128] This is an issue that DuVernay returns to again and again in her work.

Middle of Nowhere, encapsulates both of DuVernay's areas of interest: it puts a Black woman at the center of its narrative and depicts the ways in which incarceration affects her life and the life of her family. This fictional story shows the ways in which incarceration infiltrates the lives of even those who are not in prison through close association with someone who is incarcerated. This issue is particularly relevant to Black women as a vast majority of America's prisoners are Black and male: "burdens of carceral care fall most heavily on those intimately tied to the incarcerated as partners, spouses, parents, and children--demographics that are often marginalized."[129]

The cinematography and staging of the film emphasizes the protagonist, Ruby's, own entrapment via association to incarceration. Ruby puts her life on hold to provide emotional, legal, and financial support for her incarcerated husband, Derek. In Marquita Smith's analysis of the film, she explains that "carceral logic dictates that those who desire to maintain contact with incarcerated spouses...must endure an often invisible form of punishment...which criminalizes caring for the incarcerated."[129] When Ruby visits Derek, the camera takes special notice of the ways in which her own freedoms and bodily autonomy are restricted within the prison: "the camera follows the various examination acts, lingering on Ruby's body parts as they are inspected."[129] Lastly, there is a visual parallel drawn between the women who are visiting and the inmates. The women are often shown in lines and shot from behind fences and bars. They are herded into the visitation room in a way that parallels the male prisoners. DuVernay frames Ruby in a larger context of incarceration and its peripheral effects by showing her among a community of women whose situations parallel Ruby's. We see Ruby riding the bus to the prison with many other women, most of whom are Black, waiting in line with these women, and eventually being shuffled into the meeting area with these women. In the scene where Ruby visits Derek on their anniversary after hearing that he is up for parole, the camera pans over many other couples who sit in the visiting room with them- "by panning to show the various families in the visitation room before focusing on the protagonist, the film enables viewers to see beyond Ruby's individual happiness and recognize the importance of intimacy for the collective."[129]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Director Writer Producer Ref.
2010 I Will Follow Yes Yes Yes [130]
2012 Middle of Nowhere Yes Yes Yes [131]
2014 Selma Yes No No [132]
2018 A Wrinkle in Time Yes No No [133]

Executive producer

Short films

Year Title Director Writer Producer Ref.
2006 Saturday Night Life Yes Yes No
2013 The Door Yes Yes Yes
Say Yes Yes Yes No [135]

Documentary films

Year Title Director Writer Producer Notes
2007 Compton in C Minor Yes No Yes Short
2008 This is the Life Yes Yes Yes
2016 August 28: A Day in the Life of a People Yes Yes Yes Short
13th Yes Yes Yes

Television

Year Title Director Writer Executive
Producer
Creator Notes
2013 Scandal Yes No No No Episode "Vermont is for Lovers, Too"
2015 For Justice Yes No Yes No Unaired TV pilot
2016–present Queen Sugar Yes Yes Yes Yes Writer (4 episodes), Director (2 episodes)
2019 When They See Us Yes Yes Yes Yes Director (4 episodes)
The Red Line No No Yes No
2020–present Cherish the Day No Yes Yes Yes
2021 Colin in Black & White Yes Yes Yes Yes Episode "Cornrows"
Home Sweet Home No No Yes Yes
2022 Naomi No Yes Yes Yes
DMZ Yes No Yes No Episode "Good Luck"

Documentary series

Year Title Director Writer Producer
2010 TV One Night Only: Live from the Essence Music Festival Yes Yes No
My Mic Sounds Nice: A Truth About Women and Hip Hop Yes No executive
Essence Presents: Faith Through the Storm Yes Yes Yes
2013 Venus Vs. Yes Yes No
HelloBeautiful Interludes Live: John Legend Yes No No

Commercials

Year Title Director Writer Producer Notes
2015–2016 Chapter 1, Chapter 2, Chapter 3 Yes No No Apple Music

Music video

Year Title Director Writer Producer Ref.
2017 "Family Feud," Jay-Z ft. Beyoncé Yes Yes Yes [103]

Awards, nominations, honors


Year Award Category Work Result
2011 African-American Film Critics Best Screenplay I Will Follow Won
2012 Black Reel Awards Best Screenplay Nominated
Best Director Nominated
NAACP Image Awards Outstanding Independent Motion Picture Nominated
Sundance Film Festival Directing Award Middle of Nowhere Won
Grand Jury Prize Nominated
Film Independent Spirit Awards Independent Spirit John Cassavetes Award Won
Humanitas Prize Sundance Film Nominated
African-American Film Critics Best Independent Film Won
Best Screenplay Won
Best Picture Nominated
Alliance of Women Film Journalists Best Woman Screenwriter Nominated
Women Film Critics Circle Josephine Baker Award Won
2013 Black Reel Awards Best Director Won
Best Screenplay Won
Best Film Nominated
Gotham Awards Best Feature Nominated
2014 Online Film Critics Society Award Best Director Selma Nominated
Black Film Critics Circle Best Director Won[148]
Central Ohio Film Critics Association Best Director Won
Breakthrough Film Artist Won
Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Award Best Director Nominated
Georgia Film Critics Association Best Director Nominated
Breakthrough Award Nominated
Golden Globe Award Best Director Nominated
Alliance of Women Film Journalists Best Director Nominated
Best Woman Director Won
Female Icon of the Year Won
Critics' Choice Movie Awards Best Director Nominated
Satellite Awards Best Director Nominated
Film Independent Spirit Awards Best Director Nominated
African-American Film Critics Association Best Director Won
Black Reel Awards Black Reel Award for Best Director Won
NAACP Image Award Outstanding Director Nominated
Online Film Critics Society Best Director Nominated
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards Best Director Nominated
2016 Grammy Awards Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media Nominated
Alliance of Women Film Journalists Best Woman Director 13th Won
Outstanding Achievement by a Woman in the Film Industry Won
Black Reel Awards Best Film Nominated
Best Feature Documentary Won
Critics' Choice Documentary Awards Best Director (TV/Streaming) Won
Women Film Critics Circle Best Woman Storyteller (Screenwriting Award) Won
Courage in Filmmaking Won
2017 Academy Award Best Documentary Feature Nominated
Primetime Emmy Award Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special Won
Outstanding Directing for Nonfiction Programming Nominated
Outstanding Writing for Nonfiction Programming Won
2018 BET Awards Video Director of the Year "Family Feud" Won[149]
2019 TCA Awards Program of the Year When They See Us Nominated
Outstanding Achievement in Movies, Miniseries and Specials Nominated
Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Limited Series Nominated
Outstanding Directing for a Limited Series, Movie, or Dramatic Special Nominated
Outstanding Writing for a Limited Series, Movie, or Dramatic Special Nominated
2020 Directors Guild of America Award Outstanding Directing – Miniseries or TV Film Nominated
Producers Guild of America Award Best Limited Series Television Nominated

References

  1. ^ Mekado, Murphy (January 22, 2015). "Anatomy of a Scene | 'Selma'". The New York Times. Retrieved June 28, 2020.
  2. ^ Demby, Gene (January 30, 2012). "Sundance 2012: Ava DuVernay Becomes First Black Woman To Win Best Director Prize For Middle Of Nowhere". The Huffington Post.
  3. ^ Farabee, Mindy (December 20, 2012). "Ava DuVernay no longer in 'Middle of Nowhere'". Los Angeles Times.
  4. ^ Ford, Rebecca (December 11, 2014). "Golden Globes: 'Selma's' Ava DuVernay Becomes First Black Woman to Receive Director Nomination". The Hollywood Reporter.
  5. ^ Suskind, Alex (December 17, 2014). "How Ava DuVernay struck a chord with Selma". The Guardian.
  6. ^ "The 100 Most Influential People in the World". Time. Retrieved 2020-09-23.
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External links

  • Official website


duvernay, marie, duvernay, born, august, 1972, american, filmmaker, former, film, publicist, recipient, primetime, emmy, award, naacp, image, award, bafta, film, award, bafta, award, well, nominee, academy, award, golden, globe, duvernay, 2018bornava, marie, d. Ava Marie DuVernay ˌ dj uː v er ˈ n eɪ 1 born August 24 1972 is an American filmmaker and former film publicist She is a recipient of a Primetime Emmy Award a NAACP Image Award a BAFTA Film Award and a BAFTA TV Award as well as a nominee of an Academy Award and Golden Globe Ava DuVernayDuVernay in 2018BornAva Marie DuVernay 1972 08 24 August 24 1972 age 50 Long Beach California U S Alma materUniversity of California Los Angeles BA OccupationsFilmmakerfilm publicistWebsiteAvaDuVernay comAfter making her directoral debut I Will Follow 2010 DuVernay won the directing award in the U S dramatic competition at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival for her second feature film Middle of Nowhere 2 becoming the first black woman to win the award 3 For her work on Selma 2014 a biopic about Martin Luther King Jr DuVernay became the first African American woman to be nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Director and the Academy Award for Best Picture 4 5 Her other film credits include the Academy Award nominated Netflix documentary 13th 2016 and the Disney fantasy film A Wrinkle in Time 2018 the latter making her the first African American woman to direct a film with a budget of 100 million Her television credits include the OWN drama series Queen Sugar 2016 and two Netflix drama limited series When They See Us 2019 based on the 1989 Central Park jogger case and Colin in Black amp White 2021 based on the teenage years of NFL player Colin Kaepernick In 2017 DuVernay was included on the annual Time 100 list of the most influential people in the world 6 In 2020 she was elected to the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences board of governors as part of the directors branch 7 8 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Film 2 1 1 I Will Follow 2 1 2 Middle of Nowhere 2 1 3 Selma 2 1 4 13th 2 1 5 A Wrinkle in Time 2 2 Television 2 3 Advertising and music videos 2 4 Film distribution and production 2 5 Future projects 2 6 Other work 3 Style and themes 4 Filmography 4 1 Film 4 2 Documentary films 4 3 Television 4 4 Commercials 4 5 Music video 5 Awards nominations honors 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and education EditAva Marie DuVernay was born on August 24 1972 in Long Beach California She was raised by her mother Darlene nee Sexton an educator and her stepfather Murray Maye 9 The surname of her biological father Joseph Marcel DuVernay III originates with Louisiana Creole ancestry 10 She grew up in Lynwood California She has four siblings During her summer vacations she would travel to the childhood home of her stepfather which was not far from Selma Alabama 11 DuVernay said that these summers influenced the making of Selma as her father had witnessed the 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches 12 In 1990 DuVernay graduated from Saint Joseph High School in Lakewood 13 At the University of California Los Angeles UCLA she was a double BA major in English literature and African American studies Ava is an honorary member of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority 14 15 16 17 Career EditDespite the acclaim DuVernay has garnered in the film and television industries she did not pick up a camera until she was 32 18 DuVernay s first interest was in journalism a choice influenced by an internship with CBS News She was assigned to help cover the O J Simpson murder trial 15 DuVernay became disillusioned with journalism however and decided to move into public relations working as a junior publicist at 20th Century Fox Savoy Pictures and a few other PR agencies She opened her own public relations firm The DuVernay Agency also known as DVAPR in 1999 19 Through DVAPR she provided marketing and PR services to the entertainment and lifestyle industry working on campaigns for movies and television shows such as Lumumba Spy Kids Shrek 2 The Terminal Collateral and Dreamgirls 14 15 17 20 21 22 23 Other ventures launched by DuVernay include Urban Beauty Collective a promotional network that began in 2003 and had more than 10 000 African American beauty salons and barbershops in 16 U S cities expanded to 20 in 2008 They were mailed a free monthly Access Hollywood style promotion program called UBC TV 24 25 the African American blog hub Urban Thought Collective in 2008 Urban Eye a two minute long weekday celebrity and entertainment news show distributed to radio stations 26 and HelloBeautiful a digital platform for millennial women of color 27 Film Edit DuVernay at the 2010 AFI Film Festival In 2005 over the Christmas holiday DuVernay decided to take 6 000 and make her first film a short called Saturday Night Life 17 28 Based on her mother s experiences 17 the 12 minute film was about an uplifting trip by a struggling single mother Melissa De Sousa and her three kids to a local Los Angeles discount grocery store The film toured the festival circuit and was broadcast on February 6 2007 as part of Showtime s Black Filmmaker Showcase citation needed DuVernay next explored making documentaries because they can be done on a smaller budget than fiction films and she could learn the trade while doing so 29 In 2007 she directed the short Compton in C Minor for which she challenged herself to capture Compton in only two hours and present whatever she found The following year she made her feature directorial debut with the alternative hip hop documentary This Is the Life a history of LA s Good Life Cafe s arts movement in which she participated as part of the duo Figures of Speech This is the Life won audience awards at the ReelWorld Film Festival in Toronto the Los Angeles Pan African Film Festival the Hollywood Black Film Festival and the Langston Hughes African American Film Festival in Seattle 30 I Will Follow Edit Main article I Will Follow film In 2011 DuVernay s first narrative feature film I Will Follow a drama starring Salli Richardson Whitfield was released theatrically DuVernay s aunt Denise Sexton was the inspiration for the film citation needed In an interview DuVernay talked about how her real life experiences differed from the film I was a caregiver for my aunt Denise Sexton in the last year and a half of her life She was diagnosed with stage four breast cancer She was a fighter and was active in her treatment to the end which was different than the character in the film who wants to fight in a different way 30 The film cost DuVernay 50 000 and was made in 14 days 21 Roger Ebert called it one of the best films I ve seen about coming to terms with the death of a loved one 31 32 I Will Follow was an official selection of AFI Fest Pan African Film Festival Urbanworld and Chicago International Film Festival It wasn t until after I Will Follow that DuVernay fully left her job in publicity DuVernay stated I knew that as a Black woman in this industry I wouldn t have people knocking down my door to give me money for my projects so I was happy to make them on the side while working my day job 18 Middle of Nowhere Edit Main article Middle of Nowhere 2012 film In the summer of 2011 DuVernay began production on her second narrative feature film Middle of Nowhere from a script she had written in 2003 but was unable to finance 28 The film drew from her own experiences growing up in Compton and Inglewood 33 The story focuses on the wife of an incarcerated man who is serving a 10 year sentence She drops out of medical school in order to have more time and emotional energy to give to her incarcerated spouse The film explores how the families of the incarcerated are also victims of the system and shows how commonly this burden of incarceration falls upon women of color In an interview with the LA Times DuVernay touched on her inspiration for the film The idea of looking at the victims of incarceration the mothers sisters and daughters really came out of knowing women who were going through it 33 The film had its world premiere on January 20 at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival where it played in U S dramatic competition 34 It garnered the U S Directing Award Dramatic for DuVernay She was the first African American woman to win the prize DuVernay also won the 2012 Independent Spirit John Cassavetes Award for her work on the film 35 DuVernay was commissioned by the Smithsonian s National Museum of African American History and Culture to create a film about African American history Her August 28 A Day in the Life of a People explores six historical events that happened on the same date August 28 in different years It debuted at the museum s opening on September 24 2016 The 22 minute film stars Lupita Nyong o Don Cheadle Regina King David Oyelowo Angela Bassett Michael Ealy Gugu Mbatha Raw Andre Holland and Glynn Turman Events depicted include William IV s royal assent to the UK Slavery Abolition Act in 1833 the 1955 lynching of 14 year old Emmett Till in Mississippi the release of Motown s first number one song Please Mr Postman by The Marvellettes Rev Martin Luther King Jr s 1963 I Have a Dream speech the landfall of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and the night Senator Barack Obama accepted the Democratic nomination for president at the 2008 Democratic National Convention 36 Michael T Martin says DuVernay is among the vanguard of a new generation of Black filmmakers who are the busily undeterred catalyst for what may very well be a Black film renaissance in the making 30 He further speaks of DuVernay s mission and call to action which constitutes a strategy to further and foster the Black cinematic image in an organized and consistent way and to not have to defer and ask permission to traffic our films to be self determining 30 The DuVernay test is the racial equivalent of the Bechdel test for women in movies as first suggested by The Guardian writers Nadia and Leila Latif 37 and then by The New York Times film critic Manohla Dargis in January 2016 asking whether blacks and other minorities have fully realized lives rather than serve as scenery in white stories 38 It aims to point out the lack of people of color in Hollywood movies through a measure of their importance to a particular movie or the lack of a gratuitous link to white actors 39 Selma Edit Main article Selma film DuVernay directed Selma a 20 million budget dramatic film which is relatively low for a film of this caliber 30 about the Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr President Lyndon B Johnson and the 1965 Selma to Montgomery march for voting rights 40 The movie produced by Plan B Entertainment was released on December 25 2014 to critical acclaim 41 DuVernay in an interview at Indiana University stated that Selma would be the first major feature film in theaters that has anything to do with King s essential character 30 making it a historical landmark in the history of biopics She made uncredited re writes of most of the original screenplay by Paul Webb in order to emphasize King and the people of Selma as central figures 42 43 In an October 2020 interview on The Carlos Watson Show DuVernay claimed that she not Webb was the principal writer saying that the biggest mistake of her career was allowing Paul Webb to take credit for writing Selma when I wrote it 44 In response to criticism by some historians and media sources who accused her of irresponsibly rewriting history to portray her own agenda DuVernay said that the film is not a documentary I m not a historian I m a storyteller 45 The film was nominated for Best Picture and Best Original Song but not Best Director at the 2014 Academy Awards The lack of diversity among the Oscar nominations for 2014 was the subject of much press 46 especially on Twitter 47 This film was the only one directed by a person of color that was nominated for the 87th Academy Awards The award for Best Original Song went to Glory from Selma 48 49 DuVernay said that she had not expected to be nominated as director so the omission did not really bother her but she was disappointed that actor David Oyelowo who portrayed King was not nominated as Best Actor She said that the obstacles to people of color being represented in the Academy Awards were systemic 47 After Selma DuVernay was approached by executives to direct Marvel s first film about a superhero of color Black Panther but she passed In an interview with Essence DuVernay provided insight on why she passed on the project I think I ll just say we had different ideas about what the story would be Marvel has a certain way of doing things and I think they re fantastic and a lot of people love what they do I loved that they reached out to me 50 She also expressed her support for the project moving forward I love the character of Black Panther the nation of Wakanda and all that that could be visually I wish them well and will be first in line to see it 50 Duvernay with her Peabody Award for 13th at the 76th annual ceremony in 2017 13th Edit Main article 13th film In July 2016 the New York Film Festival made the surprise announcement that 13th a documentary directed by DuVernay would open the festival Until the announcement no mention of the film had been made by either DuVernay or Netflix the film s distributor 51 Centered on race in the United States criminal justice system the film is titled after the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution which outlawed slavery except as punishment for a crime DuVernay s documentary opens with the statement that 25 percent of the people in the world who are incarcerated are incarcerated in the U S and argues that slavery has been effectively perpetuated in the U S through disproportionate mass incarceration of people of color The film features several prominent activists politicians and public figures such as Bryan Stevenson Angela Davis Van Jones Newt Gingrich Cory Booker Henry Louis Gates Jr Michelle Alexander and others who discuss such issues as convict leasing the war on drugs and disproportionate arrests convictions and sentencing of minorities 52 It was also the first critically acclaimed documentary to highlight the tragic story of Kalief Browder It was released on October 7 2016 on Netflix 53 13th garnered acclaim from film critics and has a 97 rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 94 reviews The critical consensus says 13th strikes at the heart of America s tangled racial history offering observations as incendiary as they are calmly controlled 54 In a review from Awards Circuit Angela Davis said 13th is probably the most important movie you ll ever see 55 In 2017 the film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 89th Oscars 56 DuVernay became the first Black woman to be nominated by the academy as a director in a feature category 57 The film also won a Peabody Award in 2017 58 and a Columbia Journalism School duPont Award in 2018 59 A Wrinkle in Time Edit Main article A Wrinkle in Time 2018 film In 2010 it was announced that Disney carried the film rights to Madeleine L Engle s 1962 novel A Wrinkle in Time 60 which follows a young girl traveling through space and time Following the success of Tim Burton s Alice in Wonderland Disney announced the hiring of Jeff Stockwell to write the screenplay for Cary Granat and his new Bedrock Studios Cary Granat had previously worked with Disney on the Chronicles of Narnia and Bridge to Terabithia films 61 On August 5 2014 Jennifer Lee was announced as the screenwriter taking over from Stockwell who had written the first draft 62 63 On February 8 2016 it was reported that DuVernay had been offered to direct the film and she was confirmed as director later that same month 64 A Wrinkle in Time began filming in November 2016 DuVernay is the first African American woman to direct a live action film with a budget of over 100 million and the second woman to do so after Patty Jenkins who directed Wonder Woman 65 The film was released in March 2018 and brought in 33 million in its opening weekend second at the box office behind Black Panther 66 Following Disney s Q2 earnings report in May 2018 Yahoo Finance deduced the film would lose the studio anywhere from 86 186 million 67 Nonetheless A Wrinkle in Time still made the list for the top 100 grossing movies of 2018 68 making Ava DuVernay one of four female directors that made the list that year 69 Upon release the film received mixed reviews with critics taking issue with the film s heavy use of CGI and numerous plot holes while celebrating its message of female empowerment and diversity 70 Television Edit In 2010 DuVernay directed three TV documentaries The first two hour concert film TV One Night Only Live from the Essence Music Festival was a mix of live performances and behind the scenes vignettes It aired August 28 2010 on TV One and showcases the U S s largest annual African American entertainment gathering the Essence Music Festival In 2010 it was held July 2 4 in New Orleans 71 Two days later BET premiered its first original music documentary My Mic Sounds Nice A Truth About Women and Hip Hop a 41 minute long history of female hip hop artists 72 On Thanksgiving 2010 TV One showed DuVernay s 44 minute documentary special Essence Presents Faith Through the Storm about two Black sisters who reclaimed their lives after personal devastation during Hurricane Katrina It was done for a client for Essence They wanted to talk about how faith helped them through that was very important to them So it is interspersed with gospel music images of Katrina their home and family 73 ESPN commissioned DuVernay to produce and direct Venus Vs a documentary on Venus Williams s fight for equal prize money This was to be included in their film series Nine for IX which aired on July 2 2013 74 DuVernay also directed the John Legend episode of the performance and interview series HelloBeautiful Interludes Live which was shown September 14 2013 on TV One as the series broadcast premiere 27 She also directed the eighth episode of the third season of the political thriller television series Scandal The episode titled Vermont is for Lovers Too premiered on November 21 2013 on ABC 75 In 2015 DuVernay executive produced and directed the CBS civil rights crime drama pilot For Justice starring Anika Noni Rose 76 It was not picked up for distribution 50 That same year DuVernay announced she would be creating and executive producing the drama series Queen Sugar based on Natalie Baszile s novel 77 78 Queen Sugar premiered September 6 2016 on Oprah Winfrey Network to critical acclaim 79 DuVernay wrote four episodes and directed two On August 1 2016 the series was renewed for a second season ahead of its television premiere it aired in a two night premiere on June 20 and June 21 2017 80 81 The series was renewed for a third season on July 26 2017 82 In August 2018 OWN renewed the series for a fourth season which premiered on June 12 2019 83 84 On July 6 2017 it was announced that Netflix had given the production When They See Us a series order consisting of four episodes The series was created by DuVernay who served as executive producer co writer and director Other executive producers credited include Jeff Skoll Jonathan King Oprah Winfrey Jane Rosenthal and Berry Welsh Production companies involved with the series consisted of Participant Media Harpo Films and Tribeca Productions 85 The series premiered on Netflix on May 31 2019 Upon its release the miniseries received universal acclaim 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 On June 25 2019 Netflix announced that the miniseries had been streamed by over 23 million viewers within its first month of release 95 It received a record number of 16 nominations for Emmy Awards for writing directing and acting for stars and supporting actors Advertising and music videos Edit In 2013 DuVernay partnered with Miu Miu as part of their Women s Tales film series 96 Her short film The Door starred actress Gabrielle Union and reunited DuVernay with her Middle of Nowhere star Emayatzy Corinealdi The film premiered online in February 2013 97 and was presented at the Venice Days sidebar of the 70th Venice International Film Festival in August 98 Also in August 2013 DuVernay released through Vimeo 99 a second branded short film entitled Say Yes 100 The film was sponsored by cosmetic brand Fashion Fair and starred Kali Hawk and Lance Gross with Julie Dash Victoria Mahoney Lorraine Toussaint and Issa Rae appearing as extras In 2015 Apple Music and their ad agency Translation hired DuVernay to helm a series of three commercials starring Mary J Blige Taraji P Henson and Kerry Washington The first ad Chapter 1 premiered during Fox s Emmy broadcast on September 20 2015 101 Chapter 2 and Chapter 3 debuted in November 2015 and February 2016 respectively 102 Her music video for the Jay Z ft Beyonce song Family Feud premiered December 29 2017 on Tidal 103 Film distribution and production Edit Main article ARRAY In 2010 DuVernay founded African American Film Festival Releasing Movement AFFRM her own company to distribute films made by or focusing on Black people DuVernay refers to AFFRM as not so much a business but a call to action 104 Although she sees building strong business foundations for films is a priority DuVernay has said that she stresses that the driving force of the organization is activism 30 In 2015 the company rebranded itself under the name ARRAY promising a new focus on women filmmakers as well DuVernay also owns Forward Movement a film and television production company 30 Future projects Edit In 2013 she announced development on a narrative feature film entitled Part of the Sky and set in Compton 105 In 2015 it was announced that DuVernay would be writing producing and directing a fictional account which will focus on the social and environmental aspects of Hurricane Katrina while including a love story and a murder mystery 106 David Oyelowo was said to be part of the project 107 In 2018 it was announced that DuVernay would be directing a New Gods film for the DC Extended Universe 108 On May 29 2019 DuVernay announced that she and Tom King would co write the film 109 The movie was no longer moving forward by April 2021 110 On October 29 2018 it was announced that DuVernay would be working with the estate of Prince to direct a biopic covering his life for Netflix 111 However in August 2019 DuVernay quit as director due to creative differences 112 On June 29 2020 Netflix announced a six episode series created by Ava DuVernay and Colin Kaepernick titled Colin in Black amp White centering on Kaepernick s youth and various events in his life that has led him to be the activist he is today 113 On February 11 2020 news reports speculated about Ava DuVernay possibly co producing and directing a Nipsey Hussle documentary for Netflix 114 In October 2020 her next film Caste an adaptation of Isabel Wilkerson s book was officially announced for Netflix 115 Other work Edit In September 2013 DuVernay started a podcast series called The Call In 116 a series of phone conversations recorded by AFFRM of Black filmmakers of feature narrative and documentary work DuVernay talks about her goals with The Call In For people of color and women filmmakers so often the questions we get asked are about being a woman or a person of color So The Call In was a space where we could just talk about craft 117 On October 27 2013 DuVernay gave one of the Executive Keynote addresses for Film Independent a non profit organization that produces the Film Independent Spirit Awards and the Los Angeles Film Festival at their 2013 Film Independent Form a three day event She was one of two keynote speakers along with the chief executive officer of Netflix Ted Sarandos 118 DuVernay in a keynote address 119 at the 2015 SXSW Film Festival 120 121 shared that she was the seventh person asked to direct Selma 122 and described her experience at the 2015 Oscars while being an honor to attend was just a room in L A 123 In February 2018 it was announced that DuVernay along with producer Dan Lin and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti had launched the Evolve Entertainment Fund The fund s mission is to promote inclusion and provide an opportunity for under served communities to pursue a dream in the entertainment industry 124 Since May 2019 DuVernay has cohosted The Essentials a weekly film series on Turner Classic Movies with Ben Mankiewicz DuVernay has appeared in wraparounds each Saturday night on the channel discussing a wide range of films including Marty Ashes and Embers Harlan County USA and La Pointe Courte 125 Style and themes EditDuVernay has two primary areas of interest the first exploring the intricacies of the Black American family particularly Black women s agency and subjectivity 30 within the family and within a racist patriarchal society The second is exploring the injustices that have affected and have continued to affect Black families and communities throughout history A lot of her filmography works within both of these areas of interest simultaneously For example Selma a film about an important historical march and a film about Martin Luther King Jr makes a huge effort to center and explore the important female activists that played a role in the event Selma does afford viewers with a variegated window into the lives of a few of the Black women that participated Each woman is shown within the film to propel the Selma campaign sometimes in the background other times in the foreground yet always in practically indispensable ways 126 DuVernay has made it a focus of her activist filmmaking to center Black women in her work One of the social issues that DuVernay repeatedly returns to in her work is mass incarceration and the effects of incarceration on African American communities This is the main topic of her Netflix documentary 13th which finds the roots of mass incarceration in the legal end of slavery The film moves chronologically through history keeping a running total of the rapidly rising incarceration numbers since the 1970s it works to contextualize these rising digits with a grand narrative that weaves together the racist political and financial motivations that paved the nation s way to mass incarceration 127 DuVernay s television work addresses this as well When They See Us depicts the ways in which the U S justice system targets Black people and other people of color and in her show Queen Sugar one of the primary characters is a convicted felon whose prison past makes it difficult for him to find a job and puts an ongoing strain on his relationship with his family 128 This is an issue that DuVernay returns to again and again in her work Middle of Nowhere encapsulates both of DuVernay s areas of interest it puts a Black woman at the center of its narrative and depicts the ways in which incarceration affects her life and the life of her family This fictional story shows the ways in which incarceration infiltrates the lives of even those who are not in prison through close association with someone who is incarcerated This issue is particularly relevant to Black women as a vast majority of America s prisoners are Black and male burdens of carceral care fall most heavily on those intimately tied to the incarcerated as partners spouses parents and children demographics that are often marginalized 129 The cinematography and staging of the film emphasizes the protagonist Ruby s own entrapment via association to incarceration Ruby puts her life on hold to provide emotional legal and financial support for her incarcerated husband Derek In Marquita Smith s analysis of the film she explains that carceral logic dictates that those who desire to maintain contact with incarcerated spouses must endure an often invisible form of punishment which criminalizes caring for the incarcerated 129 When Ruby visits Derek the camera takes special notice of the ways in which her own freedoms and bodily autonomy are restricted within the prison the camera follows the various examination acts lingering on Ruby s body parts as they are inspected 129 Lastly there is a visual parallel drawn between the women who are visiting and the inmates The women are often shown in lines and shot from behind fences and bars They are herded into the visitation room in a way that parallels the male prisoners DuVernay frames Ruby in a larger context of incarceration and its peripheral effects by showing her among a community of women whose situations parallel Ruby s We see Ruby riding the bus to the prison with many other women most of whom are Black waiting in line with these women and eventually being shuffled into the meeting area with these women In the scene where Ruby visits Derek on their anniversary after hearing that he is up for parole the camera pans over many other couples who sit in the visiting room with them by panning to show the various families in the visitation room before focusing on the protagonist the film enables viewers to see beyond Ruby s individual happiness and recognize the importance of intimacy for the collective 129 Filmography EditFilm Edit Year Title Director Writer Producer Ref 2010 I Will Follow Yes Yes Yes 130 2012 Middle of Nowhere Yes Yes Yes 131 2014 Selma Yes No No 132 2018 A Wrinkle in Time Yes No No 133 Executive producer The White Tiger 134 2021 Short films Year Title Director Writer Producer Ref 2006 Saturday Night Life Yes Yes No2013 The Door Yes Yes YesSay Yes Yes Yes No 135 Documentary films Edit Year Title Director Writer Producer Notes2007 Compton in C Minor Yes No Yes Short2008 This is the Life Yes Yes Yes2016 August 28 A Day in the Life of a People Yes Yes Yes Short13th Yes Yes YesTelevision Edit Year Title Director Writer ExecutiveProducer Creator Notes2013 Scandal Yes No No No Episode Vermont is for Lovers Too 2015 For Justice Yes No Yes No Unaired TV pilot2016 present Queen Sugar Yes Yes Yes Yes Writer 4 episodes Director 2 episodes 2019 When They See Us Yes Yes Yes Yes Director 4 episodes The Red Line No No Yes No2020 present Cherish the Day No Yes Yes Yes2021 Colin in Black amp White Yes Yes Yes Yes Episode Cornrows Home Sweet Home No No Yes Yes2022 Naomi No Yes Yes YesDMZ Yes No Yes No Episode Good Luck Documentary series Year Title Director Writer Producer2010 TV One Night Only Live from the Essence Music Festival Yes Yes NoMy Mic Sounds Nice A Truth About Women and Hip Hop Yes No executiveEssence Presents Faith Through the Storm Yes Yes Yes2013 Venus Vs Yes Yes NoHelloBeautiful Interludes Live John Legend Yes No NoCommercials Edit Year Title Director Writer Producer Notes2015 2016 Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Yes No No Apple MusicMusic video Edit Year Title Director Writer Producer Ref 2017 Family Feud Jay Z ft Beyonce Yes Yes Yes 103 Awards nominations honors EditIn 2012 Variety featured DuVernay in its Women s Impact Report In June 2013 she was invited to both the director s and writer s branches of AMPAS 136 DuVernay was only the second Black woman following Kasi Lemmons to be invited to the director s branch DuVernay became the inaugural recipient of the Tribeca Film Institute s Heineken Affinity Award receiving a 20 000 prize and industry support for future projects DuVernay donated all the money to AFFRM the Black arthouse film collective she founded 137 In June 2015 Duvernay was honored as part of Women in Film Crystal Lucy Awards with the Dorothy Arzner Directors Award 138 In April 2015 DuVernay was chosen as one of Mattel s Sheros of 2015 A custom made one of a kind Barbie in DuVernay s likeness was produced The doll was auctioned off with the proceeds given to charity 139 Due to high demand a collectible version of the doll was produced and sold in December of that year 140 In 2016 DuVernay was named to Oprah Winfrey s SuperSoul 100 list of visionaries and influential leaders 141 In 2017 DuVernay became the first Black woman nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for her film 13th 142 143 In 2017 DuVernay was the recipient of Smithsonian Magazine s American Ingenuity Award for Visual Arts 144 In 2018 DuVernay won Entertainer of the Year at the 49th NAACP Image Awards for her work in 2017 145 PETA declared DuVernay and actor Benedict Cumberbatch to be the Most Beautiful Vegan Celebs of 2018 146 In 2020 DuVernay was awarded the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize 147 In 2021 DuVernay was given the Award for Cinematic Production of the Royal Photographic Society Year Award Category Work Result2011 African American Film Critics Best Screenplay I Will Follow Won2012 Black Reel Awards Best Screenplay NominatedBest Director NominatedNAACP Image Awards Outstanding Independent Motion Picture NominatedSundance Film Festival Directing Award Middle of Nowhere WonGrand Jury Prize NominatedFilm Independent Spirit Awards Independent Spirit John Cassavetes Award WonHumanitas Prize Sundance Film NominatedAfrican American Film Critics Best Independent Film WonBest Screenplay WonBest Picture NominatedAlliance of Women Film Journalists Best Woman Screenwriter NominatedWomen Film Critics Circle Josephine Baker Award Won2013 Black Reel Awards Best Director WonBest Screenplay WonBest Film NominatedGotham Awards Best Feature Nominated2014 Online Film Critics Society Award Best Director Selma NominatedBlack Film Critics Circle Best Director Won 148 Central Ohio Film Critics Association Best Director WonBreakthrough Film Artist WonDallas Fort Worth Film Critics Association Award Best Director NominatedGeorgia Film Critics Association Best Director NominatedBreakthrough Award NominatedGolden Globe Award Best Director NominatedAlliance of Women Film Journalists Best Director NominatedBest Woman Director WonFemale Icon of the Year WonCritics Choice Movie Awards Best Director NominatedSatellite Awards Best Director NominatedFilm Independent Spirit Awards Best Director NominatedAfrican American Film Critics Association Best Director WonBlack Reel Awards Black Reel Award for Best Director WonNAACP Image Award Outstanding Director NominatedOnline Film Critics Society Best Director NominatedWashington D C Area Film Critics Association Awards Best Director Nominated2016 Grammy Awards Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media NominatedAlliance of Women Film Journalists Best Woman Director 13th WonOutstanding Achievement by a Woman in the Film Industry WonBlack Reel Awards Best Film NominatedBest Feature Documentary WonCritics Choice Documentary Awards Best Director TV Streaming WonWomen Film Critics Circle Best Woman Storyteller Screenwriting Award WonCourage in Filmmaking Won2017 Academy Award Best Documentary Feature NominatedPrimetime Emmy Award Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Special WonOutstanding Directing for Nonfiction Programming NominatedOutstanding Writing for Nonfiction Programming Won2018 BET Awards Video Director of the Year Family Feud Won 149 2019 TCA Awards Program of the Year When They See Us NominatedOutstanding Achievement in Movies Miniseries and Specials NominatedPrimetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Limited Series NominatedOutstanding Directing for a Limited Series Movie or Dramatic Special NominatedOutstanding Writing for a Limited Series Movie or Dramatic Special Nominated2020 Directors Guild of America Award Outstanding Directing Miniseries or TV Film NominatedProducers Guild of America Award Best Limited Series Television NominatedReferences Edit Mekado Murphy January 22 2015 Anatomy of a Scene Selma The New York Times Retrieved June 28 2020 Demby Gene January 30 2012 Sundance 2012 Ava DuVernay Becomes First Black Woman To Win Best Director Prize For Middle Of Nowhere The Huffington Post Farabee Mindy December 20 2012 Ava DuVernay no longer in Middle of Nowhere Los Angeles Times Ford Rebecca December 11 2014 Golden Globes Selma s Ava DuVernay Becomes First Black Woman to Receive Director Nomination The Hollywood Reporter Suskind Alex December 17 2014 How Ava DuVernay struck a chord with Selma The Guardian The 100 Most Influential People in the World Time Retrieved 2020 09 23 New Academy Board of Governors Includes Ava DuVernay Whoopi Goldberg and Wynn P Thomas IndieWire 10 June 2020 Retrieved June 21 2020 Ava DuVernay Among Six Elected to Film Academy Board for First Time The Hollywood Reporter 10 June 2020 Retrieved June 21 2020 Ava DuVernay Biography com May 24 2016 Retrieved September 22 2016 Stated on Finding Your Roots PBS October 24 2017 Simon Bob February 8 2015 Where Selma Meets Hollywood TV interview segment 60 Minutes CBS News Edwards Gavin January 5 2015 We Shall Overcome Ava DuVernay on Making Selma Rolling Stone SJ Alumna Receives A Golden Globe Nomination St Joseph s High School Archived from the original on March 6 2016 Retrieved January 13 2015 a b Ava DuVernay Biography Documentarian Screenwriter Director 1972 Biography February 27 2018 a b c Wright Bekah October 1 2012 Direct Actio UCLA Magazine University of California Los Angeles Traister Rebecca September 19 2016 In Conversation Ava DuVernay The Cut New York a b c d Miles Ellene V 2006 Agoralumiere Film Series Saturday Night by Ava DuVernay USA Press release Agoralumiere at the Cannes Film Festival 2006 a b Connley Courtney 2018 03 10 How a career change at 32 led Ava DuVernay to become the first black woman to direct a 100 million film CNBC Retrieved 2021 11 29 Yuan Jada 2 December 2014 With Her MLK Drama Selma Ava DuVernay Is Directing History Vulture Stewart Alicia W October 25 2012 Filmmaker Ava DuVernay uses a lens of legacy Includes video and transcript CNN a b Rickey Carrie October 5 2012 She s a Graduate of an Unusual Film School The New York Times Cooper Nekisa November 1 2012 Love on the Outside Filmmaker Victoria Da ryl March 23 2016 Breaking Barriers Ava DuVernay Directs Things Her Way The Source Pollard Terry Gayle July 5 2003 Style videos could start a new wave of good hair days Los Angeles Times Mitchell Gail November 1 2003 Firms Create Novel Marketing Twists Billboard DVA Media Marketing Retrieved February 4 2018 a b HelloBeautiful com Premieres Interludes Live With Superstar John Legend On TV One Saturday Sep 14th 10 PM Press release Interactive One September 13 2013 a b Middle of Nowhere Writer Director Ava DuVernay Filmmaker January 20 2012 Brown Emma October 11 2012 In the Middle of Somewhere with Ava DuVernay and Emayatzy Corinealdi Interview a b c d e f g h i Martin Michael T 2014 Conversations with Ava DuVernay A Call to Action Organizing Principles of an Activist Cinematic Practice Black Camera 6 1 57 91 doi 10 2979 blackcamera 6 1 57 S2CID 61018393 Ebert Roger 2012 I Will Follow 2010 Genres Drama Roger s Office I Will Follow Video includes transcript Ebert Presents At the Movies Ebert Roger March 8 2011 I Will Follow RogerEbert com a b On Location Middle of Nowhere finds love in South Central L A Los Angeles Times 2012 06 19 Retrieved 2021 11 29 Fernandez Jay A January 10 2012 Sundance Preview Competition Drama Middle of Nowhere The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on February 4 2018 Retrieved February 4 2018 Smith Celia L February 24 2013 Ava DuVernay Wins Independent Spirit Award for Middle of Nowhere Essence Davis Rachaell September 22 2016 Why Is August 28 So Special To Black People Ava DuVernay Reveals All In New NMAAHC Film Essence Latif Nadia January 18 2016 How to fix Hollywood s race problem The Guardian Dargis Manohla January 29 2016 Sundance Fights Tide With Films Like The Birth of a Nation The New York Times Evans Dayna February 1 2016 Could This Be the Bechdel Test for Race The Cut New York Obenson Tambay July 11 2013 Huge Ava DuVernay Tapped By Brad Pitt s Plan B To Take Over Lee Daniels Selma IndieWire Jagernauth Kevin June 20 2014 Ava DuVernay s Selma Enters Oscar Race Sets Christmas Day Release IndieWire Hornaday Ann December 26 2014 DuVernay David Oyelowo on breaking Martin Luther King Jr out of myth and into life The Washington Post Brody Richard December 29 2014 The Crucial Lessons of Democracy in Selma The New Yorker Ava DuVernay Justice and Storytelling Go Hand in Hand YouTube www youtube com Retrieved 2021 01 26 Milliken Mary January 6 2015 Selma director makes history before awards are bestowed Reuters Harris Mark January 28 2015 How Selma Got Smeared On historical drama and its malcontents Grantland a b Goodman Amy DuVernay Ava January 27 2015 Selma Director Ava DuVernay on Hollywood s Lack of Diversity Oscar Snub and OscarsSoWhite Hashtag Video interview includes transcript Democracy Now List of 87th Academy Award Winners ABC News Associated Press February 23 2015 Ontiveros Roberto February 22 2015 Oscars 2015 A Look at Biggest Latino Oscar Winners of the Past LatinPost a b c EXCLUSIVE Ava DuVernay Won t Be Directing Black Panther Movie Essence Retrieved 2021 11 29 Cox Gordon July 19 2016 2016 New York Film Festival to Open With Ava DuVernay Documentary The 13th Variety Smith Nigel M September 26 2016 The 13th inside Ava DuVernay s Netflix prison documentary on racial inequality The Guardian Lockett Dee 19 July 2016 Ava DuVernay s The 13th Will Be the First Documentary to Ever Open the New York Film Festival Vulture 13th 2016 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved September 30 2016 Ava DuVernay Ava DuVernay Retrieved 2019 04 30 Oscar Nominations Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Retrieved January 24 2017 Garcia Patricia February 6 2017 Ava DuVernay Doesn t Want Praise She Wants Change Vogue Nordyke Kimberly Lewis Hilary 18 April 2017 Peabody Awards Norman Lear Lemonade Atlanta Veep Among Winners The Hollywood Reporter Winners of the 2018 duPont Columbia Awards Columbia University in the City of New York Kendrick Ben March 23 2010 Script in the Works for A Wrinkle in Time Screen Rant Fernandez Jay October 14 2010 Bedrock taps Jeff Stockwell to adapt Wrinkle The Hollywood Reporter McNary Dave August 5 2014 Frozen Director Jennifer Lee to Adapt A Wrinkle in Time for Disney Variety Han Angie August 5 2014 Frozen Director Jennifer Lee to Adapt A Wrinkle in Time Slash Film Kit Borys February 8 2016 Lupita Nyong o in Talks to Star in Sci Fi Thriller With Ava DuVernay Eyed to Direct Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter Keegan Rebecca August 3 2016 With A Wrinkle In Time Ava DuVernay will pass a milestone Los Angeles Times France Lisa Respers 12 March 2018 This weekend was the first time films by black directors with mega budgets held the top 2 spots at the box office CNN The lone loser in Disney s big quarter A Wrinkle in Time Yahoo Finance May 8 2018 The Numbers Top Grossing Movies of 2018 The Numbers Retrieved 2021 11 29 Lang Brent 4 January 2019 Black filmmakers make history in 2018 but female directors still shut out Chicago Tribune ProQuest 2163350412 Kirsten Chuba March 7 2018 A Wrinkle in Time Reviews What the Critics Are Saying Variety TV One features specials of the 2010 Essence Music Festival Washington Watch and Life After Aug 29 30 The Philadelphia Sunday Sun August 29 2010 Female Emcees Say My Mic Sounds Nice NPR August 30 2010 Gilmore Jason November 12 2010 An Interview with Ava DuVernay Intrepid Media Nine for IX Venus Vs ESPN June 26 2013 Archived from the original on May 27 2013 Obenson Tambay A July 12 2013 Ava DuVernay Will Direct An Episode Of Scandal Next Season IndieWire Goldberg Lesley March 10 2015 Selma s Ava DuVernay For Justice The Hollywood Reporter Andreeva Nellie February 2 2015 Oprah Winfrey To Co Star In amp Co Create With Selma Filmmaker Ava DuVernay Queen Sugar OWN Drama Series Deadline Hollywood Wilson Stacey February 18 2015 Selma Director Ava DuVernay on Awkward and Weird First Meeting With Oprah Winfrey The Hollywood Reporter Queen Sugar 2016 2017 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved September 30 2016 Patten Dominic August 1 2016 Ava DuVernay Directed Queen Sugar Gets Season 2 Pickup From OWN TCA Deadline Hollywood OWN Gives Queen Sugar an Early 16 Episode Second Season Renewal A New Trailer Shadow and Act August 1 2016 Porter Rick July 26 2017 Queen Sugar scores Season 3 renewal on OWN TV by the Numbers Archived from the original on July 26 2017 Petski Denise 2018 08 08 Queen Sugar Renewed For Season 4 By OWN With New Showrunner Anthony Sparks Deadline Retrieved 2020 05 10 Moreau Jordan 2019 03 14 TV News Roundup Tiffany Haddish Ali Wong Netflix Comedy Tuca and Bertie Sets Premiere Date Variety Retrieved 2020 05 10 Petski Denise July 6 2017 Ava DuVernay Teaming With Netflix On Central Park Five Limited Drama Series Deadline Hollywood Retrieved May 31 2019 Darrisaw Michelle May 14 2019 Ava DuVernay s When They See Us Looks at the Central Park Five Here s What to Know The Oprah Magazine Retrieved May 31 2019 D Addario Daniel May 21 2019 TV Review Ava DuVernay s When They See Us Variety Retrieved May 31 2019 Henderson Odie May 30 2019 When They See Us Review Roger Ebert Retrieved May 31 2019 Fienberg Daniel May 31 2019 When They See Us TV Review The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved May 31 2019 Goldberg Matt May 31 2019 When They See Us Review Ava DuVernay s Magnum Opus of a Broken America Collider Retrieved May 31 2019 Mangan Lucy May 31 2019 When They See Us review Netflix s gut wrenching tale of the Central Park Five The Guardian Retrieved May 31 2019 Chaney Jen May 30 2019 When They See Us Is an Intimate Sensitive Look at the Central Park Five Tragedy Vulture Retrieved May 31 2019 Paskin Willa May 30 2019 When They See Us Is a New Kind of Must See TV Slate Retrieved May 31 2019 Lloyd Robert May 30 2019 Review Ava DuVernay s When They See Us gets to the human heart of the Central Park Five Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 31 2019 Bennett Anita June 26 2019 When They See Us Watched By More Than 23 Million Netflix Accounts Worldwide Deadline Hollywood Retrieved June 25 2019 The Door by Ava DuVernay Women s Tales 5 Miu Miu 2014 Small Rachel February 11 2013 Ava DuVernay Brings Us Through the Door Interview Rothe E Nina August 30 2013 Best of Venice 70 Miu Miu Women s Tales The Door and Le Donne della Vucciri Huffington Post DuVernay Say Yes on Vimeo uploaded August 8 2013 Fashion Fair presents Say Yes by Ava DuVernay Ebony August 16 2013 Diaz Ann Christine September 21 2015 How Apple Music s Star Studded Emmys Ad Came Together AdAge Ava DuVernay Creativity AdAge 2018 a b Stefansky Emma December 30 2017 Jay Z Confesses His Sins to Beyonce in Ava DuVernay Directed Family Feud Music Video Vanity Fair Cieply Michael January 7 2011 Building an Alliance to Aid Films by Blacks The New York Times Ava DuVernay Heineken Affinity Award Strutta Archived from the original on October 30 2014 Rosenberg Alyssa January 26 2015 Selma criticism isn t stopping Ava DuVernay The Washington Post Gettell Oliver January 26 2015 Ava DuVernay David Oyelowo to reunite on Hurricane Katrina drama Los Angeles Times McNary Dave March 16 2018 Ava DuVernay to Direct DC s Superhero Epic New Gods Variety Agard Chancellor May 29 2019 Batman writer Tom King teams up with Ava DuVernay for New Gods script Entertainment Weekly Retrieved May 29 2019 Ava DuVernay s New Gods James Wan s The Trench DC Movies Not Moving Forward at Warner Bros Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter 2021 04 01 Retrieved 2021 04 01 Beaumont Thomas Ben 2018 10 30 Ava DuVernay to make Prince documentary for Netflix The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2019 05 29 Ava DuVernay quits as director of Netflix s authorized Prince documentary Star Tribune Colin Kaepernick and Ava DuVernay team up for Netflix series about his high school years www cbsnews com Retrieved 2021 05 13 McNary Dave February 11 2020 Nipsey Hussle Documentary From Ava DuVernay in Preliminary Stages at Netflix Variety Retrieved February 13 2020 N Duka Amanda October 14 2020 Ava DuVernay Back In Director s Chair For Caste Netflix Adaptation Of Acclaimed Isabel Wilkerson s Best Seller Deadline Macaulay Scott September 19 2013 Ava DuVernay and AFFRM Launch Podcast The Call In with Andrew Dosumnu Filmmaker Weir Keziah 2018 02 20 11 Career Moments That Made Ava DuVernay Who She Is ELLE Retrieved 2021 11 29 Cipriani Casey 2013 09 18 Exclusive Film Independent Forum Announces 2013 Keynote Speakers Ted Sarandos and Ava DuVernay IndieWire Retrieved 2021 11 29 Setoodeh Ramin March 14 2015 Selma s Ava DuVernay Studios Aren t Lining Up for Black Protagonists Variety Ava DuVernay Keynote SXSW March 2015 Obenson Tambay A March 17 2015 Watch Ava DuVernay s Rousing SXSW Keynote Address IndieWire Canfield David March 18 2015 SXSW The 7 Best Things We Learned From Ava DuVernay s Keynote Speech IndieWire Abramovitch Seth March 14 2015 SXSW Ava DuVernay Calls Oscars a Room in L A at Rousing Keynote The Hollywood Reporter McNary Dave 12 February 2018 Ava DuVernay Dan Lin Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti Launch Inclusion Fund Variety Ava DuVernay Joins TCM to Discuss The Essentials The Hollywood Reporter 25 April 2019 Retrieved 2019 08 29 Holmes David G 2019 Seen and Heard Negotiating the Black Female Ethos in Selma Black Camera 10 2 184 doi 10 2979 blackcamera 10 2 14 S2CID 182863812 ProQuest 2444521388 Aseltine Elyshia September 2018 The Perniciousness of Prisons Documenting the Problems of Mass Incarceration 13th Ava DuVernay dir 100 min English USA Netflix 2016 The Prison in Twelve Landscapes Brett Story dir 90 min English USA Independent Le American Anthropologist 120 3 595 598 doi 10 1111 aman 13089 S2CID 165883789 Butler Bethonie 6 October 2016 Ava DuVernay s Netflix film 13th reveals how mass incarceration is an extension of slavery Washington Post ProQuest 1826393634 a b c d Smith Marquita R 2 January 2018 Don t Be a Martyr Kinship Intimacy and Carceral Care in Ava DuVernay s Middle of Nowhere The Black Scholar 48 1 6 19 doi 10 1080 00064246 2018 1402252 S2CID 148777412 I Will Follow Film Review The Hollywood Reporter 10 March 2011 Retrieved June 22 2020 Review Middle of Nowhere Film Comment 10 October 2012 Retrieved June 22 2020 The Sounds Space And Spirit Of Selma A Director s Take NPR Retrieved June 22 2020 A Wrinkle in Time isn t a film for critics It s Ava DuVernay s love letter to black girls NBC News Retrieved June 22 2020 The White Tiger trailer Priyanka starrer explores India s class struggle The Indian Express 2020 10 29 Retrieved 2020 10 29 Fashion Fair presents SAY YES by Ava DuVernay Ebony August 16 2013 Weisman Jon June 28 2013 Film Academy Invites 276 New Members Variety Tribeca Film Institute s Inaugural Heineken Affinity Award Goes To Ava DuVernay 20 000 Industry Support IndieWire April 21 2013 Archived from the original on December 21 2014 Retrieved June 5 2013 Kang Inkoo March 31 2015 Nicole Kidman Ava DuVernay Jill Soloway Among Women in Film s 2015 Crystal Lucy Awardees IndieWire Lee Benjamin April 24 2015 Holding out for a Shero Selma director Ava DuVernay gets her own Barbie doll The Guardian Cunningham Todd December 6 2015 Ava DuVernay Barbie Doll to Go on Sale Monday Director Says TheWrap Meet the SuperSoul100 The World s Biggest Trailblazers in One Room O The Oprah Magazine August 1 2016 Riley Jenelle October 3 2016 2017 Oscars Diversity Makes Comeback Record Six Black Actor Nominees Variety Best Documentary Feature Daily Herald January 18 2017 2017 American Ingenuity Award Winners Smithsonian Archived from the original on 2019 06 28 Retrieved 2018 10 15 NAACP Image Awards Full List of Winners The Hollywood Reporter January 14 2018 Furdyk Brent 11 July 2018 Benedict Cumberbatch Ava DuVernay Named PETA s Most Beautiful Vegan Celebs Of 2018 ET Canada Messman Lauren August 6 2020 Ava DuVernay Wins the Gish Prize The New York Times Retrieved November 26 2020 Tapley Kristopher December 23 2014 Selma dominates Black Film Critics Circle awards HitFix Here Are All the Winners from the 2018 BET Awards Billboard 25 June 2018 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ava DuVernay Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ava DuVernay amp oldid 1133894589, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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