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Hidden Figures

Hidden Figures is a 2016 American biographical drama film directed by Theodore Melfi and written by Melfi and Allison Schroeder. It is loosely based on the 2016 non-fiction book of the same name by Margot Lee Shetterly about African American female mathematicians who worked at NASA during the Space Race. The film stars Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer, Janelle Monáe, Kevin Costner, Kirsten Dunst, Jim Parsons, Mahershala Ali, Aldis Hodge, and Glen Powell.

Hidden Figures
Theatrical release poster
Directed byTheodore Melfi
Screenplay by
Based onHidden Figures
by Margot Lee Shetterly
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyMandy Walker
Edited byPeter Teschner
Music by
Production
companies
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release dates
  • December 10, 2016 (2016-12-10) (SVA Theatre)
  • December 25, 2016 (2016-12-25) (United States)
Running time
127 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$25 million[2]
Box office$236.2 million[3]

Principal photography began in March 2016 in Atlanta, Georgia and wrapped up in May 2016. Other filming locations included several other locations in Georgia, including East Point, Canton, Monroe, Columbus, and Madison.

Hidden Figures had a limited release on December 25, 2016, by 20th Century Fox, before going wide in North America on January 6, 2017. It received critical acclaim, with praise for the performances, particularly those of Henson and Spencer, the writing, direction, cinematography, emotional tone, and historical accuracy, although some argued it featured a white savior narrative. The film was a commercial success, grossing $236 million worldwide against its $25 million production budget. Deadline Hollywood noted it as one of the most profitable releases of 2016, and estimated that it made a net profit of $95.5 million.[4]

The film was chosen by the National Board of Review as one of the top ten films of 2016[5] and received various awards and nominations, including three nominations at the 89th Academy Awards, including Best Picture. It also won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture.

Plot

Katherine Johnson works at the Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia in 1961, alongside her colleagues Mary Jackson and Dorothy Vaughan. All of them are African-American women; the unit is segregated by race and sex. White supervisor Vivian Mitchell assigns Katherine to assist Al Harrison's Space Task Group, given her skills in analytic geometry. She becomes the first Black woman on the team; head engineer Paul Stafford is especially dismissive.

Mary is assigned to the space capsule heat shield team, where she immediately identifies a design flaw. Encouraged by her team leader Karl Zielinski, a Polish-Jewish Holocaust survivor, Mary applies for a NASA engineer position. She is told by Mitchell that, regardless of her mathematics and physical science degree, the position requires additional courses. Mary files a petition for permission to attend all-white Hampton High School, despite her husband's opposition. Pleading her case in court, she wins over the local judge by appealing to his sense of history, allowing her to attend night classes.

Katherine meets African-American National Guard Lt. Col. Jim Johnson, who voices skepticism about women's mathematical abilities. He later apologizes and begins spending time with Katherine and her three daughters. The Mercury 7 astronauts visit Langley, and astronaut John Glenn goes out of his way to greet the West Area women. Katherine impresses Harrison by solving a complex mathematical equation from redacted documents, as the Soviet Union's successful launch of Yuri Gagarin increases pressure to send American astronauts into space.

Harrison confronts Katherine about her "breaks," unaware that she is forced to walk half a mile (800 meters) to use the nearest bathroom. She angrily explains the discrimination she faces at work, which leads Harrison to knock down the "Colored Bathroom" sign and abolish bathroom segregation. He allows Katherine to be included in high-level meetings to calculate the space capsule's re-entry point. Stafford makes Katherine remove her name from reports, insisting that "computers" cannot author them, and her work is credited solely to Stafford.

Informed by Mitchell that there are no plans to assign a "permanent supervisor for the colored group," Dorothy learns NASA has installed an IBM 7090 electronic computer that threatens to replace human computers. When a librarian scolds her for visiting the whites-only section, Dorothy takes a book about Fortran and teaches herself and her West Area co-workers programming. She visits the computer room, successfully starts the machine, and is promoted to supervise the Programming Department; she agrees to do so if thirty of her co-workers are transferred as well. Mitchell finally addresses her as "Mrs. Vaughan".

Making final arrangements for John Glenn's launch, the department no longer needs human computers; Katherine is reassigned to the West Area and marries Jim. On the day of the launch, discrepancies are found in the IBM 7090 calculations, and Katherine is asked to check the capsule's landing coordinates. She delivers the results to the control room, and Harrison allows her inside. After a successful launch and orbit, a warning indicates the capsule's heat shield may be loose. Mission Control decides to land Glenn after three orbits instead of seven, and Katherine supports Harrison's suggestion to leave the retro-rocket attached to help keep the heat shield in place. Friendship 7 lands successfully.

Though the mathematicians are ultimately replaced by electronic computers, a textual epilogue reveals Mary obtained her engineering degree and became NASA's first female African-American engineer; Dorothy continued as NASA's first African-American supervisor; and Katherine, accepted by Stafford as a report co-author, went on to calculate the trajectories for the Apollo 11 and Space Shuttle missions. In 2015, she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. In 2016, NASA dedicated the Langley Research Center's Katherine Johnson Computational Building in her honor.

Cast

Production

In 2015, producer Donna Gigliotti acquired Margot Lee Shetterly's nonfiction book Hidden Figures, about a group of Black female mathematicians that helped NASA win the Space Race.[6] Allison Schroeder wrote the script, which was developed by Gigliotti through Levantine Films. Schroeder grew up by Cape Canaveral and her grandparents worked at NASA, where she also interned as a teenager, and as a result saw the project as a perfect fit for herself.[7] Levantine Films produced the film with Peter Chernin's Chernin Entertainment. Fox 2000 Pictures acquired the film rights, and Theodore Melfi signed on to direct.[6] After coming aboard, Melfi revised Schroeder's script, and in particular focused on balancing the home lives of the three protagonists with their careers at NASA.[7] After the film's development was announced, actresses considered to play the lead roles included Oprah Winfrey, Viola Davis, Octavia Spencer, and Taraji P. Henson.[6]

Chernin and Jenno Topping produced, along with Gigliotti and Melfi.[8] Fox cast Henson to play the lead role of mathematician Katherine Goble Johnson. Spencer was selected to play Dorothy Vaughan, one of the three lead mathematicians at NASA.[9] Kevin Costner was cast in the film to play the fictional head of the space program.[10] Singer Janelle Monáe signed on to play the third lead mathematician, Mary Jackson.[11] Kirsten Dunst, Glen Powell, and Mahershala Ali were cast in the film: Powell to play astronaut John Glenn,[12] and Ali as Johnson's love interest.[13][14]

Principal photography began in March 2016 on the campus of Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia.[15] Filming also took place at Lockheed Martin Aeronautics at Dobbins Air Reserve Base.[16] Jim Parsons was cast in the film to play the head engineer of the Space Task Group at NASA, Paul Stafford.[12] Pharrell Williams (a native of Virginia Beach, near Langley Research Center[17]) came on board as a producer on the film. He also wrote original songs and handled the music department and soundtrack of the film, with Hans Zimmer and Benjamin Wallfisch.[18] Morehouse College mathematics professor Rudy L. Horne was brought in to be the on-set mathematician.

Music

Historical accuracy

The film, set at NASA Langley Research Center in 1961, depicts segregated facilities such as the West Area Computing unit, where an all-Black group of female mathematicians were originally required to use separate dining and bathroom facilities. However, in reality, Dorothy Vaughan was promoted to supervisor of West Computing much earlier, in 1949, becoming the first Black supervisor at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) and one of its few female supervisors. In 1958, when NACA became NASA, segregated facilities, including the West Computing office, were abolished.[19] Vaughan and many of the former West computers transferred to the new Analysis and Computation Division (ACD), a racially and gender-integrated group.[20]

It was Mary Jackson, not Katherine Johnson, who had difficulty finding a colored bathroom — in a 1953 incident she experienced while on temporary assignment in the East Area, a region of Langley unfamiliar to her and where few Blacks worked.[21]

Katherine Johnson, for her part, was initially unaware that the bathrooms at Langley were segregated (in both its East and West areas during the NACA era), and used the "whites-only" bathrooms (many weren't explicitly so labeled) for years before anyone complained. She ignored the complaint, and the issue was dropped.[22][23]

In an interview with WHRO-TV, Johnson denied the feelings of segregation. "I didn't feel the segregation at NASA, because everybody there was doing research. You had a mission and you worked on it, and it was important to you to do your job ... and play bridge at lunch. I didn't feel any segregation. I knew it was there, but I didn't feel it."[24]

Mary Jackson did not have to get a court order to attend night classes at the whites-only high school. She asked the city of Hampton for an exception, and it was granted. The school turned out to be run down and dilapidated, a hidden cost of running two parallel school systems.[25] She completed her engineering courses and earned a promotion to engineer in 1958.[26]

Katherine Johnson worked mostly in Langley's West Area, not the East Area — working mainly in Building 1244 starting in mid-1953, and remaining in 1244 even after joining the Space Task Group, through at least the early 1960s and John Glenn's historic flight.[27][28][29]

The scene where a coffeepot labeled "colored" appears in Katherine Johnson's workplace did not happen in real life, and the book on which the film is based depicts no such incident.

Katherine Johnson carpooled with Eunice Smith, a nine-year West Area computer veteran at the time Johnson joined NACA. Smith was her neighbor and friend from her sorority and church choir.[30] The three Goble children were teenagers at the time of Katherine's marriage to Jim Johnson.[31]

Katherine Johnson was assigned to the Flight Research Division in 1953, a move that soon became permanent. When the Space Task Group was created in 1958, engineers from the Flight Research Division formed the core of the group, and Johnson was included. She coauthored a research report published by NASA in 1960, the first time a woman in the Flight Research Division had received credit as an author of a research report.[32] Johnson gained access to editorial meetings as of 1958 simply through persistence, not because one particular meeting was critical.[33][34]

The Space Task Group was led by Robert Gilruth, not the fictional character Al Harrison, who was created to simplify a more complex management structure. The scene where Harrison smashes the Colored Ladies Room sign never happened, as in real life Johnson refused to walk the extra distance to use the colored bathroom and, in her words, "just went to the white one."[35] Harrison also lets her into Mission Control to witness the launch. Neither scene happened in real life, and screenwriter Theodore Melfi said he saw no problem with adding the scenes, saying, "There needs to be white people who do the right thing, there needs to be Black people who do the right thing, and someone does the right thing. And so who cares who does the right thing, as long as the right thing is achieved?"[36]

Dexter Thomas of Vice News criticized Melfi's additions as creating the white savior trope: "In this case, it means that a white person doesn't have to think about the possibility that, were they around back in the 1960s South, they might have been one of the bad ones."[37] The Atlantic's Megan Garber said that the film's "narrative trajectory" involved "thematic elements of the white savior".[38] Melfi said he found "hurtful" the "accusations of a 'white savior' storyline", saying:

It was very upsetting to me because I am at a place where I've lived my life colorless and I grew up in Brooklyn. I walked to school with people of all shapes, sizes, and colors, and that's how I've lived my life. So it's very upsetting that we still have to have this conversation. I get upset when I hear 'Black film,' and so does Taraji P. Henson ... It's just a film. And if we keep labeling something 'a Black film,' or 'a white film'— basically it's modern day segregation. We're all humans. Any human can tell any human's story. I don't want to have this conversation about Black film or white film anymore. I wanna have conversations about film.

The Huffington Post's Zeba Blay said of Melfi's frustration:

His frustration is also a perfect example of how, when it comes to open dialogue about depictions of people of color on screen, it behooves white people (especially those who position themselves as 'allies') to listen ... the inclusion of the bathroom scene doesn't make Melfi a bad filmmaker, or a bad person, or a racist. But his suggestion that a feel-good scene like that was needed for the marketability and overall appeal of the film speaks to the fact that Hollywood at large still has a long way to go in telling Black stories, no matter how many strides have been made.[39]

The fictional characters Vivian Mitchell and Paul Stafford are composites of several team members, and reflect common social views and attitudes of the time. Karl Zielinski is based on Mary Jackson's mentor, Kazimierz "Kaz" Czarnecki.[40]

John Glenn, who was about a decade older than depicted at the time of launch, did ask specifically for Johnson[41] to verify the IBM calculations, although she had several days before the launch date to complete the process.[42]

Author Margot Lee Shetterly has agreed that there are differences between her book and the movie, but found that to be understandable.

For better or for worse, there is history, there is the book and then there's the movie. Timelines had to be conflated and [there were] composite characters, and for most people [who have seen the movie] have already taken that as the literal fact. ... You might get the indication in the movie that these were the only people doing those jobs, when in reality we know they worked in teams, and those teams had other teams. There were sections, branches, divisions, and they all went up to a director. There were so many people required to make this happen. ... It would be great for people to understand that there were so many more people. Even though Katherine Johnson, in this role, was a hero, there were so many others that were required to do other kinds of tests and checks to make [Glenn's] mission come to fruition. But I understand you can't make a movie with 300 characters. It is simply not possible.[43]

John Glenn's flight was not terminated early as stated in the movie's closing subtitles. The MA-6 mission was planned for three orbits and landed at the expected time. The press kit published before launch states that "The Mercury Operations Director may elect a one, two or three orbit mission."[44] The post-mission report also shows that retrofire was scheduled to occur on the third orbit.[45] Scott Carpenter's subsequent flight in May was also scheduled and flew for three orbits, and Wally Schirra's planned six-orbit flight in October required extensive modifications to the Mercury capsule's life-support system to allow him to fly a nine-hour mission.[46] The phrase "go for at least seven orbits" that is in the mission transcript refers to the fact that the Atlas booster had placed Glenn's capsule into an orbit that would be stable for at least seven orbits, not that he had permission to stay up that long.

The Mercury Control Center was located at Cape Canaveral in Florida, not at the Langley Research Center in Virginia. The orbit plots displayed in the front of the room incorrectly show a six-orbit mission, which did not happen until Wally Schirra's MA-8 mission in October 1962. The movie also incorrectly shows NASA flight controllers monitoring live telemetry from the Soviet Vostok launch, which the Soviet Union would not have been sharing with NASA in 1961.

Katherine Johnson's Technical Note D-233, co-written with T.H. Skopinski, can be found on the NASA Technical Reports Server.[47]

Release

 
US President Barack Obama greeting Kevin Costner, Octavia Spencer, and Taraji P. Henson on December 15, 2016

The film began a limited release on December 25, 2016, before a wide release on January 6, 2017.[48][49]

Charity screenings

After Hidden Figures was released on December 25, 2016, certain charities, institutions and independent businesses who regard the film as relevant to the cause of improving youth awareness in education and careers in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields, organized free screenings of the film in order to spread the message of the film's subject matter.[50] A collaborative effort between Western New York STEM Hub, AT&T and the Girl Scouts of the USA allowed more than 200 Buffalo Public School students, Girl Scouts and teachers to see the film. WBFO's Senior Reporter Eileen Buckley stated the event was designed to help encourage a new generation of women to consider STEM careers. Research indicates that by 2020, there will be 2.4 million unfilled STEM jobs.[51] Aspiring astronaut Naia Butler-Craig wrote of the film: "I can’t imagine what that would have been like: 16-year-old, impressionable, curious and space-obsessed Naia finding out that Black women had something to do with getting Americans on the moon."[52]

Also, the film's principal actors (Henson, Spencer, Monáe and Parsons), director (Melfi), producer/musical creator (Williams), and other non-profit outside groups have offered free screenings to Hidden Figures at several cinema locations around the world. Some of the screenings were open to all-comers, while others were arranged to benefit girls, women and the underprivileged. The campaign began as individual activism by Spencer, and made a total of more than 1,500 seats for Hidden Figures available, free of charge, to poor individuals and families. The result was seven more screenings for people who otherwise might not have been able to afford to see the film - in Atlanta (sponsored by Monáe), in Washington, D.C. (sponsored by Henson), in Chicago (also Henson), in Houston (by Parsons), in Hazelwood, Missouri (by Melfi and actress/co-producer Kimberly Quinn), and in Norfolk and Virginia Beach, Virginia (both sponsored by Williams).[53]

In February 2017, AMC Theatres and 21st Century Fox announced that free screenings of Hidden Figures would take place in celebration of Black History Month in up to 14 select U.S. cities (including Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles and Miami). The statement described the February charity screenings as building broader awareness of the film's true story of Black women mathematicians who worked at NASA during the Space Race.[54] 21st Century Fox and AMC Theatres also invited schools, community groups and non-profit organizations to apply for additional special screenings to be held in their towns. "As we celebrate Black History Month and look ahead to Women's History Month in March, this story of empowerment and perseverance is more relevant than ever," said Liba Rubenstein, 21st Century Fox's Senior Vice President of Social Impact, "We at 21CF were inspired by the grassroots movement to bring this film to audiences that wouldn't otherwise be able to see it - audiences that might include future innovators and barrier-breakers - and we wanted to support and extend that movement".[55]

Philanthropic non-profit outside groups and other local efforts by individuals have offered free screenings of Hidden Figures by using crowdfunding platforms on the Internet, that allow people to raise money for free film screening events.[56][57] Dozens of other GoFundMe free screening campaigns have appeared since the film's general release, all by people wanting to raise money to pay for students to see the film.[56]

In 2019, The Walt Disney Company partnered with the U.S. Department of State on the third annual "Hidden No More" exchange program, which was inspired by the film and brings to the United States 50 women from around the world who have excelled in STEM careers such as spacecraft engineering, data solutions and data privacy, and STEM-related education.[58] The exchange program began in 2017 after local US embassies screened the film to their local communities. The support for the screenings was so positive that 48 countries decided to each nominate one women in STEM to represent their country on a three-week IVLP exchange program in the United States.[59]

Merchandising

Following the 2017 Lego Ideas Contest, Denmark-based toy maker The Lego Group announced plans to manufacture a fan-designed Women of NASA figurine set of five female scientists, engineers and astronauts, as based on real women who have worked for NASA. The minifigures planned for inclusion in the set were Katherine Johnson, computer scientist Margaret Hamilton; astronaut, physicist and educator Sally Ride; astronomer Nancy Grace Roman; and astronaut and physician Mae Jemison (who is also African American). The finished set did not include Johnson. The Women of NASA set was released November 1, 2017.[60][61][62]

The Miracles' 1961 chart hit, "Mighty Good Lovin'", written by lead singer Smokey Robinson, is played in the film during the house party dance scene, and was also heard in the closing credits.[63][64]

Home media

Hidden Figures was released on Digital HD on March 28, 2017, and Blu-ray, 4K Ultra HD, and DVD on April 11, 2017.[65] The film debuted at No. 3 on the home video sales chart.[66]

Reception

Box office

Hidden Figures grossed $169.6 million in the United States and Canada, and $66.3 million in other territories, for a worldwide gross of $236 million, against a production budget of $25 million.[3] Domestically, Hidden Figures was the highest-grossing Best Picture nominee at the 89th Academy Awards.[67] Deadline Hollywood calculated the net profit of the film to be $95.55 million, when factoring together all expenses and revenues for the film, making it one of the top twenty most profitable release of 2016.[4]

During its limited release in 25 theaters from December 25, 2016, to January 5, 2017, the film grossed $3 million.[3] In North America, Hidden Figures had its expansion alongside the opening of Underworld: Blood Wars and the wide expansions of Lion and A Monster Calls. It was expected to gross around $20 million from 2,471 theaters in its opening weekend, with the studio projecting a more conservative $15–17 million debut.[68] It made $1.2 million from Thursday night previews and $7.6 million on its first day. Initially, projections had the film grossing $21.8 million in its opening weekend, finishing second behind Rogue One: A Star Wars Story ($22 million). However the next day, final figures revealed the film tallied a weekend total of $22.8 million, beating Rogue One's $21.9 million.[69] In its second weekend, the film grossed $20.5 million (for a four-day MLK Weekend total of $27.5 million), again topping the box office.[70]

Critical response

 
Octavia Spencer's performance as Dorothy Vaughan garnered critical acclaim, prompting her second Academy Award & Golden Globe nomination and her third SAG nomination.

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 93% based on 314 reviews, with an average rating of 7.64/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "In heartwarming, crowd-pleasing fashion, Hidden Figures celebrates overlooked—and crucial—contributions from a pivotal moment in American history."[71] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 74 out of 100, based on 47 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[72] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A+" on an A+ to F scale,[73] one of fewer than 90 films in the history of the service to receive such a score.[69]

Simon Thompson of IGN gave the film a rating of nine out of ten, writing, "Hidden Figures fills in an all too forgotten, or simply too widely unknown, blank in US history in a classy, engaging, entertaining and hugely fulfilling way. Superb performances across the board and a fascinating story alone make Hidden Figures a solid, an accomplished and deftly executed movie that entertains, engages and earns your time, money and attention."[74] Ty Burr of The Boston Globe wrote, "the film's made with more heart than art and more skill than subtlety, and it works primarily because of the women that it portrays and the actresses who portray them. Best of all, you come out of the movie knowing who Katherine Johnson and Dorothy Vaughn and Mary Jackson are, and so do your daughters and sons."[75]

Clayton Davis of Awards Circuit gave the film three and a half stars, saying "Precisely marketed as terrific adult entertainment for the Christmas season, Hidden Figures is a faithful and truly beautiful portrait of our country's consistent gloss over the racial tensions that have divided and continue to plague the fabric of our existence. Lavishly engaging from start to finish, Hidden Figures may be able to catch the most inopportune movie-goer off guard and cause them to fall for its undeniable and classic storytelling. The film is not to be missed."[76]

Other reviews criticized the film for its fictional embellishments and conventional, feel-good style. Tim Grierson, writing for Screen International, states that "Hidden Figures is almost patronisingly earnest in its depiction of sexism and racism. An air of do-gooder self-satisfaction hovers over the proceedings",[77] while Jesse Hassenger at The A.V. Club comments that "lack of surprise is in this movie's bones."[78] Eric Kohn of IndieWire argues that the film "trivializes history; as a hagiographic tribute to its brilliant protagonists, it doesn't dig into the essence of their struggles"[79] and similarly, Paul Byrnes concludes that "When a film purports to be selling history, we're entitled to ask where the history went, even if it offers a good time instead."[80]

Accolades

Among its many achievements, Octavia Spencer was particularly lauded for her portrayal of Dorothy Vaughan and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture and Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role. The film's ensemble cast won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture. The film itself garnered a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Picture and several nominations its screenplay (including for the Oscar and BAFTA), soundtrack and score.

Overall, the film received three nominations for the 89th Academy Awards in 2017, winning none:

See also

References

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Further reading

External links

hidden, figures, this, article, about, film, book, which, based, book, 2016, american, biographical, drama, film, directed, theodore, melfi, written, melfi, allison, schroeder, loosely, based, 2016, fiction, book, same, name, margot, shetterly, about, african,. This article is about the film For the book on which it is based see Hidden Figures book Hidden Figures is a 2016 American biographical drama film directed by Theodore Melfi and written by Melfi and Allison Schroeder It is loosely based on the 2016 non fiction book of the same name by Margot Lee Shetterly about African American female mathematicians who worked at NASA during the Space Race The film stars Taraji P Henson Octavia Spencer Janelle Monae Kevin Costner Kirsten Dunst Jim Parsons Mahershala Ali Aldis Hodge and Glen Powell Hidden FiguresTheatrical release posterDirected byTheodore MelfiScreenplay byAllison Schroeder Theodore MelfiBased onHidden Figuresby Margot Lee ShetterlyProduced byDonna Gigliotti Peter Chernin Jenno Topping Pharrell Williams Theodore MelfiStarringTaraji P Henson Octavia Spencer Janelle Monae Kevin Costner Kirsten Dunst Jim Parsons Mahershala Ali Aldis Hodge Glen PowellCinematographyMandy WalkerEdited byPeter TeschnerMusic byHans Zimmer Pharrell Williams Benjamin WallfischProductioncompaniesFox 2000 Pictures Chernin Entertainment Levantine FilmsDistributed by20th Century FoxRelease datesDecember 10 2016 2016 12 10 SVA Theatre December 25 2016 2016 12 25 United States Running time127 minutes 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 25 million 2 Box office 236 2 million 3 Principal photography began in March 2016 in Atlanta Georgia and wrapped up in May 2016 Other filming locations included several other locations in Georgia including East Point Canton Monroe Columbus and Madison Hidden Figures had a limited release on December 25 2016 by 20th Century Fox before going wide in North America on January 6 2017 It received critical acclaim with praise for the performances particularly those of Henson and Spencer the writing direction cinematography emotional tone and historical accuracy although some argued it featured a white savior narrative The film was a commercial success grossing 236 million worldwide against its 25 million production budget Deadline Hollywood noted it as one of the most profitable releases of 2016 and estimated that it made a net profit of 95 5 million 4 The film was chosen by the National Board of Review as one of the top ten films of 2016 5 and received various awards and nominations including three nominations at the 89th Academy Awards including Best Picture It also won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Music 5 Historical accuracy 6 Release 6 1 Charity screenings 6 2 Merchandising 6 3 Home media 7 Reception 7 1 Box office 7 2 Critical response 7 3 Accolades 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksPlot EditKatherine Johnson works at the Langley Research Center in Hampton Virginia in 1961 alongside her colleagues Mary Jackson and Dorothy Vaughan All of them are African American women the unit is segregated by race and sex White supervisor Vivian Mitchell assigns Katherine to assist Al Harrison s Space Task Group given her skills in analytic geometry She becomes the first Black woman on the team head engineer Paul Stafford is especially dismissive Mary is assigned to the space capsule heat shield team where she immediately identifies a design flaw Encouraged by her team leader Karl Zielinski a Polish Jewish Holocaust survivor Mary applies for a NASA engineer position She is told by Mitchell that regardless of her mathematics and physical science degree the position requires additional courses Mary files a petition for permission to attend all white Hampton High School despite her husband s opposition Pleading her case in court she wins over the local judge by appealing to his sense of history allowing her to attend night classes Katherine meets African American National Guard Lt Col Jim Johnson who voices skepticism about women s mathematical abilities He later apologizes and begins spending time with Katherine and her three daughters The Mercury 7 astronauts visit Langley and astronaut John Glenn goes out of his way to greet the West Area women Katherine impresses Harrison by solving a complex mathematical equation from redacted documents as the Soviet Union s successful launch of Yuri Gagarin increases pressure to send American astronauts into space Harrison confronts Katherine about her breaks unaware that she is forced to walk half a mile 800 meters to use the nearest bathroom She angrily explains the discrimination she faces at work which leads Harrison to knock down the Colored Bathroom sign and abolish bathroom segregation He allows Katherine to be included in high level meetings to calculate the space capsule s re entry point Stafford makes Katherine remove her name from reports insisting that computers cannot author them and her work is credited solely to Stafford Informed by Mitchell that there are no plans to assign a permanent supervisor for the colored group Dorothy learns NASA has installed an IBM 7090 electronic computer that threatens to replace human computers When a librarian scolds her for visiting the whites only section Dorothy takes a book about Fortran and teaches herself and her West Area co workers programming She visits the computer room successfully starts the machine and is promoted to supervise the Programming Department she agrees to do so if thirty of her co workers are transferred as well Mitchell finally addresses her as Mrs Vaughan Making final arrangements for John Glenn s launch the department no longer needs human computers Katherine is reassigned to the West Area and marries Jim On the day of the launch discrepancies are found in the IBM 7090 calculations and Katherine is asked to check the capsule s landing coordinates She delivers the results to the control room and Harrison allows her inside After a successful launch and orbit a warning indicates the capsule s heat shield may be loose Mission Control decides to land Glenn after three orbits instead of seven and Katherine supports Harrison s suggestion to leave the retro rocket attached to help keep the heat shield in place Friendship 7 lands successfully Though the mathematicians are ultimately replaced by electronic computers a textual epilogue reveals Mary obtained her engineering degree and became NASA s first female African American engineer Dorothy continued as NASA s first African American supervisor and Katherine accepted by Stafford as a report co author went on to calculate the trajectories for the Apollo 11 and Space Shuttle missions In 2015 she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom In 2016 NASA dedicated the Langley Research Center s Katherine Johnson Computational Building in her honor Cast EditTaraji P Henson as Katherine Goble Johnson mathematician Octavia Spencer as Dorothy Vaughan mathematician and supervisor Janelle Monae as Mary Jackson mathematician and engineer Kevin Costner as Al Harrison director of the Space Task Group STG Kirsten Dunst as Vivian Mitchell supervisor Jim Parsons as Paul Stafford head engineer in STG Mahershala Ali as Jim Johnson military officer who romances and eventually marries Katherine Aldis Hodge as Levi Jackson Glen Powell as John Glenn astronaut Kimberly Quinn as Ruth Olek Krupa as Karl Zielinski engineer a fictionalized version of Kazimierz Czarnecki who encourages Mary Jackson Saniyya Sidney as Constance JohnsonProduction EditIn 2015 producer Donna Gigliotti acquired Margot Lee Shetterly s nonfiction book Hidden Figures about a group of Black female mathematicians that helped NASA win the Space Race 6 Allison Schroeder wrote the script which was developed by Gigliotti through Levantine Films Schroeder grew up by Cape Canaveral and her grandparents worked at NASA where she also interned as a teenager and as a result saw the project as a perfect fit for herself 7 Levantine Films produced the film with Peter Chernin s Chernin Entertainment Fox 2000 Pictures acquired the film rights and Theodore Melfi signed on to direct 6 After coming aboard Melfi revised Schroeder s script and in particular focused on balancing the home lives of the three protagonists with their careers at NASA 7 After the film s development was announced actresses considered to play the lead roles included Oprah Winfrey Viola Davis Octavia Spencer and Taraji P Henson 6 Chernin and Jenno Topping produced along with Gigliotti and Melfi 8 Fox cast Henson to play the lead role of mathematician Katherine Goble Johnson Spencer was selected to play Dorothy Vaughan one of the three lead mathematicians at NASA 9 Kevin Costner was cast in the film to play the fictional head of the space program 10 Singer Janelle Monae signed on to play the third lead mathematician Mary Jackson 11 Kirsten Dunst Glen Powell and Mahershala Ali were cast in the film Powell to play astronaut John Glenn 12 and Ali as Johnson s love interest 13 14 Principal photography began in March 2016 on the campus of Morehouse College in Atlanta Georgia 15 Filming also took place at Lockheed Martin Aeronautics at Dobbins Air Reserve Base 16 Jim Parsons was cast in the film to play the head engineer of the Space Task Group at NASA Paul Stafford 12 Pharrell Williams a native of Virginia Beach near Langley Research Center 17 came on board as a producer on the film He also wrote original songs and handled the music department and soundtrack of the film with Hans Zimmer and Benjamin Wallfisch 18 Morehouse College mathematics professor Rudy L Horne was brought in to be the on set mathematician Music EditMain articles Hidden Figures soundtrack and Hidden Figures score Historical accuracy EditThe film set at NASA Langley Research Center in 1961 depicts segregated facilities such as the West Area Computing unit where an all Black group of female mathematicians were originally required to use separate dining and bathroom facilities However in reality Dorothy Vaughan was promoted to supervisor of West Computing much earlier in 1949 becoming the first Black supervisor at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics NACA and one of its few female supervisors In 1958 when NACA became NASA segregated facilities including the West Computing office were abolished 19 Vaughan and many of the former West computers transferred to the new Analysis and Computation Division ACD a racially and gender integrated group 20 It was Mary Jackson not Katherine Johnson who had difficulty finding a colored bathroom in a 1953 incident she experienced while on temporary assignment in the East Area a region of Langley unfamiliar to her and where few Blacks worked 21 Katherine Johnson for her part was initially unaware that the bathrooms at Langley were segregated in both its East and West areas during the NACA era and used the whites only bathrooms many weren t explicitly so labeled for years before anyone complained She ignored the complaint and the issue was dropped 22 23 In an interview with WHRO TV Johnson denied the feelings of segregation I didn t feel the segregation at NASA because everybody there was doing research You had a mission and you worked on it and it was important to you to do your job and play bridge at lunch I didn t feel any segregation I knew it was there but I didn t feel it 24 Mary Jackson did not have to get a court order to attend night classes at the whites only high school She asked the city of Hampton for an exception and it was granted The school turned out to be run down and dilapidated a hidden cost of running two parallel school systems 25 She completed her engineering courses and earned a promotion to engineer in 1958 26 Katherine Johnson worked mostly in Langley s West Area not the East Area working mainly in Building 1244 starting in mid 1953 and remaining in 1244 even after joining the Space Task Group through at least the early 1960s and John Glenn s historic flight 27 28 29 The scene where a coffeepot labeled colored appears in Katherine Johnson s workplace did not happen in real life and the book on which the film is based depicts no such incident Katherine Johnson carpooled with Eunice Smith a nine year West Area computer veteran at the time Johnson joined NACA Smith was her neighbor and friend from her sorority and church choir 30 The three Goble children were teenagers at the time of Katherine s marriage to Jim Johnson 31 Katherine Johnson was assigned to the Flight Research Division in 1953 a move that soon became permanent When the Space Task Group was created in 1958 engineers from the Flight Research Division formed the core of the group and Johnson was included She coauthored a research report published by NASA in 1960 the first time a woman in the Flight Research Division had received credit as an author of a research report 32 Johnson gained access to editorial meetings as of 1958 simply through persistence not because one particular meeting was critical 33 34 The Space Task Group was led by Robert Gilruth not the fictional character Al Harrison who was created to simplify a more complex management structure The scene where Harrison smashes the Colored Ladies Room sign never happened as in real life Johnson refused to walk the extra distance to use the colored bathroom and in her words just went to the white one 35 Harrison also lets her into Mission Control to witness the launch Neither scene happened in real life and screenwriter Theodore Melfi said he saw no problem with adding the scenes saying There needs to be white people who do the right thing there needs to be Black people who do the right thing and someone does the right thing And so who cares who does the right thing as long as the right thing is achieved 36 Dexter Thomas of Vice News criticized Melfi s additions as creating the white savior trope In this case it means that a white person doesn t have to think about the possibility that were they around back in the 1960s South they might have been one of the bad ones 37 The Atlantic s Megan Garber said that the film s narrative trajectory involved thematic elements of the white savior 38 Melfi said he found hurtful the accusations of a white savior storyline saying It was very upsetting to me because I am at a place where I ve lived my life colorless and I grew up in Brooklyn I walked to school with people of all shapes sizes and colors and that s how I ve lived my life So it s very upsetting that we still have to have this conversation I get upset when I hear Black film and so does Taraji P Henson It s just a film And if we keep labeling something a Black film or a white film basically it s modern day segregation We re all humans Any human can tell any human s story I don t want to have this conversation about Black film or white film anymore I wanna have conversations about film The Huffington Post s Zeba Blay said of Melfi s frustration His frustration is also a perfect example of how when it comes to open dialogue about depictions of people of color on screen it behooves white people especially those who position themselves as allies to listen the inclusion of the bathroom scene doesn t make Melfi a bad filmmaker or a bad person or a racist But his suggestion that a feel good scene like that was needed for the marketability and overall appeal of the film speaks to the fact that Hollywood at large still has a long way to go in telling Black stories no matter how many strides have been made 39 The fictional characters Vivian Mitchell and Paul Stafford are composites of several team members and reflect common social views and attitudes of the time Karl Zielinski is based on Mary Jackson s mentor Kazimierz Kaz Czarnecki 40 John Glenn who was about a decade older than depicted at the time of launch did ask specifically for Johnson 41 to verify the IBM calculations although she had several days before the launch date to complete the process 42 Author Margot Lee Shetterly has agreed that there are differences between her book and the movie but found that to be understandable For better or for worse there is history there is the book and then there s the movie Timelines had to be conflated and there were composite characters and for most people who have seen the movie have already taken that as the literal fact You might get the indication in the movie that these were the only people doing those jobs when in reality we know they worked in teams and those teams had other teams There were sections branches divisions and they all went up to a director There were so many people required to make this happen It would be great for people to understand that there were so many more people Even though Katherine Johnson in this role was a hero there were so many others that were required to do other kinds of tests and checks to make Glenn s mission come to fruition But I understand you can t make a movie with 300 characters It is simply not possible 43 John Glenn s flight was not terminated early as stated in the movie s closing subtitles The MA 6 mission was planned for three orbits and landed at the expected time The press kit published before launch states that The Mercury Operations Director may elect a one two or three orbit mission 44 The post mission report also shows that retrofire was scheduled to occur on the third orbit 45 Scott Carpenter s subsequent flight in May was also scheduled and flew for three orbits and Wally Schirra s planned six orbit flight in October required extensive modifications to the Mercury capsule s life support system to allow him to fly a nine hour mission 46 The phrase go for at least seven orbits that is in the mission transcript refers to the fact that the Atlas booster had placed Glenn s capsule into an orbit that would be stable for at least seven orbits not that he had permission to stay up that long The Mercury Control Center was located at Cape Canaveral in Florida not at the Langley Research Center in Virginia The orbit plots displayed in the front of the room incorrectly show a six orbit mission which did not happen until Wally Schirra s MA 8 mission in October 1962 The movie also incorrectly shows NASA flight controllers monitoring live telemetry from the Soviet Vostok launch which the Soviet Union would not have been sharing with NASA in 1961 Katherine Johnson s Technical Note D 233 co written with T H Skopinski can be found on the NASA Technical Reports Server 47 Release Edit US President Barack Obama greeting Kevin Costner Octavia Spencer and Taraji P Henson on December 15 2016 The film began a limited release on December 25 2016 before a wide release on January 6 2017 48 49 Charity screenings Edit After Hidden Figures was released on December 25 2016 certain charities institutions and independent businesses who regard the film as relevant to the cause of improving youth awareness in education and careers in the science technology engineering and mathematics STEM fields organized free screenings of the film in order to spread the message of the film s subject matter 50 A collaborative effort between Western New York STEM Hub AT amp T and the Girl Scouts of the USA allowed more than 200 Buffalo Public School students Girl Scouts and teachers to see the film WBFO s Senior Reporter Eileen Buckley stated the event was designed to help encourage a new generation of women to consider STEM careers Research indicates that by 2020 there will be 2 4 million unfilled STEM jobs 51 Aspiring astronaut Naia Butler Craig wrote of the film I can t imagine what that would have been like 16 year old impressionable curious and space obsessed Naia finding out that Black women had something to do with getting Americans on the moon 52 Also the film s principal actors Henson Spencer Monae and Parsons director Melfi producer musical creator Williams and other non profit outside groups have offered free screenings to Hidden Figures at several cinema locations around the world Some of the screenings were open to all comers while others were arranged to benefit girls women and the underprivileged The campaign began as individual activism by Spencer and made a total of more than 1 500 seats for Hidden Figures available free of charge to poor individuals and families The result was seven more screenings for people who otherwise might not have been able to afford to see the film in Atlanta sponsored by Monae in Washington D C sponsored by Henson in Chicago also Henson in Houston by Parsons in Hazelwood Missouri by Melfi and actress co producer Kimberly Quinn and in Norfolk and Virginia Beach Virginia both sponsored by Williams 53 In February 2017 AMC Theatres and 21st Century Fox announced that free screenings of Hidden Figures would take place in celebration of Black History Month in up to 14 select U S cities including Atlanta Chicago Dallas Los Angeles and Miami The statement described the February charity screenings as building broader awareness of the film s true story of Black women mathematicians who worked at NASA during the Space Race 54 21st Century Fox and AMC Theatres also invited schools community groups and non profit organizations to apply for additional special screenings to be held in their towns As we celebrate Black History Month and look ahead to Women s History Month in March this story of empowerment and perseverance is more relevant than ever said Liba Rubenstein 21st Century Fox s Senior Vice President of Social Impact We at 21CF were inspired by the grassroots movement to bring this film to audiences that wouldn t otherwise be able to see it audiences that might include future innovators and barrier breakers and we wanted to support and extend that movement 55 Philanthropic non profit outside groups and other local efforts by individuals have offered free screenings of Hidden Figures by using crowdfunding platforms on the Internet that allow people to raise money for free film screening events 56 57 Dozens of other GoFundMe free screening campaigns have appeared since the film s general release all by people wanting to raise money to pay for students to see the film 56 In 2019 The Walt Disney Company partnered with the U S Department of State on the third annual Hidden No More exchange program which was inspired by the film and brings to the United States 50 women from around the world who have excelled in STEM careers such as spacecraft engineering data solutions and data privacy and STEM related education 58 The exchange program began in 2017 after local US embassies screened the film to their local communities The support for the screenings was so positive that 48 countries decided to each nominate one women in STEM to represent their country on a three week IVLP exchange program in the United States 59 Merchandising Edit Following the 2017 Lego Ideas Contest Denmark based toy maker The Lego Group announced plans to manufacture a fan designed Women of NASA figurine set of five female scientists engineers and astronauts as based on real women who have worked for NASA The minifigures planned for inclusion in the set were Katherine Johnson computer scientist Margaret Hamilton astronaut physicist and educator Sally Ride astronomer Nancy Grace Roman and astronaut and physician Mae Jemison who is also African American The finished set did not include Johnson The Women of NASA set was released November 1 2017 60 61 62 The Miracles 1961 chart hit Mighty Good Lovin written by lead singer Smokey Robinson is played in the film during the house party dance scene and was also heard in the closing credits 63 64 Home media Edit Hidden Figures was released on Digital HD on March 28 2017 and Blu ray 4K Ultra HD and DVD on April 11 2017 65 The film debuted at No 3 on the home video sales chart 66 Reception EditBox office Edit Hidden Figures grossed 169 6 million in the United States and Canada and 66 3 million in other territories for a worldwide gross of 236 million against a production budget of 25 million 3 Domestically Hidden Figures was the highest grossing Best Picture nominee at the 89th Academy Awards 67 Deadline Hollywood calculated the net profit of the film to be 95 55 million when factoring together all expenses and revenues for the film making it one of the top twenty most profitable release of 2016 4 During its limited release in 25 theaters from December 25 2016 to January 5 2017 the film grossed 3 million 3 In North America Hidden Figures had its expansion alongside the opening of Underworld Blood Wars and the wide expansions of Lion and A Monster Calls It was expected to gross around 20 million from 2 471 theaters in its opening weekend with the studio projecting a more conservative 15 17 million debut 68 It made 1 2 million from Thursday night previews and 7 6 million on its first day Initially projections had the film grossing 21 8 million in its opening weekend finishing second behind Rogue One A Star Wars Story 22 million However the next day final figures revealed the film tallied a weekend total of 22 8 million beating Rogue One s 21 9 million 69 In its second weekend the film grossed 20 5 million for a four day MLK Weekend total of 27 5 million again topping the box office 70 Critical response Edit Octavia Spencer s performance as Dorothy Vaughan garnered critical acclaim prompting her second Academy Award amp Golden Globe nomination and her third SAG nomination On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 93 based on 314 reviews with an average rating of 7 64 10 The website s critical consensus reads In heartwarming crowd pleasing fashion Hidden Figures celebrates overlooked and crucial contributions from a pivotal moment in American history 71 On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 74 out of 100 based on 47 critics indicating generally favorable reviews 72 Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of A on an A to F scale 73 one of fewer than 90 films in the history of the service to receive such a score 69 Simon Thompson of IGN gave the film a rating of nine out of ten writing Hidden Figures fills in an all too forgotten or simply too widely unknown blank in US history in a classy engaging entertaining and hugely fulfilling way Superb performances across the board and a fascinating story alone make Hidden Figures a solid an accomplished and deftly executed movie that entertains engages and earns your time money and attention 74 Ty Burr of The Boston Globe wrote the film s made with more heart than art and more skill than subtlety and it works primarily because of the women that it portrays and the actresses who portray them Best of all you come out of the movie knowing who Katherine Johnson and Dorothy Vaughn and Mary Jackson are and so do your daughters and sons 75 Clayton Davis of Awards Circuit gave the film three and a half stars saying Precisely marketed as terrific adult entertainment for the Christmas season Hidden Figures is a faithful and truly beautiful portrait of our country s consistent gloss over the racial tensions that have divided and continue to plague the fabric of our existence Lavishly engaging from start to finish Hidden Figures may be able to catch the most inopportune movie goer off guard and cause them to fall for its undeniable and classic storytelling The film is not to be missed 76 Other reviews criticized the film for its fictional embellishments and conventional feel good style Tim Grierson writing for Screen International states that Hidden Figures is almost patronisingly earnest in its depiction of sexism and racism An air of do gooder self satisfaction hovers over the proceedings 77 while Jesse Hassenger at The A V Club comments that lack of surprise is in this movie s bones 78 Eric Kohn of IndieWire argues that the film trivializes history as a hagiographic tribute to its brilliant protagonists it doesn t dig into the essence of their struggles 79 and similarly Paul Byrnes concludes that When a film purports to be selling history we re entitled to ask where the history went even if it offers a good time instead 80 Accolades Edit Main article List of accolades received by Hidden Figures Among its many achievements Octavia Spencer was particularly lauded for her portrayal of Dorothy Vaughan and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress Motion Picture and Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role The film s ensemble cast won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture The film itself garnered a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Picture and several nominations its screenplay including for the Oscar and BAFTA soundtrack and score Overall the film received three nominations for the 89th Academy Awards in 2017 winning none Best Picture Donna Gigliotti Peter Chernin Jenno Topping Pharrell Williams and Theodore Melfi lost to Moonlight Best Supporting Actress Octavia Spencer lost to Viola Davis for Fences Best Adapted Screenplay Allison Schroeder and Theodore Melfi based on the book Hidden Figures The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Who Helped Win the Space Race lost to Moonlight See also EditAfrican American women in computer science Henrietta Swan Leavitt List of black films of the 2010s Mathematical fiction Women in scienceReferences Edit Hidden Figures British Board of Film Classification Retrieved December 10 2016 Goldrich Robert Fall 2016 Director s Profile Ted Melfi Shoot Retrieved December 22 2016 a b c Hidden Figures 2016 Box Office Mojo Retrieved January 6 2018 a b Mike Fleming Jr March 22 2017 No 15 Hidden Figures Box Office Profits 2016 Most Valuable Movie Blockbuster Tournament Deadline Hollywood Retrieved March 23 2017 National Board of Review Announces 2016 Award Winners National Board of Review November 29 2016 Retrieved November 29 2016 a b c Fleming Mike Jr July 9 2015 Ted Melfi amp Fox 2000 In Talks For Hidden Figures How A Group Of Math Savvy Black Women Helped NASA Win Space Race Deadline Hollywood Retrieved March 26 2016 a b McKittrick Christopher February 1 2017 Hidden Figures A Mathematical Juggling Act creativescreenwriting com Retrieved February 1 2017 McNary Dave February 10 2016 Taraji P Henson to Play Math Genius in New Film Hidden Figures Variety Retrieved March 27 2016 Kroll Justin February 17 2016 Octavia Spencer to Play Mathematician Opposite Taraji P Henson in Hidden Figures EXCLUSIVE Variety Retrieved March 27 2016 Kroll Justin March 1 2016 Kevin Costner Joins Taraji P Henson Octavia Spencer in Hidden Figures EXCLUSIVE Variety Retrieved March 27 2016 Sneider Jeff March 7 2016 Janelle Monae Joins Taraji P Henson Octavia Spencer in Fox 2000 s Hidden Figures Exclusive TheWrap Retrieved March 27 2016 a b Busch Anita April 1 2016 Jim Parsons Joins Ted Melfi s Hidden Figures For Fox 2000 Deadline Hollywood Retrieved April 2 2016 Fleming Mike Jr March 11 2016 Kirsten Dunst Joins Ted Melfi Directed Hidden Figures At Fox 2000 Deadline Hollywood Retrieved March 27 2016 Busch Anita March 15 2016 Ted Melfi s Hidden Figures Adds Glen Powell amp Mahershala Ali Deadline Hollywood Retrieved March 27 2016 On the Set for 3 11 16 Taraji P Henson amp Octavia Spencer Team Up for Hidden Figures While Jordan Peele Allison Williams amp Catherine Keener Wrap Get Out SSN Insider March 11 2016 Archived from the original on March 12 2017 Retrieved March 26 2016 Walljasper Matt March 24 2016 What s Filming in Atlanta Now Baby Driver Hidden Figures and a grim warning of things to come Atlanta Magazine Retrieved March 26 2016 Itzkoff Dave January 21 2017 Pharrell Williams Making Noise for Hidden Figures Everywhere New York Times Retrieved June 26 2019 The project had another layer of resonance for Mr Williams who was raised in Virginia Beach not far from the NASA Langley Research Center in Hampton where Hidden Figures takes place Growing up he said he had a kind of mystical reverence for the NASA facilities We knew the bigger questions were being answered there Galuppo Mia April 5 2016 Pharrell Williams to Produce Write Music for Fox 2000 s Hidden Figures The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved April 8 2016 Loff Sarah November 22 2016 Dorothy Vaughan Biography NASA NASA Retrieved September 24 2019 Dorothy Vaughan Biography NASA Nasa gov November 22 2016 Retrieved January 30 2017 Shetterly 2016 p 107 8 Khan Amina February 26 2017 Q amp A Our interview with Katherine G Johnson the real life mathematician who inspired Hidden Figures LA Times Los Angeles Retrieved March 1 2017 Shetterly 2016 pp 129 What Matters Katherine Johnson NASA Pioneer and Computer YouTube WHRO Public Media February 25 2011 Retrieved April 16 2022 Shetterly 2016 pp 144 5 Mary Jackson Biography NASA Nasa gov December 2 2016 Retrieved January 30 2017 Shetterly 2016 pp 122 126 131 189 191 210 211 219 223 1960s Official Numbers and Former Designations of Langley Research Center Buildings PDF Langley Maps Nasa gov February 3 2016 Archived from the original PDF on October 2 2022 Denise Lineberry March 3 2010 A Look Back with Langley s NACA Alumni NACA s 95th Anniversary Researcher News Nasa gov Retrieved October 2 2022 Shetterly 2016 pp 120 1 Shetterly 2016 pp 185 192 Shetterly Margot Lee December 1 2016 Katherine Johnson Biography NASA NASA Retrieved March 2 2017 authored or coauthored 26 research reports Shetterly 2016 pp 179 181 2 Warren Wini 1999 Katherine Coleman Goble Johnson The Ultimate Payoff Putting America in Space Black Women Scientists in the United States Indiana University Press pp 140 7 ISBN 0 253 33603 1 Space So White Oscar nominated Hidden Figures was whitewashed but it didn t have to be Vice com Retrieved February 24 2017 Space So White Oscar nominated Hidden Figures was whitewashed but it didn t have to be Vice com Retrieved February 24 2017 Thomas Dexter January 25 2017 Space so white The Oscar nominated Hidden Figures was whitewashed but it didn t have to be Vice News Retrieved February 2 2017 Garber Megan January 18 2017 Hidden Figures and the Appeal of Math in an Age of Inequality The Atlantic Retrieved February 2 2017 Hidden Figures s narrative trajectory involves not just progress that emerges too often from pettiness but also thematic elements of the white savior and of a culturally enforced tiara syndrome All those things effectively temper the idealism of its message Blay Zeba February 23 2017 Hidden Figures And The Diversity Conversation We Aren t Having The Huffington Post Retrieved April 23 2017 Modern Figures Frequently Asked Questions NASA Nasa gov January 7 2017 Retrieved January 30 2017 Hidden Figures How Black Women Did The Math That Put Men On The Moon NPR NPR September 25 2016 Retrieved March 1 2017 Heard on All Things Considered Hidden Figures When did John Glenn ask for the girl to check the numbers collectSPACE Retrieved January 31 2017 Pearlman Robert Z December 27 2016 Hidden Figures The Right Stuff vs Real Stuff in New Film About NASA History Space com Purch Retrieved March 2 2017 Shetterly was still writing her book when production of the film began it was only just released in September but she was also available to the filmmakers as they sought to condense a story spanning a few decades into their setting of just a couple of years Mercury Atlas 6 at a Glance page 1 PDF NASA Archived from the original PDF on May 25 2009 Retrieved November 12 2017 Results of the First United States Manned Orbital Space Flight Table 6 II Sequence of Events During MA 6 Flight Page 71 PDF NASA Retrieved November 12 2017 Baker David 1981 The History of Manned Space Flight page 137 Crown Publishers ISBN 0 517 54377 X Skopinski T H Johnson Katherine G September 1 1960 Determination of Azimuth Angle at Burnout for Placing a Satellite Over a Selected Earth Position NASA Retrieved August 29 2020 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help A Lincoln Ross October 14 2016 Fox Shifts Hidden Figures To Christmas Day Limited Release Deadline Hollywood Retrieved October 15 2016 Lewis Hilary October 15 2016 It s Official Fox s Hidden Figures NASA Film to Get Oscar Qualifying Limited Release The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved October 15 2016 Muller Marissa G January 30 2017 The Hidden Figures Effect Is Real How It s Inspiring Young Women to Seek Careers in Science and Technology Glamour Retrieved February 27 2017 Buckley Eileen February 1 2017 Hidden Figures to inspire city students to pursue STEM careers WBFO Retrieved February 27 2017 Butler Craig Naia Perspective For 16 year old Black girl nerds it s good that Katherine Johnson is no longer hidden The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved December 12 2020 Rainey James January 27 2017 Free Screenings of Hidden Figures Go Wide From L A to Australia Variety Retrieved February 27 2017 Free Screening of Hidden Figures Offered for Black History Month NBC Southern California Associated Press February 14 2017 Retrieved February 27 2017 McNary Dave February 14 2017 Hidden Figures Set for Free Screenings in 14 Cities for Black History Month Variety Retrieved February 27 2017 a b Lasher Megan January 27 2017 This 7th Grader Wants to Send All the Young Girls in Her City to See Hidden Figures Time com Archived from the original on January 27 2017 Retrieved February 27 2017 Donate Online Make Online Donations to People You Know gofundme com Retrieved February 27 2017 The Walt Disney Company Partners with U S State Department on Hidden No More Exchange Program The Walt Disney Company October 28 2019 Retrieved November 16 2019 Hidden No More A Global Exchange Program Inspired by Hidden Figures Pond5 Blog November 9 2017 Retrieved November 16 2019 Malkin Bonnie February 28 2017 Hidden figures no more female Nasa staff to be immortalised in Lego The Guardian Ewing Michelle March 1 2017 Lego set to honor women of NASA including Katherine Johnson of Hidden Figures WSB TV Retrieved August 29 2017 Introducing LEGO Ideas 21312 Women of NASA ideas lego com October 18 2017 Mighty Good Lovin Featured in Hidden Figures March 6 2017 Hidden Figures 2016 IMDb Hidden Figures 4K Blu ray DVD and Digital Release Dates and Details TheHDRoom February 28 2017 Retrieved April 23 2017 Force Remains With Star Wars for DVD Blu ray Disc Sales Variety April 20 2017 Retrieved May 26 2017 Tom Huddleston Jr February 27 2017 Moonlight Is Among the Lowest Grossing Oscar Best Picture Winners Ever Fortune Faughnder Ryan January 4 2017 Hidden Figures is likely to draw crowds as Rogue One stays on top of the box office Los Angeles Times a b D Alessandro Anthony January 9 2017 Rogue One Doesn t Want To Fall To Hidden Figures As Winter Storm Helena Closes Theaters Deadline Hollywood D Alessandro Anthony January 17 2017 Hidden Figures Stays Smart But Why Are So Many Movies Bombing Over MLK Weekend Deadline Hollywood Retrieved August 16 2018 Hidden Figures 2017 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Retrieved May 3 2020 Hidden Figures Reviews Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved January 9 2017 Hidden Figures Twitter CinemaScore January 6 2017 Retrieved April 10 2017 Thompson Simon December 14 2016 Hidden Figures IGN Retrieved August 16 2018 Burr Ty January 4 2017 Hidden Figures is a crowd pleaser with math appeal The Boston Globe Retrieved August 16 2018 Davis Clayton December 11 2016 Film Review Hidden Figures Is Pure Goodness Featuring a Stellar Cast AwardsCircuit Retrieved August 16 2018 Grierson Tim December 11 2016 Hidden Figures Review Screen International Retrieved August 16 2018 Hassenger Jese December 20 2016 Good performances can t blast Hidden Figures out of prestige convention The A V Club Retrieved August 16 2018 Kohn Eric December 11 2016 Hidden Figures Review IndieWire Retrieved August 16 2018 Byrnes Paul February 14 2017 Hidden Figures review these trailblazing women deserve better The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved August 16 2018 Further reading EditHayles N Katherine 2005 My Mother Was a Computer Digital Subjects and Literary Texts Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 32147 9 Shetterly Margot Lee 2016 Hidden Figures William Morrow ISBN 978 0 06 236359 6 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Hidden Figures Official website Hidden Figures at IMDb Hidden Figures at AllMovie Hidden Figures at History vs Hollywood Portals United States Film Spaceflight Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hidden Figures amp oldid 1132680442, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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