Portsmouth News

An event like no other as legends of 1960s gather for one night only

One Night In Miami imagines the night spent together by Malcolm X, Cassius Clay, Sam Cooke and Jim Brown. Laura Harding meets Regina King and the cast

- One Night In Miami is out now on Amazon Prime Video

On February 25 1964, the boxer then known as Cassius Clay surprising­ly defeated Sonny Liston to win the championsh­ip title. He celebrated his win with his friends, the activist Malcolm X, singer Sam Cooke and NFL star Jim Brown, in Malcolm’s small, unglamorou­s motel room.

One Night In Miami, the directoria­l debut of the Oscar-winning actress Regina King, takes us into the room with these young, famous men, imagining the conversati­ons they had, the music they played and the arguments they fought as they debated their roles in the civil rights movement and their approach to black leadership and freedom.

The film was shot last year, some of it before the world shut down due to coronaviru­s, but the rest later on, after Black Lives Matter protests had been held all over the world, following the death of unarmed black man George Floyd. “The things that we were talking about in this film are things that have been prescient for black people far before 1964,” says King over Zoom.

The film is based on a play by Kemp Powers, who recently codirected the Pixar movie Soul, and King describes his script as a “punch” to her.

“This is an actor’s piece, it truly is, and the dialogue is the star, and to be an actor that relishes in the moment of receiving content where the dialogue just makes you swoon upon reading, that was attractive to me.

“I thought ‘Oh my god I would love to play any of these men’.”

In spite of that, Leslie Odom Jr, best known for originatin­g the role of Aaron Burr in the Broadway production of Hamilton, said no to the chance to play Cooke at first.

“Who would want to do that?” he says with a laugh. “Sam Cooke – those are mighty big shoes and it took me about 15 years to get any kind of acceptance for who I am. Hamilton was really the thing that allowed people to have a little bit of putting a name with a face, and I just felt like I can be myself a little bit.

“But it was Kemp Powers’ script that really won me over, he was trying to do something daring in this movie and I knew that Regina was the one to lead the way.”

British actor Kingsley Ben-Adir, who plays Malcolm X, also felt nervous to take on his part, but was determined that King would never know.

“I wanted to present her with my own version of fearlessne­ss,” he says, “because I didn’t want her to feel at any stage that the person she was employing to play Malcolm X was cautious or unsure, even though the Malcolm in this film required such a huge vulnerabil­ity.

“Even if I was frightened, I was fronting to Regina that I was superconfi­dent. I don’t know how much of that was a defence mechanism, trying to block out how significan­t the pressure was.

“But the good thing for us was by the time I was cast I only had 12 days to prepare, so I didn’t have time to worry or think about anything, other than trying to do a real deep dive into Malcolm and who he was, and more importantl­y who he was at this time, on this night.

“I think one of the most interestin­g things about this project was understand­ing in the research that the changes that were going on for Malcolm at this time were huge, there was a real sense that his life was in danger and his religious and political thinking was about to undergo a huge shift.”

Indeed the film is set shortly before Malcolm X split publicly with Nation Of Islam leader Elijah Muhammad. A year later he would be dead.

Also on the brink of a precipice was Clay, who would soon announce his commitment to his new faith and

I didn’t count on how the rest of the world

would engage with the importance of the

subject matter in the months to come

take a new name, Muhammad Ali, and Riverdale actor Eli Goree transforme­d his body for the part.

But it was the protests of last summer that were more transforma­tive for him than any physical training.

“As a black man in this world, this has always been a high intensity interactio­n with society, it’s been heightened stakes my whole life, but definitely things had a huge seismic shift after Covid (when production shut down), in terms of the public outcry and it made a big difference for me in my performanc­e.

“I had a scene with Leslie in the car where I’m talking about what black people really want is to be free and to make our own choices and determine our own futures and to be treated as human beings.

“And that scene was very difficult for me in the audition process, I remember really searching to connect to the words, to make them real.

“Even though I felt them, it’s sometimes hard to express that as an artist in a way that isn’t cliche or isn’t trying to force something, and just to say it and to have it be what it is and be real and connect, without trying to make anything up.”

Straight Outta Compton actor Aldis Hodge had wrapped filming by the time the protests happened but is hopeful they have changed how the film will be viewed.

“I didn’t count on how the rest of the world would engage with the importance of the subject matter in the months that were to come,” he says.

“So when we shot it I knew how important it was but after all the things happened and when we finally debuted, I said ‘Wow this is so much more powerful now because we have the eyes and the ears of the world upon us’, and when I say that, I mean upon us black people and understand­ing what our struggle actually is.”

 ??  ?? Kingsley Ben-Adir as Malcolm X, Aldis Hodge as Jim Brown, Eli Goree as Muhammad Ali and Leslie Odom Jr as Sam Cooke.
Kingsley Ben-Adir as Malcolm X, Aldis Hodge as Jim Brown, Eli Goree as Muhammad Ali and Leslie Odom Jr as Sam Cooke.
 ??  ?? Lance Reddick as Brother Kareem, Eli Goree as Muhammad Ali and Kingsley Ben-Adir as Malcolm X.
Lance Reddick as Brother Kareem, Eli Goree as Muhammad Ali and Kingsley Ben-Adir as Malcolm X.
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