Director Ava DuVernay is no stranger to being bold.
Not only was her 2014 Martin Luther King Jr. biopic, “Selma,” nominated for a best picture Oscar, but she’s the first woman of color to direct a live-action film with a production budget of over $100 million. And she has used that clout to cast a young actress of color, 13-year-old Storm Reid, as protagonist Meg Murry, previously played by a white actress, in Madeleine L’Engle’s beloved classic “A Wrinkle in Time.”
Still, with “Queen Sugar,” the scripted drama that DuVernay created for Oprah Winfrey’s OWN, bold might be an understatement. With a young male character who plays with a Barbie doll, the writer-director is consciously aiming to stoke conversation about identity in the African-American community.
“I wanted to make sure ‘Queen Sugar,’ in a lot of different ways, is pointing to parts of our conversation as a black American family,” she said, “particularly the things we close our eyes to and don’t talk about or don’t know how to talk about.”
“Queen Sugar,” which is adapted from Natalie Baszile’s novel of the same name, follows the life of a trio of siblings in Louisiana who inherit an 800-acre sugar cane farm after their father’s death. Starring in the hourlong show, which is executive produced by DuVernay and Winfrey, are Rutina Wesley, Dawn-Lyen Gardner and Kofi Siriboe. Playing the young boy Blue, with a love for a Barbie named Kenya, is Ethan Hutchison.