1
00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000
Downloaded from
YTS.MX

2
00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000
Official YIFY movies site:
YTS.MX

3
00:00:13,500 --> 00:00:15,083
BBC NARRATOR:
<i>He is a famous photographer,</i>

4
00:00:15,166 --> 00:00:18,125
<i>the only Negro cameraman</i>
<i>on</i> LIFE<i> magazine.</i>

5
00:00:18,208 --> 00:00:21,875
<i>He's a composer, an author,</i>
<i>and a film director.</i>

6
00:00:21,958 --> 00:00:24,416
<i>Among his friends</i>
<i>in the world of liberal arts,</i>

7
00:00:24,500 --> 00:00:27,708
<i>he's a success in his own right,</i>
<i>accepted on that basis.</i>

8
00:00:29,166 --> 00:00:31,375
<i>But he is still a Negro living</i>
<i>in America.</i>

9
00:00:31,458 --> 00:00:33,166
<i>Not every White American</i>
<i>has heard</i>

10
00:00:33,250 --> 00:00:35,166
<i>of the famous Gordon Parks.</i>

11
00:00:35,250 --> 00:00:38,708
When I walked
into<i> LIFE</i> magazine, that uh,

12
00:00:38,791 --> 00:00:39,958
18 years ago...

13
00:00:41,041 --> 00:00:42,916
<i>You see, a Negro--</i>
<i>Put it like this.</i>

14
00:00:43,000 --> 00:00:45,125
<i>A Negro builds up</i>
<i>a double defense.</i>

15
00:00:45,208 --> 00:00:47,625
<i>When you are a kid,</i>
<i>you have to prepare</i>

16
00:00:47,708 --> 00:00:50,416
<i>to be able to do much more</i>
<i>than a White boy,</i>

17
00:00:50,500 --> 00:00:53,291
<i>so that if the time comes</i>

18
00:00:53,375 --> 00:00:56,208
<i>where your talent</i>
<i>is pitted against a White man,</i>

19
00:00:56,291 --> 00:00:59,166
<i>you will get the nod because</i>
<i>they can't afford to lose you.</i>

20
00:01:00,958 --> 00:01:03,125
The term,
"living in a White man's world"

21
00:01:03,208 --> 00:01:05,083
is one
I don't particularly like.

22
00:01:05,166 --> 00:01:08,083
A lot of Negroes use it,
a lot of Whites use it.

23
00:01:08,166 --> 00:01:10,583
But I consider this my world.

24
00:01:10,666 --> 00:01:15,750
♪ ("THIS WORLD"
BY CHARLES BRADLEY PLAYING) ♪

25
00:01:15,833 --> 00:01:21,291
<i>♪ This world</i>
<i>Is going up in flames ♪</i>

26
00:01:21,375 --> 00:01:25,375
<i>♪ And nobody</i>
<i>Wanna take the blame ♪</i>

27
00:01:25,458 --> 00:01:29,000
BLM PROTESTERS:
Hands up! Don't shoot!
Hands up! Don't shoot!

28
00:01:29,083 --> 00:01:32,500
<i>♪ Don't tell me</i>
<i>How to live my life ♪</i>

29
00:01:32,583 --> 00:01:37,666
<i>♪ When you</i>
<i>Never felt the pain ♪</i>

30
00:01:39,583 --> 00:01:43,833
<i>♪ Oh, oh, oh ♪</i>

31
00:01:43,916 --> 00:01:49,333
<i>♪ Ooh!</i>
<i>They don't hear me cry ♪</i>

32
00:01:49,416 --> 00:01:56,791
♪<i> Ooh!</i>
<i>Oh, it's killing me</i> ♪

33
00:01:56,875 --> 00:01:59,791
♪<i> A better world, oh baby!</i> ♪

34
00:01:59,875 --> 00:02:04,333
<i>♪ Gotta make it baby</i>
<i>Gotta make it right ♪</i>

35
00:02:04,416 --> 00:02:06,500
<i>♪ Baby! Oh! ♪</i>

36
00:02:11,625 --> 00:02:13,375
♪ (MUSIC FADES) ♪

37
00:02:14,583 --> 00:02:15,791
(POLICE SIREN WAILING)

38
00:02:15,875 --> 00:02:17,791
COACH: Let's go, let's go,
let's go, let's go, let's go.

39
00:02:21,083 --> 00:02:24,541
DEVIN ALLEN:<i> I only can imagine</i>
<i>if Gordon Parks was alive now.</i>

40
00:02:24,625 --> 00:02:26,041
<i>What he would be able to do.</i>

41
00:02:26,125 --> 00:02:28,000
<i>You know, to talk</i>
<i>about these serious issues.</i>

42
00:02:29,916 --> 00:02:32,833
Always something
going on around here. (CHUCKLES)

43
00:02:35,375 --> 00:02:36,541
There you go, shorty.

44
00:02:37,666 --> 00:02:40,125
<i>I had to make a lot</i>
<i>of mistakes, you know,</i>

45
00:02:40,208 --> 00:02:41,916
<i>to get to where I am now.</i>

46
00:02:42,000 --> 00:02:43,791
♪ (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

47
00:02:56,666 --> 00:02:59,791
ALLEN:<i> I was hustling,</i>
<i>and I was in the streets.</i>

48
00:03:01,916 --> 00:03:03,833
I lost like my first friend
at like 16, 17,

49
00:03:03,916 --> 00:03:06,708
due to gun violence, and that
kind of, like, changed my world.

50
00:03:07,666 --> 00:03:09,000
<i>I wanted to really pursue art.</i>

51
00:03:09,083 --> 00:03:10,291
<i>So I would go</i>
<i>to Barnes & Noble,</i>

52
00:03:10,375 --> 00:03:12,625
and just, like, have all these
photography books out.

53
00:03:12,708 --> 00:03:14,750
And I just would, like,
sit and look at Gordon's work,

54
00:03:14,833 --> 00:03:16,875
<i>if it was him</i>
<i>shooting his stuff in Harlem.</i>

55
00:03:21,708 --> 00:03:24,000
<i>The story, the gang--</i>

56
00:03:24,083 --> 00:03:25,916
<i>that's still going</i>
<i>on to this day.</i>

57
00:03:30,458 --> 00:03:33,208
<i>I was like, "So I can</i>
<i>shoot all these things too.</i>

58
00:03:33,291 --> 00:03:34,625
<i>I'ma get me a camera."</i>

59
00:03:37,208 --> 00:03:39,583
So it started off as
just a personal journey...

60
00:03:39,666 --> 00:03:41,208
(PROTESTORS CHANTING)

61
00:03:41,291 --> 00:03:43,625
<i>...but as I got deep</i>
<i>into my career,</i>

62
00:03:43,708 --> 00:03:45,125
<i>that's when I really</i>
<i>started realizing</i>

63
00:03:45,208 --> 00:03:48,250
<i>how powerful an image can be.</i>

64
00:03:49,958 --> 00:03:51,916
'Cause my career
is literally built on

65
00:03:52,000 --> 00:03:53,416
the broken back of Freddie Gray.

66
00:03:53,500 --> 00:03:55,541
REPORTER:<i> The 25-year-old</i>
<i>falls into a coma</i>

67
00:03:55,625 --> 00:03:57,916
<i>at shock trauma</i>
<i>and dies seven days later.</i>

68
00:03:58,000 --> 00:04:00,416
PROTESTERS:
Freddie! Freddie! Freddie!

69
00:04:00,500 --> 00:04:02,083
ALLEN:<i> I knew how my city was,</i>

70
00:04:02,166 --> 00:04:04,750
<i>and the energy that was, like,</i>
<i>kinda vibrating.</i>

71
00:04:04,833 --> 00:04:06,083
<i>So I just took to the streets.</i>

72
00:04:06,166 --> 00:04:09,750
PROTESTERS: No justice,
no peace! No racist police!

73
00:04:09,833 --> 00:04:12,208
ALLEN:<i> When everything</i>
<i>really hit the fan</i>

74
00:04:12,291 --> 00:04:14,041
<i>is when we were down</i>
<i>in Camden Yards,</i>

75
00:04:14,125 --> 00:04:15,666
<i>and all the police were worried</i>
<i>about the fact</i>

76
00:04:15,750 --> 00:04:17,000
<i>that we had an Orioles game.</i>

77
00:04:17,083 --> 00:04:20,500
<i>Some fans at the bars were</i>
<i>actually calling us the N-word,</i>

78
00:04:20,583 --> 00:04:22,333
<i>they were calling us monkeys.</i>

79
00:04:22,416 --> 00:04:24,250
<i>And that's what actually</i>
<i>started everything.</i>

80
00:04:24,333 --> 00:04:26,041
(CROWD SCREAMING)

81
00:04:26,125 --> 00:04:27,375
(GLASS SMASHING)

82
00:04:27,458 --> 00:04:30,125
ALLEN:<i> And this guy runs past,</i>
<i>and he throws something,</i>

83
00:04:30,208 --> 00:04:32,458
<i>and I just snapped the picture.</i>
<i>I don't think nothing of it.</i>

84
00:04:33,708 --> 00:04:35,416
<i>I remember</i>
<i>just uploading the image</i>

85
00:04:35,500 --> 00:04:37,958
<i>while all of this was going on,</i>
<i>saying, "We're sick and tired."</i>

86
00:04:40,625 --> 00:04:42,166
And around
that time, I get like

87
00:04:42,250 --> 00:04:44,791
a blocked call come through,
and he is like,

88
00:04:44,875 --> 00:04:46,458
"This is Olivier
from<i> TIME</i> magazine.

89
00:04:46,541 --> 00:04:48,791
I wanted to talk to Devin Allen
about his work in Baltimore.

90
00:04:48,875 --> 00:04:50,208
What publication are you with?"

91
00:04:50,291 --> 00:04:52,000
I'm like,
"I'm not with no publication."

92
00:04:53,250 --> 00:04:55,583
<i>And I told them my story,</i>
<i>and we did a blog from it.</i>

93
00:04:57,291 --> 00:05:00,125
<i>I go to sleep. I wake up,</i>

94
00:05:00,208 --> 00:05:03,541
<i>and I just see all these, like,</i>
<i>tweets. And it says,</i>

95
00:05:03,625 --> 00:05:05,416
"Amateur photographer
from West Baltimore

96
00:05:05,500 --> 00:05:07,541
snags the cover
of<i> TIME</i> magazine."

97
00:05:07,625 --> 00:05:11,666
And I just burst out in tears,
and I call my mother,

98
00:05:11,750 --> 00:05:13,166
and she burst out in tears,

99
00:05:13,250 --> 00:05:14,833
and my whole family
is just crying.

100
00:05:18,958 --> 00:05:21,750
<i>For the first time, I understood</i>
<i>what Gordon was talking about,</i>

101
00:05:21,833 --> 00:05:24,000
<i>that the camera</i>
<i>is a real weapon,</i>

102
00:05:24,083 --> 00:05:26,875
and I realized how powerful
I am with a camera in my hand.

103
00:05:28,375 --> 00:05:31,166
♪ (SOFT JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

104
00:05:32,333 --> 00:05:34,250
GORDON PARKS:
<i>I might have turned eventually</i>

105
00:05:34,333 --> 00:05:38,166
<i>to the gun or the knife</i>
<i>as a weapon to survive,</i>

106
00:05:38,250 --> 00:05:40,958
<i>but by then</i>
<i>I had chosen the camera.</i>

107
00:05:42,833 --> 00:05:46,916
<i>Photography was the way in which</i>
<i>I could express my own feelings</i>

108
00:05:47,000 --> 00:05:49,291
<i>about racism in America,</i>

109
00:05:50,458 --> 00:05:52,833
<i>about the downtrodden.</i>

110
00:05:52,916 --> 00:05:54,750
<i>And somehow or another, I might</i>

111
00:05:54,833 --> 00:05:56,791
<i>transcend my own experience.</i>

112
00:05:59,583 --> 00:06:02,958
<i>I live off of my emotions,</i>
<i>perhaps, you know.</i>

113
00:06:03,041 --> 00:06:05,458
<i>And so I had</i>
<i>turned those emotions</i>

114
00:06:05,541 --> 00:06:10,416
<i>into some mercenary thing,</i>
<i>by which I could survive.</i>

115
00:06:10,500 --> 00:06:12,583
♪ (MUSIC CONTINUES) ♪

116
00:06:14,625 --> 00:06:17,250
BRYAN STEVENSON:
<i>What distinguishes Gordon Parks</i>

117
00:06:17,333 --> 00:06:20,291
<i>from a lot of other artists</i>
<i>is that he had</i>

118
00:06:20,375 --> 00:06:22,916
<i>a quintessentially authentic</i>
<i>Black experience.</i>

119
00:06:23,000 --> 00:06:25,166
<i>I mean, he was</i>
<i>the child of Black people</i>

120
00:06:25,250 --> 00:06:27,000
<i>who had fled enslavement.</i>

121
00:06:29,250 --> 00:06:31,625
<i>Growing up in Kansas,</i>

122
00:06:31,708 --> 00:06:34,625
<i>to be proximate to lynching</i>
<i>and racial terrorism,</i>

123
00:06:34,708 --> 00:06:36,458
<i>to understand the weight</i>

124
00:06:36,541 --> 00:06:39,125
<i>that people of color</i>
<i>felt in these spaces</i>

125
00:06:39,208 --> 00:06:42,083
where you had
to basically be two people.

126
00:06:42,166 --> 00:06:44,458
One person around White people

127
00:06:44,541 --> 00:06:46,333
that would keep you safe,

128
00:06:46,416 --> 00:06:48,583
and another person
with your family.

129
00:06:48,666 --> 00:06:52,583
I think just gave him an insight
to the Black narrative.

130
00:06:52,666 --> 00:06:56,666
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

131
00:06:56,750 --> 00:06:58,583
Boy, they sure are having
a good ol' time

132
00:06:58,666 --> 00:07:00,000
over there at that crap game.

133
00:07:00,083 --> 00:07:03,666
PARKS:<i> Kansas itself offered you</i>
<i>freedom on one hand,</i>

134
00:07:03,750 --> 00:07:06,583
<i>and on the other hand, it was</i>
<i>trying to take it away from you.</i>

135
00:07:06,666 --> 00:07:09,750
Tuck! Tuck! Kirky's coming!

136
00:07:09,833 --> 00:07:12,250
♪ (TENSE MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

137
00:07:12,791 --> 00:07:14,250
Run, Tuck, run!

138
00:07:16,583 --> 00:07:18,375
KIRKY: Stop damn it, I'll shoot!

139
00:07:23,041 --> 00:07:24,083
(GUNSHOT)

140
00:07:24,166 --> 00:07:26,041
♪ (TENSE MUSIC CONTINUES) ♪

141
00:07:26,125 --> 00:07:28,250
PARKS:<i> Four or five</i>
<i>of my closest friends</i>

142
00:07:28,333 --> 00:07:30,333
<i>had died through violence.</i>

143
00:07:30,416 --> 00:07:32,291
<i>About four people</i>
<i>were shot to death.</i>

144
00:07:34,250 --> 00:07:36,291
<i>My mother wanted me</i>
<i>out of there.</i>

145
00:07:36,375 --> 00:07:39,125
<i>She knew it was a</i>
<i>dangerous place for me to live.</i>

146
00:07:42,833 --> 00:07:46,541
PHILIP BROOKMAN:
<i>Gordon lived a wandering life</i>
<i>as a young person.</i>

147
00:07:46,625 --> 00:07:48,500
He gets a job as a waiter

148
00:07:48,583 --> 00:07:50,666
on the dining car
of the Northern Pacific.

149
00:07:52,083 --> 00:07:54,041
PARKS:<i> I had great expectations,</i>
<i>you know.</i>

150
00:07:54,125 --> 00:07:56,250
<i>I thought I was going</i>
<i>to conquer a new world.</i>

151
00:07:56,333 --> 00:07:59,625
He had to go through getting
kicked off of the trains.

152
00:07:59,708 --> 00:08:02,125
He had to go through
hanging out with the bums.

153
00:08:02,208 --> 00:08:04,875
He had to go through all these
different forms of life,

154
00:08:04,958 --> 00:08:06,916
<i>but when you're traveling</i>
<i>around the world</i>

155
00:08:07,000 --> 00:08:09,125
<i>and you're in a place where</i>
<i>you've never been before,</i>

156
00:08:09,208 --> 00:08:11,708
the first thing
that you have to do is observe.

157
00:08:13,541 --> 00:08:14,833
And the more you observe,

158
00:08:14,916 --> 00:08:17,375
the more you understand
what's going on around you.

159
00:08:19,083 --> 00:08:21,916
JAMEL SHABAZZ:
<i>He would ride the trains</i>
<i>and pick up the magazines,</i>

160
00:08:22,000 --> 00:08:24,083
<i>and look at imagery and be</i>
<i>informed behind that.</i>

161
00:08:24,166 --> 00:08:26,166
<i>Having an opportunity to go to</i>
<i>different cities,</i>

162
00:08:26,250 --> 00:08:28,166
under some
really harsh conditions,

163
00:08:28,250 --> 00:08:30,666
just to survive
and being amongst the filth

164
00:08:30,750 --> 00:08:33,416
and the drunkenness
and addiction.

165
00:08:33,500 --> 00:08:35,583
<i>Luckily for him,</i>
<i>he was able to get that camera.</i>

166
00:08:40,958 --> 00:08:42,541
BROOKMAN:<i> He's teaching</i>
<i>himself photography</i>

167
00:08:42,625 --> 00:08:45,250
<i>by reading, uh,</i>
<i>training manuals.</i>

168
00:08:45,333 --> 00:08:48,041
<i>His studio</i>
<i>was the kitchen of his home,</i>

169
00:08:48,125 --> 00:08:51,541
and his lights
were made from tin cans.

170
00:08:51,625 --> 00:08:53,500
<i>That's how Gordon Parks</i>
<i>started out, you know,</i>

171
00:08:53,583 --> 00:08:56,500
<i>making pictures and then</i>
<i>selling them to the newspaper.</i>

172
00:08:57,791 --> 00:08:59,083
♪ (JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

173
00:08:59,166 --> 00:09:01,333
STEVENSON:
<i>When Black photographers began</i>

174
00:09:01,416 --> 00:09:03,333
<i>capturing African American life,</i>

175
00:09:03,416 --> 00:09:05,083
<i>it created a new relationship</i>

176
00:09:05,166 --> 00:09:08,083
for Black people
to their own identity.

177
00:09:09,416 --> 00:09:14,291
<i>When Gordon Parks came along,</i>
<i>he found value and interest</i>

178
00:09:14,375 --> 00:09:17,916
and art in the lives
of ordinary people.

179
00:09:20,208 --> 00:09:22,125
AVA DUVERNAY:
<i>At a time and in a society</i>

180
00:09:22,208 --> 00:09:24,916
<i>where Black people</i>
<i>were told far too often</i>

181
00:09:25,000 --> 00:09:27,958
that we're criminals,
that we're ugly,

182
00:09:28,041 --> 00:09:29,333
that we're less worthy

183
00:09:29,416 --> 00:09:32,250
to have the spotlight on us
for any reason,

184
00:09:32,333 --> 00:09:37,250
<i>Gordon put a lens</i>
<i>and a light on us for ourselves.</i>

185
00:09:37,333 --> 00:09:39,958
And allowed us to see
the elegance of the lives

186
00:09:40,041 --> 00:09:41,875
that we live and the places
where we are.

187
00:09:43,708 --> 00:09:45,625
♪ (JAZZ MUSIC CONTINUES) ♪

188
00:09:50,583 --> 00:09:54,250
BROOKMAN:<i> In January 1942,</i>
<i>Parks receives word</i>

189
00:09:54,333 --> 00:09:56,000
<i>that he's been</i>
<i>awarded a fellowship</i>

190
00:09:56,750 --> 00:09:58,375
<i>to work for a year at</i>

191
00:09:58,458 --> 00:10:01,833
the Farm Security Administration
in Washington.

192
00:10:01,916 --> 00:10:06,333
<i>The purpose of the FSA</i>
<i>was to resettle American farmers</i>

193
00:10:06,416 --> 00:10:09,208
<i>who had lost their land</i>
<i>during the Dust Bowl.</i>

194
00:10:09,291 --> 00:10:13,083
♪ (SOMBER MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

195
00:10:13,166 --> 00:10:16,791
BROOKMAN:<i> It set up a unit</i>
<i>of photographers and filmmakers</i>

196
00:10:16,875 --> 00:10:19,333
<i>who could help to document</i>
<i>what they were doing.</i>

197
00:10:19,416 --> 00:10:23,041
<i>It was run by a man by</i>
<i>the name of Roy Stryker.</i>

198
00:10:27,250 --> 00:10:29,083
MICHAL RAZ-RUSSO:<i> Many of the</i>
<i>photographers who shot for</i>

199
00:10:29,166 --> 00:10:32,541
the Farm Security Administration
become heroes for Gordon Parks,

200
00:10:32,625 --> 00:10:35,458
and he's really interested in
the process and their approach.

201
00:10:37,625 --> 00:10:39,500
<i>And so his idea is,</i>
<i>"Let me go out there,</i>

202
00:10:39,583 --> 00:10:41,791
<i>and let me</i>
<i>mentor under Roy Stryker."</i>

203
00:10:46,833 --> 00:10:48,333
PARKS:
<i>He was the one who taught me</i>

204
00:10:48,416 --> 00:10:49,958
<i>that when you are doing a story,</i>

205
00:10:50,041 --> 00:10:51,583
<i>it's not for you</i>
<i>to accept the people,</i>

206
00:10:51,666 --> 00:10:52,791
<i>but the people to accept you.</i>

207
00:10:52,875 --> 00:10:56,000
Because you are going
into their presence,

208
00:10:56,083 --> 00:10:58,291
asking them to help you.

209
00:10:58,375 --> 00:11:01,416
BROOKMAN:<i> Roy Stryker actually</i>
<i>introduces Gordon Parks</i>

210
00:11:01,500 --> 00:11:02,666
<i>to the cleaning woman,</i>

211
00:11:02,750 --> 00:11:06,125
<i>who cleans the offices in</i>
<i>the Agriculture Department.</i>

212
00:11:09,083 --> 00:11:10,875
<i>A woman by</i>
<i>the name of Ella Watson.</i>

213
00:11:12,166 --> 00:11:14,208
<i>He photographs her at work,</i>

214
00:11:14,291 --> 00:11:16,833
<i>sweeping floors,</i>
<i>cleaning the offices.</i>

215
00:11:18,750 --> 00:11:21,333
<i>In one office,</i>
<i>there's an American flag</i>

216
00:11:21,416 --> 00:11:22,583
<i>hanging on the wall.</i>

217
00:11:25,750 --> 00:11:27,625
LONNIE BUNCH:
<i>Here is a woman</i>

218
00:11:27,708 --> 00:11:30,375
<i>who in some ways</i>
<i>is the backbone of America...</i>

219
00:11:32,583 --> 00:11:35,208
yet she is standing
in front of a flag,

220
00:11:35,291 --> 00:11:38,208
in front of an America
that didn't believe in her.

221
00:11:40,958 --> 00:11:43,125
SPIKE LEE:<i> Gordon Parks</i>
<i>is one of my heroes.</i>

222
00:11:46,125 --> 00:11:47,500
<i>Ella Watson.</i>

223
00:11:47,583 --> 00:11:50,500
<i>This photograph, to me,</i>
<i>talks about</i>

224
00:11:50,583 --> 00:11:51,958
how our ancestors,

225
00:11:53,125 --> 00:11:55,625
from 1619,

226
00:11:55,708 --> 00:11:59,958
when that first slave ship hit
Jamestown, Virginia.

227
00:12:00,041 --> 00:12:03,208
We have fought and died
for this country.

228
00:12:03,291 --> 00:12:08,500
We have loved this country, but
the love has not been returned.

229
00:12:08,583 --> 00:12:11,166
That's what
this photograph says to me.

230
00:12:13,708 --> 00:12:16,791
<i>Then I thought of Grant Wood</i>
<i>and</i> American Gothic.

231
00:12:18,916 --> 00:12:20,625
<i>I said,</i>
<i>"Take this broom in one hand,</i>

232
00:12:20,708 --> 00:12:22,125
<i>take this mop in the other,</i>

233
00:12:22,208 --> 00:12:24,125
<i>and stand before that</i>
<i>American flag."</i>

234
00:12:26,166 --> 00:12:27,250
<i>I blew it up the next morning,</i>

235
00:12:27,333 --> 00:12:29,250
<i>put it on Stryker's desk,</i>
<i>and he nearly fainted.</i>

236
00:12:29,333 --> 00:12:31,791
<i>He said, "Oh my God, you're</i>
<i>going to get us all fired."</i>

237
00:12:35,250 --> 00:12:38,583
LATOYA RUBY FRAZIER:
<i>She's standing in front</i>
<i>of the American flag...</i>

238
00:12:40,041 --> 00:12:42,666
in a society, a nation,
and a government

239
00:12:42,750 --> 00:12:48,541
that doesn't recognize her
as a full human being.

240
00:12:48,625 --> 00:12:52,958
PARKS:<i> I made a very innocent,</i>
<i>bold, outrageous statement.</i>

241
00:12:57,541 --> 00:13:00,583
FRAZIER: You know, it reminds me
of the Malcolm X quote,

242
00:13:00,666 --> 00:13:02,791
<i>"The most hated,</i>
<i>the most mistreated,</i>

243
00:13:02,875 --> 00:13:06,833
<i>and the most abused person</i>
<i>in America is the Black woman."</i>

244
00:13:06,916 --> 00:13:09,541
<i>There it is right there,</i>
<i>written on her face.</i>

245
00:13:11,041 --> 00:13:14,166
♪ (SOMBER MUSIC FADES) ♪

246
00:13:14,250 --> 00:13:16,541
BROOKMAN:<i> Parks continues</i>
<i>to photograph Ella Watson.</i>

247
00:13:16,625 --> 00:13:18,166
♪ (WHIMSICAL MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

248
00:13:18,250 --> 00:13:21,125
BROOKMAN:<i> He worked with her</i>
<i>for a period of weeks.</i>

249
00:13:21,208 --> 00:13:24,875
<i>He photographs her at church,</i>
<i>he photographs her neighborhood.</i>

250
00:13:24,958 --> 00:13:26,708
<i>There is one amazing photograph</i>

251
00:13:26,791 --> 00:13:28,916
<i>that he makes</i>
<i>of Ella Watson at home.</i>

252
00:13:30,291 --> 00:13:32,208
<i>The photograph is divided</i>
<i>right down the middle,</i>

253
00:13:32,291 --> 00:13:34,958
<i>and you see Ella Watson</i>
<i>on the left side,</i>

254
00:13:35,041 --> 00:13:37,916
<i>helping to feed</i>
<i>one of the young kids.</i>

255
00:13:38,000 --> 00:13:40,666
<i>On the right side of the picture</i>
<i>there is a mirror,</i>

256
00:13:40,750 --> 00:13:44,208
<i>and her adopted daughter is</i>
<i>reflected in the mirror.</i>

257
00:13:45,583 --> 00:13:47,666
<i>You can see, also a photograph,</i>

258
00:13:47,750 --> 00:13:51,083
<i>it's a photograph</i>
<i>of Ella Watson's parents.</i>

259
00:13:51,166 --> 00:13:54,166
<i>So you're actually seeing four</i>
<i>generations of this family,</i>

260
00:13:54,250 --> 00:13:55,541
<i>all in one photograph</i>

261
00:13:55,625 --> 00:13:58,541
<i>that's composed in a very</i>
<i>sophisticated way.</i>

262
00:14:01,125 --> 00:14:03,250
RAZ-RUSSO:<i> That's</i>
<i>the turning point for him.</i>

263
00:14:03,333 --> 00:14:05,708
<i>It's there,</i>
<i>through this project,</i>

264
00:14:05,791 --> 00:14:08,125
<i>that he understands</i>
<i>how important it is</i>

265
00:14:08,208 --> 00:14:10,000
<i>to get to know his subject.</i>

266
00:14:10,083 --> 00:14:12,416
To really try and depict
the humanity

267
00:14:12,500 --> 00:14:14,000
of the subjects
that he is photographing.

268
00:14:14,083 --> 00:14:17,541
♪ (MUSIC CONTINUES) ♪

269
00:14:25,541 --> 00:14:28,291
-(CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKS)
-(BIRDS CHIRPING)

270
00:14:29,583 --> 00:14:31,375
MR. SMILEY: This is his way
of holding on to me,

271
00:14:31,458 --> 00:14:34,166
and I don't spend
enough time with him. (CHUCKLES)

272
00:14:35,541 --> 00:14:38,750
He says, "I got you now,
can't go nowhere." (CHUCKLES)

273
00:14:38,833 --> 00:14:41,291
-FRAZIER: "What do you mean?"
-MR. SMILEY: Yeah,
what you been doing?

274
00:14:41,375 --> 00:14:43,250
Leave me out here all by myself.

275
00:14:44,208 --> 00:14:46,625
FRAZIER: Look this way,
Mr. Smiley.

276
00:14:46,708 --> 00:14:50,583
<i>When I read</i>
<i>Gordon's autobiography,</i>
A Choice of Weapons,

277
00:14:50,666 --> 00:14:52,833
<i>I mean, everything</i>
<i>that he went through</i>

278
00:14:52,916 --> 00:14:56,750
<i>to define himself</i>
<i>on his own terms</i>

279
00:14:56,833 --> 00:14:58,750
<i>and to say with the camera,</i>

280
00:14:58,833 --> 00:15:01,416
<i>"This is how I am going</i>
<i>to make my mark and change</i>

281
00:15:01,500 --> 00:15:04,916
<i>all the things that I don't like</i>
<i>about America, right."</i>

282
00:15:05,000 --> 00:15:08,625
<i>It stays with me</i>
<i>because I grew up</i>

283
00:15:08,708 --> 00:15:13,000
<i>living in a dilapidated house</i>
<i>next to the railroad</i>

284
00:15:13,083 --> 00:15:15,250
<i>in an industrial small town,</i>

285
00:15:15,333 --> 00:15:19,000
<i>watching everyone kind of</i>
<i>disappear and the city shrink</i>

286
00:15:19,083 --> 00:15:22,625
<i>and have all our basic</i>
<i>human rights stripped from us.</i>

287
00:15:22,708 --> 00:15:25,208
♪ (SOMBER MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

288
00:15:30,000 --> 00:15:34,166
FRAZIER:<i> I found the ability</i>
<i>to cope and move forward</i>
<i>through art.</i>

289
00:15:34,250 --> 00:15:36,708
<i>Right, it started out being</i>
<i>drawings and paintings</i>

290
00:15:36,791 --> 00:15:39,083
<i>and then eventually moving</i>
<i>into photography.</i>

291
00:15:44,875 --> 00:15:47,750
Those photographs
are what enabled me

292
00:15:47,833 --> 00:15:49,666
to save my own life.

293
00:15:59,125 --> 00:16:03,791
In 2016, I was commissioned
by<i> ELLE</i> magazine

294
00:16:03,875 --> 00:16:08,208
and Hearst Corporation
to produce a photo essay

295
00:16:08,291 --> 00:16:10,541
<i>about the Flint water crisis.</i>

296
00:16:10,625 --> 00:16:13,750
REPORTER 1:<i> It's not safe</i>
<i>to drink the water</i>
<i>in Flint, Michigan.</i>

297
00:16:13,833 --> 00:16:16,375
REPORTER 2:<i> Flint disconnected</i>
<i>its water supply through Detroit</i>

298
00:16:16,458 --> 00:16:19,250
<i>and began drawing water</i>
<i>from the Flint River instead.</i>

299
00:16:19,333 --> 00:16:23,000
REPORTER 3:<i> Highly corrosive</i>
<i>river water flowed through</i>
<i>the city's lead pipes,</i>

300
00:16:23,083 --> 00:16:26,458
<i>leaching lead into</i>
<i>the water supply.</i>

301
00:16:26,541 --> 00:16:29,833
FRAZIER:<i> That's how</i>
<i>Shea Cobb and I met</i>

302
00:16:29,916 --> 00:16:33,666
<i>and how I've built</i>
<i>this very robust friendship.</i>

303
00:16:33,750 --> 00:16:37,750
<i>It was for several months</i>
<i>that I was photographing Shea</i>

304
00:16:37,833 --> 00:16:39,875
<i>and her</i>
<i>eight-year-old daughter, Zion.</i>

305
00:16:42,333 --> 00:16:45,916
<i>And Shea was faced</i>
<i>with having to decide</i>

306
00:16:46,000 --> 00:16:48,458
<i>to protect</i>
<i>her daughter's health,</i>

307
00:16:48,541 --> 00:16:52,500
and the issue with lead is,
in an eight-year-old child,

308
00:16:52,583 --> 00:16:54,958
it's going to
leach into their brain.

309
00:16:56,333 --> 00:16:57,708
<i>It couldn't have been</i>
<i>more than a week</i>

310
00:16:57,791 --> 00:17:00,833
<i>that I was photographing</i>
<i>Shea in Flint.</i>

311
00:17:00,916 --> 00:17:02,958
<i>She said her father</i>
<i>sent her something.</i>

312
00:17:04,541 --> 00:17:07,416
<i>And it's a picture of</i>
<i>her at the age of 12,</i>

313
00:17:07,500 --> 00:17:11,375
<i>taking her first sip of water</i>
<i>from a freshwater spring</i>

314
00:17:11,458 --> 00:17:15,375
<i>on the land where</i>
<i>her father lives in Mississippi,</i>

315
00:17:16,750 --> 00:17:18,375
<i>with a message that said,</i>

316
00:17:18,458 --> 00:17:21,083
"This water won't kill you.
Come home."

317
00:17:22,833 --> 00:17:26,541
<i>And so she makes the</i>
<i>decision to leave her mother</i>

318
00:17:26,625 --> 00:17:31,083
<i>and make the reverse migration</i>
<i>back to the South,</i>

319
00:17:31,166 --> 00:17:32,791
<i>where her father lives,</i>

320
00:17:32,875 --> 00:17:36,666
<i>on land that his family</i>
<i>has always owned.</i>

321
00:17:36,750 --> 00:17:39,333
Oh wow!
He's gotten so much bigger.

322
00:17:39,416 --> 00:17:42,791
This is the one that
I was seeing that was a baby?

323
00:17:42,875 --> 00:17:47,041
When I started doing
karate moves, like to practice,
he thinks he can do it,

324
00:17:47,125 --> 00:17:50,333
so he holds onto stuff
and then fell flat on his butt.

325
00:17:50,416 --> 00:17:52,041
FRAZIER:
<i>So I returned to Mississippi</i>

326
00:17:52,125 --> 00:17:53,916
<i>to continue a body of work</i>

327
00:17:54,000 --> 00:17:57,708
<i>that I'm committed to</i>
<i>with Shea Cobb,</i>

328
00:17:57,791 --> 00:18:01,375
<i>her daughter Zion,</i>
<i>who's now 12,</i>

329
00:18:01,458 --> 00:18:06,125
<i>and Shea's father,</i>
<i>Mr. Doug Smiley.</i>

330
00:18:07,916 --> 00:18:11,416
MR. SMILEY:
Thank you, Lord, for this food
and all of our many blessings.

331
00:18:11,500 --> 00:18:14,833
-Thank you.
-ALL: Amen.

332
00:18:14,916 --> 00:18:19,625
FRAZIER:<i> And so it was</i>
<i>a tumultuous time</i>
<i>to enter into Shea's life,</i>

333
00:18:19,708 --> 00:18:21,625
<i>and she didn't</i>
<i>have to trust me,</i>

334
00:18:21,708 --> 00:18:24,166
<i>but I think</i>
<i>it goes back to Gordon.</i>

335
00:18:24,250 --> 00:18:26,791
You need to be present

336
00:18:26,875 --> 00:18:30,541
and talk to people
for as long as it takes.

337
00:18:32,375 --> 00:18:36,625
<i>I get to know the person that is</i>
<i>the main subject of the work,</i>

338
00:18:36,708 --> 00:18:39,291
<i>and I learn to empathize...</i>

339
00:18:40,500 --> 00:18:45,250
<i>and also allow their feelings</i>
<i>to guide me through</i>

340
00:18:45,333 --> 00:18:47,333
<i>the landscape that they inhabit.</i>

341
00:18:49,208 --> 00:18:51,791
<i>This was, you know,</i>
<i>a real lesson</i>

342
00:18:51,875 --> 00:18:53,291
about not only empathizing

343
00:18:53,375 --> 00:18:57,333
but listening and taking
the instructions
and allowing the images

344
00:18:57,416 --> 00:18:59,083
<i>to be authored by someone else.</i>

345
00:18:59,166 --> 00:19:01,583
<i>Like,</i>
<i>that's a real collaboration.</i>

346
00:19:01,666 --> 00:19:04,083
<i>And I also knew</i>
<i>to take those cues</i>

347
00:19:04,166 --> 00:19:08,958
because I had been
closely looking at Ralph Ellison

348
00:19:09,041 --> 00:19:13,666
and Gordon Parks's collaboration
in the late '40s.

349
00:19:13,750 --> 00:19:18,541
♪ (UPBEAT JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

350
00:19:18,625 --> 00:19:21,541
PARKS:<i> Ralph Ellison wrote</i>
Invisible Man.

351
00:19:21,625 --> 00:19:25,958
<i>I did a story on the need</i>
<i>of psychiatric treatment</i>
<i>in Harlem.</i>

352
00:19:31,375 --> 00:19:33,833
Ellison actually
writes a manifesto

353
00:19:33,916 --> 00:19:36,750
for Gordon Parks
titled the "Pictorial Problem."

354
00:19:38,583 --> 00:19:41,041
<i>He wants</i>
<i>the photographs to function</i>

355
00:19:41,125 --> 00:19:43,833
<i>as both document and symbol.</i>

356
00:19:43,916 --> 00:19:47,208
And this phrase becomes
a kind of guiding principle

357
00:19:47,291 --> 00:19:49,208
for Gordon Parks's
entire career.

358
00:19:53,125 --> 00:19:57,666
<i>This idea that photographs</i>
<i>can transcend what is</i>
<i>just being depicted.</i>

359
00:19:59,750 --> 00:20:04,750
FRAZIER:<i> Ellison details a list</i>
<i>of certain kinds of images</i>

360
00:20:04,833 --> 00:20:07,250
that he would like
Parks to make.

361
00:20:09,166 --> 00:20:13,916
<i>Images that psychologically</i>
<i>impact the viewer.</i>

362
00:20:16,541 --> 00:20:17,625
<i>The feeling of a place</i>

363
00:20:17,708 --> 00:20:21,333
<i>and the feeling of being robbed</i>
<i>and dehumanized...</i>

364
00:20:23,166 --> 00:20:26,500
in an undulating poetic
visual way.

365
00:20:29,875 --> 00:20:33,500
RAZ-RUSSO:<i> Later in 1952,</i>
<i>Parks approaches Ralph Ellison.</i>

366
00:20:33,583 --> 00:20:36,083
Ellison had just published
<i>Invisible Man,</i>

367
00:20:36,166 --> 00:20:38,750
<i>and he says, "Let's create</i>
<i>another collaboration</i>

368
00:20:38,833 --> 00:20:40,666
<i>to celebrate the publication."</i>

369
00:20:43,500 --> 00:20:46,333
<i>They go out on</i>
<i>the streets once again</i>
<i>and they create photographs</i>

370
00:20:46,416 --> 00:20:49,250
<i>that represent nearly</i>
<i>every single scene in the book.</i>

371
00:20:55,333 --> 00:20:58,000
LEE:<i> This picture could</i>
<i>have been taken during slavery.</i>

372
00:20:58,083 --> 00:20:59,625
We're all tryna watch out

373
00:20:59,708 --> 00:21:01,791
for the motherfuckin'
slave catchers.

374
00:21:02,833 --> 00:21:07,041
And my brother here
ran off the plantation.

375
00:21:08,250 --> 00:21:10,625
And he's running for his life.

376
00:21:14,708 --> 00:21:17,958
♪ (UPBEAT JAZZ MUSIC FADES) ♪

377
00:21:18,041 --> 00:21:21,791
Parks takes the portfolio
of images that he shot

378
00:21:21,875 --> 00:21:25,333
for his collaboration
with Ralph Ellison in 1948

379
00:21:25,416 --> 00:21:26,958
<i>to</i> LIFE<i> magazine,</i>

380
00:21:27,041 --> 00:21:29,708
<i>to pitch them a story</i>
<i>about a Harlem gang leader.</i>

381
00:21:32,625 --> 00:21:34,958
BUNCH: LIFE<i> magazine</i>
<i>was the Bible.</i>

382
00:21:36,625 --> 00:21:39,291
<i>People read the newspapers,</i>
<i>listened to the radio.</i>

383
00:21:39,375 --> 00:21:44,208
But for many people,
it really was<i> LIFE</i> magazine
that helped them understand

384
00:21:44,291 --> 00:21:46,041
what was going on in America.

385
00:21:46,125 --> 00:21:47,416
PARKS:
<i>I met the picture editor,</i>

386
00:21:47,500 --> 00:21:50,416
<i>who offered me</i>
<i>the great sum of 500 dollars</i>

387
00:21:50,500 --> 00:21:52,000
<i>to do the Harlem gang story.</i>

388
00:21:53,750 --> 00:21:55,708
<i>When I walked out of there,</i>
<i>I was frightened.</i>

389
00:21:55,791 --> 00:21:59,333
How do you walk in and ask
the gang leader to let me
photograph your life

390
00:21:59,416 --> 00:22:00,875
when he's hiding
from the police?

391
00:22:03,291 --> 00:22:04,833
<i>I used the broad approach</i>

392
00:22:04,916 --> 00:22:06,875
<i>when I first went up</i>
<i>to the police precinct</i>

393
00:22:06,958 --> 00:22:09,875
<i>and asked one of the detectives</i>
<i>if they knew such a gang leader.</i>

394
00:22:09,958 --> 00:22:11,708
And they said,
"Yeah, we know plenty of them,

395
00:22:11,791 --> 00:22:13,625
but none of them gonna
let you photograph them."

396
00:22:15,208 --> 00:22:17,708
<i>While I was in the precinct,</i>
<i>a young man walked in,</i>

397
00:22:17,791 --> 00:22:21,750
<i>and he literally cursed</i>
<i>the desk sergeant out</i>
<i>about something.</i>

398
00:22:21,833 --> 00:22:25,166
<i>And so I said</i>
<i>to my detective friend,</i>
<i>"Who is that guy?"</i>

399
00:22:25,250 --> 00:22:29,625
<i>He said, "That is</i>
<i>the most notorious gang leader</i>
<i>in all of Harlem."</i>

400
00:22:32,375 --> 00:22:33,750
<i>His name was Red Jackson.</i>

401
00:22:33,833 --> 00:22:35,625
<i>I told him</i>
<i>I was from</i> LIFE<i> magazine.</i>

402
00:22:35,708 --> 00:22:38,083
<i>I want to do a story on him,</i>
<i>very bluntly, you know.</i>

403
00:22:38,166 --> 00:22:40,125
<i>That's the way I got</i>
<i>into that story.</i>

404
00:22:45,708 --> 00:22:47,250
<i>I didn't take pictures</i>
<i>in the beginning.</i>

405
00:22:47,333 --> 00:22:49,875
<i>I just sort of sat with them</i>
<i>on the stoop in Harlem</i>

406
00:22:49,958 --> 00:22:53,541
<i>in the hot summer days</i>
<i>and listened to their talk.</i>

407
00:22:53,625 --> 00:22:55,541
♪ (SOFT JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

408
00:22:58,041 --> 00:23:00,458
PARKS:<i> So one day he just said,</i>

409
00:23:00,541 --> 00:23:02,666
<i>"When are you going</i>
<i>to use your camera?"</i>

410
00:23:02,750 --> 00:23:07,208
I said, "Oh, you know,
anytime something happens."

411
00:23:10,708 --> 00:23:14,666
This is like what he learned
from the Farm Security
Administration project

412
00:23:14,750 --> 00:23:16,416
he does with Ella Watson.

413
00:23:16,500 --> 00:23:19,250
<i>He knows that he has to get</i>
<i>to know somebody really well</i>

414
00:23:19,333 --> 00:23:20,250
<i>and spend time with them.</i>

415
00:23:20,333 --> 00:23:21,916
Red was a little apprehensive,

416
00:23:22,000 --> 00:23:24,250
but they built
this great bond with each other,

417
00:23:24,333 --> 00:23:27,166
and Gordon recognized
his leadership ability,

418
00:23:27,250 --> 00:23:30,625
<i>and they developed</i>
<i>a really unique relationship.</i>

419
00:23:30,708 --> 00:23:33,666
PARKS:<i> I stayed with his gang</i>
<i>about three months.</i>

420
00:23:36,791 --> 00:23:40,333
MAURICE BERGER:
<i>He photographed Red</i>
<i>in his everyday life.</i>

421
00:23:40,416 --> 00:23:42,875
<i>Being with his mother</i>
<i>in the kitchen cooking,</i>

422
00:23:42,958 --> 00:23:44,375
<i>washing the dishes,</i>

423
00:23:46,166 --> 00:23:49,041
sitting with his brother while
his brother was reading.

424
00:23:50,083 --> 00:23:53,333
RAZ-RUSSO:<i> His goal was</i>
<i>to create a story</i>

425
00:23:53,416 --> 00:23:55,291
from an insider point of view.

426
00:23:57,666 --> 00:23:59,958
BUNCH:
<i>He added levels of complexity</i>

427
00:24:00,041 --> 00:24:04,125
and levels of understanding,
that you might not have gotten
in other photography.

428
00:24:06,916 --> 00:24:09,250
No one's a gangster
24 hours a day.

429
00:24:10,958 --> 00:24:12,916
Everyone who is a gangster
has a family.

430
00:24:17,541 --> 00:24:19,875
BROOKMAN:
<i>He also photographs him</i>
<i>out on the streets...</i>

431
00:24:21,041 --> 00:24:22,166
<i>with members of his gang.</i>

432
00:24:24,833 --> 00:24:26,958
<i>He photographs</i>
<i>fights and violence.</i>

433
00:24:28,833 --> 00:24:32,708
So it's a really interesting
look at the life of a young,

434
00:24:32,791 --> 00:24:34,291
you know, gang leader.

435
00:24:36,375 --> 00:24:39,375
PARKS:<i> Two boys were killed</i>
<i>while I was with him.</i>

436
00:24:39,458 --> 00:24:43,958
<i>There's one picture in</i>
<i>the</i> LIFE<i> story of Herbie</i>
<i>lying in his coffin.</i>

437
00:24:44,041 --> 00:24:46,708
<i>He'd been stabbed in the neck</i>
<i>and parts of his head.</i>

438
00:24:48,708 --> 00:24:52,666
<i>And Red picked Herbie's head up</i>
<i>and felt the wounds,</i>

439
00:24:52,750 --> 00:24:55,208
<i>and said, "We're going</i>
<i>to do the same thing to them."</i>

440
00:24:56,916 --> 00:24:59,500
SHABAZZ:<i> I think that Gordon saw</i>
<i>himself in Red Jackson.</i>

441
00:24:59,583 --> 00:25:01,541
Because if Gordon didn't pick
up the camera,

442
00:25:01,625 --> 00:25:03,416
he could have
easily been Red Jackson.

443
00:25:04,750 --> 00:25:07,416
<i>He just saw a young man</i>
<i>that had a lot of potential.</i>

444
00:25:07,500 --> 00:25:10,083
<i>He was a leader.</i>
<i>He saw he didn't have a father.</i>

445
00:25:10,166 --> 00:25:13,750
<i>At the same time,</i>
<i>trying to show him in a light</i>

446
00:25:13,833 --> 00:25:17,208
<i>that will illuminate some</i>
<i>of the problems</i>
<i>that existed in Harlem</i>

447
00:25:17,291 --> 00:25:20,666
<i>in regards to poverty</i>
<i>and gang warfare and injustice.</i>

448
00:25:28,166 --> 00:25:29,791
SHABAZZ:
How y'all feeling today?

449
00:25:29,875 --> 00:25:31,541
I like that outfit there,
young man.

450
00:25:31,625 --> 00:25:34,625
Can I borrow that jacket? Wow,
I like that haircut too, troop.

451
00:25:34,708 --> 00:25:36,500
Who hooked you up?
All right, here we go.

452
00:25:36,583 --> 00:25:38,125
I'm gonna say showtime,
and let's do it.

453
00:25:38,208 --> 00:25:39,208
You guys are ready?

454
00:25:39,291 --> 00:25:40,708
'Cause I think you guys are
gonna be famous.

455
00:25:40,791 --> 00:25:42,250
All right, here we go. Ready?

456
00:25:42,333 --> 00:25:44,666
-All right, look at me.
I think you guys got it.
-(CAMERA CLICKING)

457
00:25:44,750 --> 00:25:47,833
<i>Gordon spoke about</i>
<i>the power of photography</i>
<i>and imagery</i>

458
00:25:47,916 --> 00:25:51,250
<i>and how you could use the</i>
<i>camera as a weapon.</i>

459
00:25:51,333 --> 00:25:55,000
<i>It's through</i>
<i>the photography that I want</i>
<i>to really express myself.</i>

460
00:25:55,083 --> 00:25:58,791
<i>That gave me a voice</i>
<i>'cause prior to that I was lost.</i>

461
00:25:58,875 --> 00:26:01,916
<i>I fell victim to the streets,</i>
<i>but once I picked up the camera,</i>

462
00:26:02,000 --> 00:26:03,291
<i>it became my compass.</i>

463
00:26:04,875 --> 00:26:06,375
I have a tool that I can use,

464
00:26:06,458 --> 00:26:08,000
not only to document
the community

465
00:26:08,083 --> 00:26:09,708
but to save lives
at the same time.

466
00:26:11,000 --> 00:26:13,250
<i>Gordon spoke</i>
<i>about the 35 millimeter</i>

467
00:26:13,333 --> 00:26:15,541
<i>and how it could be</i>
<i>a more effective weapon.</i>

468
00:26:15,625 --> 00:26:17,083
<i>And that really resonated</i>
<i>with me</i>

469
00:26:17,166 --> 00:26:18,666
<i>because I grew up</i>
<i>in a gun culture,</i>

470
00:26:18,750 --> 00:26:21,250
<i>you know with the</i>
<i>nine millimeters.</i>

471
00:26:21,333 --> 00:26:23,500
It was the empathy that he had
for his subjects

472
00:26:23,583 --> 00:26:25,500
that I thought was
really powerful.

473
00:26:25,583 --> 00:26:28,375
<i>You had Red Jackson,</i>
<i>his difficult life coming up.</i>

474
00:26:29,916 --> 00:26:31,958
Gordon just wanted
to be like a mentor and a guide.

475
00:26:34,333 --> 00:26:36,916
<i>I spent 20 years in</i>
<i>the Department of Corrections.</i>

476
00:26:37,000 --> 00:26:40,041
<i>When the opportunity came</i>
<i>to work on Rikers Island,</i>

477
00:26:40,125 --> 00:26:42,083
<i>I accepted it</i>
<i>as my new assignment.</i>

478
00:26:42,166 --> 00:26:46,375
NEWS REPORTER:
<i>Crack is causing an increase in</i>
<i>murder and other violent crime.</i>

479
00:26:46,458 --> 00:26:48,625
SHABAZZ:<i> This is right around</i>
<i>the same time</i>

480
00:26:48,708 --> 00:26:50,166
<i>that the crack epidemic hit.</i>

481
00:26:51,375 --> 00:26:52,625
<i>So now I'm in this space,</i>

482
00:26:52,708 --> 00:26:55,041
<i>and I'm seeing</i>
<i>the impact of drugs</i>

483
00:26:55,125 --> 00:26:56,875
<i>and the lack of</i>
<i>rehabilitation.</i>

484
00:26:58,208 --> 00:27:00,500
<i>I'm taking my camera</i>
<i>to the job every day.</i>

485
00:27:00,583 --> 00:27:02,125
<i>I'm documenting</i>
<i>the world inside.</i>

486
00:27:02,208 --> 00:27:04,875
<i>I'm witnessing</i>
<i>brutality and hatred.</i>

487
00:27:04,958 --> 00:27:08,208
<i>I felt it was my responsibility</i>
<i>to talk to young people</i>

488
00:27:08,291 --> 00:27:09,333
<i>about what was going on</i>

489
00:27:09,416 --> 00:27:11,000
<i>because a lot of young men</i>
<i>were dying</i>

490
00:27:11,083 --> 00:27:12,833
<i>at the hands of other young men.</i>

491
00:27:12,916 --> 00:27:15,708
And I was very troubled by
what I was seeing.

492
00:27:15,791 --> 00:27:18,208
So I would place myself
in different positions

493
00:27:18,291 --> 00:27:20,833
where young people would be at,
and I would approach them.

494
00:27:23,250 --> 00:27:26,291
<i>If I saw a group, I would look</i>
<i>at the leader and say,</i>

495
00:27:26,375 --> 00:27:28,708
<i>"You know, with all due respect,</i>
<i>I'm a photographer,</i>

496
00:27:28,791 --> 00:27:30,250
<i>when I look at you,</i>
<i>I see greatness.</i>

497
00:27:30,333 --> 00:27:32,500
<i>If you don't mind, I'd like to</i>
<i>take a photograph</i>

498
00:27:32,583 --> 00:27:33,791
<i>of you and your crew."</i>

499
00:27:36,083 --> 00:27:37,666
<i>And then I would start</i>
<i>posing them.</i>

500
00:27:37,750 --> 00:27:39,125
<i>And then</i>
<i>they would create poses.</i>

501
00:27:39,208 --> 00:27:40,708
<i>and the poses gave it life.</i>

502
00:27:41,916 --> 00:27:44,125
♪ (JOYFUL MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

503
00:27:45,791 --> 00:27:49,250
SHABAZZ:<i> Once the film roll</i>
<i>was completed, I would put</i>
<i>the film in the shop,</i>

504
00:27:49,333 --> 00:27:52,291
<i>I would come back in an hour,</i>
<i>and I would go back to the</i>
<i>location,</i>

505
00:27:52,375 --> 00:27:53,791
<i>I would give out prints.</i>

506
00:27:57,500 --> 00:27:59,916
<i>It let them know that</i>
<i>they weren't invisible.</i>

507
00:28:00,000 --> 00:28:02,500
<i>As kids, we could</i>
<i>just tear each other down.</i>

508
00:28:02,583 --> 00:28:04,500
<i>I use the camera</i>
<i>to build people up</i>

509
00:28:04,583 --> 00:28:06,125
<i>and let people feel special.</i>

510
00:28:15,041 --> 00:28:16,500
<i>A lot of them</i>
<i>were really receptive</i>

511
00:28:16,583 --> 00:28:18,875
<i>to hearing what I was saying</i>
<i>'cause I'm speaking in real</i>
<i>time.</i>

512
00:28:18,958 --> 00:28:21,041
Just a few hours ago,
I was on Rikers Island,

513
00:28:21,125 --> 00:28:23,125
and I witnessed, you know,
people getting stabbed

514
00:28:23,208 --> 00:28:25,208
and individuals that thought
that they can handle it,

515
00:28:25,291 --> 00:28:26,958
and they couldn't.
And they would listen.

516
00:28:27,041 --> 00:28:31,000
So I was trying to
encourage them to be better.
You know, I didn't want to see

517
00:28:31,083 --> 00:28:33,708
<i>no more</i>
<i>of these young men incarcerated.</i>

518
00:28:34,708 --> 00:28:37,625
♪ (JOYFUL MUSIC FADES) ♪

519
00:28:37,708 --> 00:28:40,958
I owe a lot of
where I'm at right now to Gordon

520
00:28:41,041 --> 00:28:43,916
<i>because we didn't have a lot</i>
<i>of Black photographers</i>
<i>to mirror,</i>

521
00:28:44,000 --> 00:28:47,333
<i>you know, when I was coming up.</i>
<i>Gordon was that pathfinder.</i>

522
00:28:49,833 --> 00:28:51,916
NARRATOR: LIFE<i> magazine</i>
<i>is the headquarters</i>

523
00:28:52,000 --> 00:28:53,708
<i>for photographer Gordon Parks</i>

524
00:28:53,791 --> 00:28:55,250
<i>on the staff of the popular</i>

525
00:28:55,333 --> 00:28:58,291
<i>pictorial news magazine</i>
<i>since 1949.</i>

526
00:28:58,375 --> 00:29:01,583
<i>And a man who stands</i>
<i>at the top of his profession.</i>

527
00:29:01,666 --> 00:29:03,375
BROOKMAN:
<i>Because of the success of</i>

528
00:29:03,458 --> 00:29:06,916
<i>"Harlem Gang Leader",</i>
<i>Parks was hired onto the staff</i>

529
00:29:07,000 --> 00:29:10,041
<i>as the first African American</i>
<i>photographer at</i> LIFE,

530
00:29:10,125 --> 00:29:12,750
which was a really big deal.

531
00:29:12,833 --> 00:29:17,166
<i>This was entry into the media</i>
<i>that was seen internationally.</i>

532
00:29:17,250 --> 00:29:19,833
NARRATOR:<i> Parks's work</i>
<i>is amongst the finest</i>
<i>in a magazine,</i>

533
00:29:19,916 --> 00:29:21,833
<i>noted for</i>
<i>photographic excellence.</i>

534
00:29:21,916 --> 00:29:25,166
BERGER:<i> By the mid-1950s,</i>
<i>Parks had already become,</i>

535
00:29:25,250 --> 00:29:28,500
for want of a better word,
very established.

536
00:29:28,583 --> 00:29:32,916
JELANI COBB:<i> He really does have</i>
<i>that internally solid</i>

537
00:29:33,000 --> 00:29:35,375
perseverance kind of
quality to him.

538
00:29:37,541 --> 00:29:39,708
PARKS:
<i>I've tried to use the camera</i>

539
00:29:39,791 --> 00:29:41,750
<i>to sort of</i>
<i>correct the things that</i>

540
00:29:41,833 --> 00:29:45,541
<i>I experienced as a young Black</i>
<i>man coming up in America.</i>

541
00:29:46,916 --> 00:29:49,250
COBB:
<i>And then with all that</i>

542
00:29:49,333 --> 00:29:52,333
<i>Black people</i>
<i>were confronting at that point,</i>

543
00:29:52,416 --> 00:29:55,333
it requires a great deal
of temerity

544
00:29:55,416 --> 00:29:59,000
to say that you're going
to change that with your camera.

545
00:30:02,000 --> 00:30:07,541
BERGER:
<i>In 1956,</i> LIFE<i> sent Gordon</i>
<i>to Alabama</i>

546
00:30:07,625 --> 00:30:12,000
to do a story about segregation
in the Jim Crow South.

547
00:30:14,666 --> 00:30:17,375
KHALIL MUHAMMAD:
<i>Dispatches coming out</i>
<i>of the south</i>

548
00:30:17,458 --> 00:30:21,500
are the usual reporting
on racial violence.

549
00:30:23,750 --> 00:30:27,000
COBB:
<i>In 1955, just months before</i>

550
00:30:27,083 --> 00:30:29,500
<i>Gordon Parks traveled</i>
<i>to Alabama,</i>

551
00:30:29,583 --> 00:30:33,250
<i>Emmett Till was</i>
<i>brutally tortured and killed</i>

552
00:30:33,333 --> 00:30:34,833
<i>in Money, Mississippi.</i>

553
00:30:37,416 --> 00:30:39,958
<i>If the death of my son</i>
<i>can mean something</i>

554
00:30:40,041 --> 00:30:43,250
to the other unfortunate people
all over the world,

555
00:30:43,333 --> 00:30:46,708
then for him
to have died a hero

556
00:30:46,791 --> 00:30:50,666
would mean more to me
than for him just to have died.

557
00:30:50,750 --> 00:30:54,250
COBB:<i> His mother Mamie allowed</i>
Jet<i> magazine to publish</i>

558
00:30:54,333 --> 00:30:58,833
<i>the images of his defiled,</i>
<i>desecrated body.</i>

559
00:31:02,083 --> 00:31:04,708
I saw Emmett Till's
photograph in<i> Jet</i> magazine.

560
00:31:07,541 --> 00:31:08,958
I'll never forget it.

561
00:31:10,750 --> 00:31:12,208
I still get very emotional.

562
00:31:14,625 --> 00:31:17,500
I was eight years old
when Emmett Till was murdered

563
00:31:17,583 --> 00:31:19,458
and I didn't...
I-- Wh-- What--

564
00:31:19,541 --> 00:31:21,833
What was that all about?
I couldn't understand it.

565
00:31:24,541 --> 00:31:26,625
COBB:<i> That photograph</i>
<i>was really evidence</i>

566
00:31:26,708 --> 00:31:27,875
<i>of what could happen to you</i>

567
00:31:27,958 --> 00:31:30,416
<i>as a Black person</i>
<i>in the deep South,</i>

568
00:31:30,500 --> 00:31:32,708
<i>and that was the world</i>
<i>that Gordon Parks</i>

569
00:31:32,791 --> 00:31:35,208
<i>was stepping into in 1956.</i>

570
00:31:41,708 --> 00:31:45,083
Gordon liked to embody
whatever subject

571
00:31:45,166 --> 00:31:47,208
he had been asked
by his editors

572
00:31:47,291 --> 00:31:50,666
to represent in a family.

573
00:31:50,750 --> 00:31:53,125
<i>Because he knew that the readers</i>
<i>of</i> LIFE<i> magazine</i>

574
00:31:53,208 --> 00:31:56,916
<i>would be innately sympathetic</i>
<i>to the circumstances of a child,</i>

575
00:31:57,000 --> 00:31:58,708
<i>of a family, and of a community.</i>

576
00:32:01,208 --> 00:32:03,583
<i>Those photographs had</i>
<i>tremendous impact</i>

577
00:32:03,666 --> 00:32:05,333
<i>partly because of the color.</i>

578
00:32:08,750 --> 00:32:12,041
<i>At that time,</i>
<i>a searing photo essay</i>
<i>in the pages of</i> LIFE

579
00:32:12,125 --> 00:32:14,458
<i>was practically expected</i>
<i>to be in black and white.</i>

580
00:32:19,166 --> 00:32:23,666
STEVENSON:<i> He wanted that color</i>
<i>to implicate people seeing this,</i>

581
00:32:23,750 --> 00:32:28,125
<i>so that they would understand</i>
<i>this is your America right now.</i>

582
00:32:31,625 --> 00:32:34,333
People were told
that segregation was benign.

583
00:32:34,416 --> 00:32:36,500
It's okay,
Black people want it.

584
00:32:36,583 --> 00:32:37,916
That's not what you see

585
00:32:38,000 --> 00:32:41,125
when you see his images
and the hurt and the exclusion

586
00:32:41,208 --> 00:32:42,916
<i>that these families present.</i>

587
00:32:45,208 --> 00:32:48,333
<i>These children are</i>
<i>literally excluded by this fence</i>

588
00:32:48,416 --> 00:32:50,833
<i>that they cannot pass.</i>

589
00:32:50,916 --> 00:32:52,125
STEVENSON:<i> Even from behind,</i>

590
00:32:52,208 --> 00:32:54,375
<i>he's able to convey</i>
<i>their sense of longing</i>

591
00:32:54,458 --> 00:32:56,166
<i>to be able</i>
<i>to go into that space.</i>

592
00:33:00,833 --> 00:33:03,125
ALLEN:<i> He can take</i>
<i>something that's so negative,</i>

593
00:33:03,208 --> 00:33:05,041
<i>but when you</i>
<i>first digest it and look at it,</i>

594
00:33:05,125 --> 00:33:06,750
<i>before you start</i>
<i>to unpack everything,</i>

595
00:33:06,833 --> 00:33:09,416
<i>it's like super warm, and it</i>
<i>just like blows you away.</i>

596
00:33:09,500 --> 00:33:11,916
I think he was really good
at even things

597
00:33:12,000 --> 00:33:13,416
that might have been

598
00:33:13,500 --> 00:33:16,875
uncomfortable for, as a
Black person to capture

599
00:33:16,958 --> 00:33:18,833
<i>but he has this thing where</i>
<i>the way he frames stuff,</i>

600
00:33:18,916 --> 00:33:22,000
<i>it draws you in, and it makes</i>
<i>you wanna have a conversation.</i>

601
00:33:24,375 --> 00:33:26,291
There's an elegance.
Even, there's an elegance,

602
00:33:26,375 --> 00:33:29,291
even to his
depictions of evil, basically.

603
00:33:31,000 --> 00:33:33,125
DUVERNAY:<i> It's her dress</i>
<i>that does it for me</i>

604
00:33:33,208 --> 00:33:38,208
<i>and the earring, and the purse,</i>
<i>and the perfectly matched shoes.</i>

605
00:33:38,833 --> 00:33:40,166
<i>She's a queen,</i>

606
00:33:40,250 --> 00:33:42,625
and yet she has
to have a separate entrance

607
00:33:42,708 --> 00:33:44,875
from the White woman
in the red dress

608
00:33:44,958 --> 00:33:46,708
that's further down the street.

609
00:33:48,375 --> 00:33:53,166
BERGER:<i> Mrs. Joanne Wilson</i>
<i>was walking with her young niece</i>

610
00:33:53,250 --> 00:33:55,666
<i>by a segregated movie theatre,</i>

611
00:33:55,750 --> 00:33:59,208
<i>and the little girl</i>
<i>smelled popcorn.</i>

612
00:33:59,291 --> 00:34:03,541
<i>I interviewed Mrs. Wilson</i>
<i>60 years after</i>
<i>that photograph was taken.</i>

613
00:34:03,625 --> 00:34:07,791
And she said,
"I was feeling a sense
of almost panic of what to do.

614
00:34:07,875 --> 00:34:10,000
I wasn't going
to take my niece

615
00:34:10,083 --> 00:34:13,208
into a segregated back entrance.
I wouldn't do it."

616
00:34:15,458 --> 00:34:16,791
<i>So I asked Mrs. Wilson</i>

617
00:34:16,875 --> 00:34:19,000
<i>about the experience</i>
<i>of the shoot,</i>

618
00:34:19,083 --> 00:34:22,083
and I said, "Was there anything
about it that upset you

619
00:34:22,166 --> 00:34:23,500
or bothered you?"
and she said,

620
00:34:23,583 --> 00:34:24,750
and she loved Gordon,

621
00:34:24,833 --> 00:34:26,916
and she said, "Yes.

622
00:34:27,000 --> 00:34:29,458
<i>When I looked at</i>
<i>the photograph, I realized that</i>

623
00:34:29,541 --> 00:34:31,750
<i>the strap</i>
<i>of my slip had fallen.</i>

624
00:34:33,000 --> 00:34:35,708
<i>I was a proud Black woman</i>
<i>in Alabama,</i>

625
00:34:35,791 --> 00:34:39,250
<i>and I never left my house</i>
<i>not being dressed perfectly."</i>

626
00:34:41,500 --> 00:34:42,791
<i>I understand how she felt,</i>

627
00:34:42,875 --> 00:34:45,083
<i>but I don't think that Gordon</i>
<i>would have told her</i>

628
00:34:45,166 --> 00:34:47,291
<i>to adjust the strap</i>
<i>because for him</i>

629
00:34:47,375 --> 00:34:49,666
<i>it represented</i>
<i>something remarkable.</i>

630
00:34:50,958 --> 00:34:52,666
<i>She was distracted.</i>

631
00:34:52,750 --> 00:34:56,250
<i>You cannot be a mother</i>
<i>or even human</i>

632
00:34:56,333 --> 00:34:59,916
<i>and not see that little moment</i>
<i>of drama in a photograph</i>

633
00:35:00,000 --> 00:35:04,000
and not feel a sense
of affiliation with Mrs. Wilson.

634
00:35:08,666 --> 00:35:13,125
DARREN WALKER:<i> Gordon Parks's</i>
<i>photography demanded</i>

635
00:35:13,208 --> 00:35:16,750
<i>that America look at itself.</i>

636
00:35:16,833 --> 00:35:22,416
His work did what art does
at its very best.

637
00:35:22,500 --> 00:35:28,500
<i>It makes the viewer</i>
<i>engage deeply in the subject.</i>

638
00:35:28,583 --> 00:35:32,541
<i>And to see</i>
<i>narratives about life,</i>

639
00:35:32,625 --> 00:35:34,500
<i>about our history.</i>

640
00:35:34,583 --> 00:35:38,041
So when you look at those
beautiful photographs,

641
00:35:38,125 --> 00:35:40,833
<i>what you saw was dignity</i>

642
00:35:40,916 --> 00:35:46,833
<i>in the face of remarkable</i>
<i>discrimination and bigotry.</i>

643
00:35:48,291 --> 00:35:52,500
♪ (MELANCHOLIC MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

644
00:35:52,583 --> 00:35:54,041
And rising...

645
00:35:56,833 --> 00:35:58,708
You got to wait for him
to rise, folks.

646
00:36:00,083 --> 00:36:02,500
Okay, now rise behind him.
You got to look for him.

647
00:36:03,500 --> 00:36:04,875
<i>One of the things</i>
<i>about Mr. Parks</i>

648
00:36:04,958 --> 00:36:08,916
<i>that had been</i>
<i>really inspiring and informative</i>

649
00:36:09,041 --> 00:36:12,416
<i>is the idea that</i>
<i>if I pick up my camera,</i>

650
00:36:12,500 --> 00:36:14,500
<i>I can say something</i>
<i>and show something,</i>

651
00:36:14,583 --> 00:36:16,041
and that I will be heard,

652
00:36:16,125 --> 00:36:18,916
and that it will be seen,
and a story will be told.

653
00:36:19,000 --> 00:36:20,083
Action!

654
00:36:20,166 --> 00:36:22,416
<i>And that my camera gives me</i>
<i>the power to do that.</i>

655
00:36:24,000 --> 00:36:26,375
To think of the camera
as a weapon is a strong way

656
00:36:26,458 --> 00:36:29,041
to think about it and something
that I have come to embrace.

657
00:36:31,958 --> 00:36:34,791
<i>Some of my favorite work</i>
<i>of his is in color.</i>

658
00:36:34,875 --> 00:36:37,541
<i>There's something</i>
<i>about the color</i>
<i>that feels very painterly</i>

659
00:36:37,625 --> 00:36:40,875
<i>in a way that's different</i>
<i>from the black and white.</i>

660
00:36:40,958 --> 00:36:44,625
<i>I remember looking</i>
<i>at those photos,</i>
<i>and I look at them often.</i>

661
00:36:44,708 --> 00:36:47,375
<i>They inform, even choices</i>
<i>that I make in cinematography</i>

662
00:36:47,458 --> 00:36:48,541
<i>for my films.</i>

663
00:36:49,791 --> 00:36:51,083
<i>There's a photo that I love.</i>

664
00:36:51,166 --> 00:36:52,791
<i>It's a little boy</i>
<i>sitting in a field,</i>

665
00:36:52,875 --> 00:36:54,833
<i>and he has an "X" on his head</i>

666
00:36:54,916 --> 00:36:56,375
<i>that's like a target.</i>

667
00:36:58,375 --> 00:36:59,958
<i>That image just says so much.</i>

668
00:37:02,375 --> 00:37:06,083
<i>The rest, the relaxation,</i>
<i>the intimacy,</i>

669
00:37:06,166 --> 00:37:08,041
<i>juxtaposed against the poverty.</i>

670
00:37:12,208 --> 00:37:13,583
<i>We think of photography,</i>
<i>I think,</i>

671
00:37:13,666 --> 00:37:16,250
<i>as like a solitary art practice.</i>

672
00:37:19,666 --> 00:37:21,000
<i>It's the photographer</i>
<i>and their camera,</i>

673
00:37:21,083 --> 00:37:24,208
<i>but really, they're in</i>
<i>relationship with their subject.</i>

674
00:37:26,000 --> 00:37:28,916
<i>When I look at his work,</i>
<i>I think, "God!</i>
<i>How'd he get that?"</i>

675
00:37:30,041 --> 00:37:31,875
The ease and the intimacy

676
00:37:31,958 --> 00:37:34,333
that comes through
in so much of his work.

677
00:37:36,500 --> 00:37:38,958
<i>The process with actors is</i>
<i>you're trying to achieve</i>

678
00:37:39,041 --> 00:37:41,083
<i>the same ends of intimacy,</i>
<i>of a connection...</i>

679
00:37:41,166 --> 00:37:42,250
Action!

680
00:37:42,333 --> 00:37:44,500
<i>...of an understanding</i>
<i>of the material and each other,</i>

681
00:37:44,583 --> 00:37:47,125
<i>so that you can get</i>
<i>to those true places.</i>

682
00:37:47,208 --> 00:37:49,625
Pent up emotions
and inattention

683
00:37:49,708 --> 00:37:51,958
would have led
to an uncontrollable,

684
00:37:52,041 --> 00:37:53,791
retaliatory situation.

685
00:37:53,875 --> 00:37:57,958
Well done. We're good.
Looking good. Thank you.

686
00:37:58,041 --> 00:38:00,125
DUVERNAY:<i> The thing</i>
<i>for Black filmmakers is</i>

687
00:38:00,208 --> 00:38:02,708
<i>for far too long</i>
<i>we've been relegated to</i>

688
00:38:02,791 --> 00:38:04,875
<i>one set of tools, if any.</i>

689
00:38:04,958 --> 00:38:07,916
<i>One of the things</i>
<i>about Mr. Parks is the ability</i>

690
00:38:08,000 --> 00:38:13,041
to work within many boxes
and to use many tools.

691
00:38:13,833 --> 00:38:17,833
♪ (CALM MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

692
00:38:26,125 --> 00:38:28,125
RAZ-RUSSO:<i> If one were</i>
<i>to look at the entirety</i>

693
00:38:28,208 --> 00:38:29,333
<i>of Gordon Parks's career,</i>

694
00:38:29,416 --> 00:38:31,666
you would be struck by
the range of work that he did.

695
00:38:33,125 --> 00:38:36,708
<i>It's absolutely fascinating</i>
<i>how he's able to bounce around</i>

696
00:38:36,791 --> 00:38:39,166
<i>from photojournalism</i>
<i>to fashion photography,</i>

697
00:38:39,250 --> 00:38:43,416
<i>to portraiture, to abstraction,</i>
<i>and everything in between.</i>

698
00:38:43,500 --> 00:38:48,125
<i>And yet somehow, it's all tied</i>
<i>together by his approach,</i>

699
00:38:49,000 --> 00:38:52,000
the idea
that he's fully invested

700
00:38:52,083 --> 00:38:54,125
in every single one
of his subjects.

701
00:38:57,958 --> 00:39:00,166
NELSON GEORGE:
<i>His whole thing was to be there</i>

702
00:39:00,250 --> 00:39:02,833
and have a point of view.
Definitely had a point of view

703
00:39:02,916 --> 00:39:05,541
about Black liberation,
Black freedom,

704
00:39:05,625 --> 00:39:08,083
White oppression, uh, fashion.

705
00:39:12,500 --> 00:39:14,458
<i>But not to impose</i>
<i>that in the environment,</i>

706
00:39:14,541 --> 00:39:16,166
<i>to be able to be there</i>

707
00:39:16,250 --> 00:39:19,750
and find those moments where,
"Boom, boom, boom."

708
00:39:30,208 --> 00:39:31,541
My mom and Gordon Parks met

709
00:39:31,625 --> 00:39:33,375
on a photo shoot
for<i> LIFE</i> magazine.

710
00:39:35,458 --> 00:39:38,041
<i>She was gonna be</i>
<i>in a play called</i> The Swan

711
00:39:38,125 --> 00:39:41,875
<i>and Gordon was</i>
<i>the photographer assigned to it.</i>

712
00:39:41,958 --> 00:39:43,666
They just instantly
sort of clicked.

713
00:39:47,000 --> 00:39:49,583
<i>My mom, I mean,</i>
<i>you couldn't have more</i>
<i>different circumstances,</i>

714
00:39:49,666 --> 00:39:51,875
<i>she grew up obviously surrounded</i>
<i>by great wealth.</i>

715
00:39:55,833 --> 00:39:58,416
<i>She said that this was the</i>
<i>first African American person</i>

716
00:39:58,500 --> 00:39:59,833
<i>she really became friends with.</i>

717
00:40:01,833 --> 00:40:03,916
<i>I think they did connect</i>
<i>as artists.</i>

718
00:40:05,833 --> 00:40:08,291
<i>That was the beginning</i>
<i>of what would become</i>

719
00:40:08,375 --> 00:40:10,250
this extraordinary
lifelong friendship.

720
00:40:12,500 --> 00:40:15,250
<i>I always knew there was more</i>
<i>to their relationship</i>

721
00:40:15,333 --> 00:40:16,916
<i>than he was just a family friend</i>

722
00:40:17,000 --> 00:40:19,750
<i>who would spend weekends</i>
<i>out in Long Island with us.</i>

723
00:40:22,500 --> 00:40:23,833
<i>But I knew Gordon's work</i>

724
00:40:23,916 --> 00:40:25,791
<i>from the time I was a kid.</i>
<i>I followed it.</i>

725
00:40:28,333 --> 00:40:30,791
<i>He had the ability</i>
<i>to tell other people's stories</i>

726
00:40:30,875 --> 00:40:33,833
and the ability to enmesh
yourself in somebody else's life

727
00:40:33,916 --> 00:40:35,541
and to document it.

728
00:40:35,625 --> 00:40:37,083
<i>I just found that amazing.</i>

729
00:40:39,791 --> 00:40:42,625
GEORGE:<i> Gordon was this guy</i>
<i>who could connect</i>
<i>with all of these people,</i>

730
00:40:42,708 --> 00:40:45,208
<i>and not necessarily</i>
<i>be everyone's best friend,</i>

731
00:40:45,291 --> 00:40:48,041
<i>but gain respect enough</i>
<i>to move in their spaces.</i>

732
00:40:49,791 --> 00:40:52,916
<i>As a photographer, and I learned</i>
<i>myself as a journalist,</i>

733
00:40:53,000 --> 00:40:55,083
the ability to be there
and be present

734
00:40:55,166 --> 00:40:56,375
but not to interfere.

735
00:40:57,250 --> 00:40:59,291
<i>To be able to sit back,</i>

736
00:40:59,375 --> 00:41:02,375
<i>let it happen, observe closely</i>
<i>what's going on,</i>

737
00:41:02,458 --> 00:41:04,083
<i>and find out what's</i>
<i>interesting about it.</i>

738
00:41:04,166 --> 00:41:05,833
<i>He had that ability,</i>
<i>and it comes through</i>

739
00:41:05,916 --> 00:41:07,375
<i>in all of his photography.</i>

740
00:41:08,958 --> 00:41:15,916
♪ (MELLOW JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

741
00:41:16,000 --> 00:41:19,541
BERGER:
<i>In 1957,</i> LIFE<i> sent Gordon</i>

742
00:41:19,625 --> 00:41:22,625
<i>to photograph</i>
<i>the American crime crisis.</i>

743
00:41:23,750 --> 00:41:28,250
♪ (JAZZ MUSIC CONTINUES) ♪

744
00:41:28,333 --> 00:41:32,333
He represented
crime as an ambiguity.

745
00:41:38,041 --> 00:41:40,500
<i>It deracialized</i>
<i>the story of crime.</i>

746
00:41:42,125 --> 00:41:45,125
<i>There were White criminals.</i>
<i>There were Black criminals.</i>

747
00:41:48,750 --> 00:41:52,541
<i>He also showed</i>
<i>the humanity around crime.</i>

748
00:41:53,791 --> 00:41:56,291
STEVENSON:
<i>It challenges this notion</i>

749
00:41:56,375 --> 00:41:58,791
that a criminal
is someone who is

750
00:41:58,875 --> 00:42:01,333
entirely loathsome,
entirely evil.

751
00:42:07,666 --> 00:42:10,958
<i>There's an incredible</i>
<i>photograph of a prison cell.</i>

752
00:42:11,041 --> 00:42:15,958
<i>You see a hand leaning over one</i>
<i>of the bars with a cigarette,</i>

753
00:42:16,041 --> 00:42:19,250
<i>but on the bottom, you see</i>
<i>the hand grabbing the bar.</i>

754
00:42:22,625 --> 00:42:25,333
What you see is the anxiety

755
00:42:26,708 --> 00:42:28,416
<i>of the person behind bars.</i>

756
00:42:30,375 --> 00:42:33,208
ALLEN:<i> Gordon was able</i>
<i>to tell both sides of the story.</i>

757
00:42:33,291 --> 00:42:35,458
<i>Being able to go</i>
<i>into a police station</i>

758
00:42:35,541 --> 00:42:37,666
<i>and shooting</i>
<i>from that perspective.</i>

759
00:42:39,541 --> 00:42:43,958
<i>As an artist, we are the medium</i>
<i>between opposing sides,</i>

760
00:42:44,041 --> 00:42:45,833
<i>and we are</i>
<i>the only ones that can actually</i>

761
00:42:45,916 --> 00:42:48,458
create that narrative
to even start a conversation.

762
00:42:58,500 --> 00:43:00,250
♪ (MUSIC FADES) ♪

763
00:43:01,500 --> 00:43:03,250
STEVENSON:<i> You cannot be</i>
<i>a person of color</i>

764
00:43:03,333 --> 00:43:04,916
<i>growing up in the urban north</i>

765
00:43:05,000 --> 00:43:08,000
and not be mindful
of the way in which

766
00:43:08,083 --> 00:43:10,083
police officers were symbols.

767
00:43:10,166 --> 00:43:12,416
They represented
threat and menace.

768
00:43:12,500 --> 00:43:14,458
<i>My cousins lived</i>
<i>in North Philadelphia,</i>

769
00:43:14,541 --> 00:43:16,125
<i>and when we would go</i>
<i>spend time with them,</i>

770
00:43:16,208 --> 00:43:17,875
<i>there was a</i>
<i>completely foreign environment.</i>

771
00:43:17,958 --> 00:43:19,875
<i>And my cousin would say,</i>

772
00:43:19,958 --> 00:43:22,083
"If you see a gang coming down
one street

773
00:43:22,166 --> 00:43:24,666
and you see the police
coming down another street,

774
00:43:24,750 --> 00:43:26,166
both of them are dangerous,

775
00:43:26,250 --> 00:43:28,916
but run toward the gang,
not toward the police."

776
00:43:29,000 --> 00:43:31,583
<i>And it wasn't because people</i>
<i>didn't want law and order.</i>

777
00:43:31,666 --> 00:43:35,500
<i>They did. They just didn't want</i>
<i>it imposed through abuse.</i>

778
00:43:36,458 --> 00:43:38,458
♪ (SOMBER MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

779
00:43:38,541 --> 00:43:41,625
STEVENSON:
<i>And Parks got it, you know,</i>
<i>in the images presented.</i>

780
00:43:50,958 --> 00:43:53,541
<i>That image where he shows</i>
<i>those police officers</i>

781
00:43:53,625 --> 00:43:57,041
<i>crashing down a door,</i>
<i>gun in hand.</i>

782
00:43:57,125 --> 00:43:58,708
<i>There's a kind of violence.</i>

783
00:43:58,791 --> 00:44:02,125
<i>Can you imagine being</i>
<i>on the other side of this door?</i>

784
00:44:04,083 --> 00:44:07,958
<i>So it's a really powerful image</i>
<i>to contradict this idea</i>

785
00:44:08,041 --> 00:44:10,541
<i>that these are the people</i>
<i>who make us safe.</i>

786
00:44:10,625 --> 00:44:12,416
<i>You know,</i>
<i>I see this and I think,</i>

787
00:44:12,500 --> 00:44:15,291
<i>"Keep me as far away</i>
<i>from these guys as possible."</i>

788
00:44:17,500 --> 00:44:20,625
♪ (SOMBER MUSIC FADES) ♪

789
00:44:28,333 --> 00:44:32,458
STEVENSON:<i> Using the rule of law</i>
<i>is certainly a way</i>

790
00:44:32,541 --> 00:44:36,541
to fight against
inequality and injustice.

791
00:44:40,666 --> 00:44:44,125
<i>But I have recognized</i>
<i>that that's not enough.</i>

792
00:44:44,208 --> 00:44:46,958
Now I see myself
very much engaged in...

793
00:44:48,250 --> 00:44:51,541
in narrative work
and using narrative tools

794
00:44:51,625 --> 00:44:54,500
<i>to fight against</i>
<i>inequality and injustice,</i>

795
00:44:54,583 --> 00:44:58,125
<i>and that's the reason why</i>
<i>it makes perfect sense to us</i>

796
00:44:58,208 --> 00:44:59,333
<i>to build a museum.</i>

797
00:45:01,458 --> 00:45:05,333
<i>The primary goal is to</i>
<i>tell a story about our history</i>

798
00:45:05,416 --> 00:45:07,083
<i>that shakes people sufficiently.</i>

799
00:45:07,166 --> 00:45:09,083
<i>You're motivated</i>
<i>to say, "Never again"</i>

800
00:45:09,166 --> 00:45:12,291
<i>to racial bigotry and bias.</i>

801
00:45:16,208 --> 00:45:18,625
<i>Gordon Parks became central</i>

802
00:45:18,708 --> 00:45:20,791
<i>to the way we wanted</i>
<i>to talk about our imagery</i>

803
00:45:20,875 --> 00:45:23,208
<i>and storytelling through</i>
<i>photography.</i>

804
00:45:28,500 --> 00:45:33,125
<i>Narrative work is how Parks</i>
<i>changed hearts and minds.</i>

805
00:45:37,875 --> 00:45:38,833
<i>You can change laws,</i>

806
00:45:38,916 --> 00:45:41,250
<i>but if you don't, kind of,</i>
<i>work on people</i>

807
00:45:41,333 --> 00:45:45,250
<i>and the psychology behind</i>
<i>bigotry and exclusion,</i>

808
00:45:45,333 --> 00:45:46,833
<i>then you're not</i>
<i>gonna make any progress.</i>

809
00:45:51,750 --> 00:45:55,291
<i>And Parks understood early</i>
<i>that he had a role to play</i>

810
00:45:55,375 --> 00:45:57,083
<i>if we were gonna kind of</i>
<i>shape the things</i>

811
00:45:57,166 --> 00:45:59,375
<i>that people believe</i>
<i>about equality.</i>

812
00:46:04,625 --> 00:46:07,583
<i>You know,</i>
<i>as a photographer for</i> LIFE,

813
00:46:07,666 --> 00:46:10,250
<i>you look at publications</i>
<i>like that.</i>

814
00:46:15,291 --> 00:46:18,416
<i>And in this very subtle way,</i>
<i>this notion of</i>

815
00:46:18,500 --> 00:46:21,458
<i>who is an American</i>
<i>was being reinforced.</i>

816
00:46:21,541 --> 00:46:23,791
<i>Week after week,</i>
<i>month after month.</i>

817
00:46:23,875 --> 00:46:29,041
♪ (MELANCHOLIC MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

818
00:46:29,125 --> 00:46:32,375
STEVENSON:
<i>And so Parks's images</i>
<i>really disrupted that.</i>

819
00:46:35,541 --> 00:46:37,541
<i>If you had to see</i>
<i>this Black family</i>

820
00:46:37,625 --> 00:46:38,833
<i>in one of his photos</i>

821
00:46:38,916 --> 00:46:41,041
<i>juxtaposed with</i>
<i>these White families</i>

822
00:46:41,125 --> 00:46:42,541
<i>in these ads,</i>

823
00:46:42,625 --> 00:46:45,416
<i>it caused you to kind of think</i>
<i>just a little differently.</i>

824
00:46:45,500 --> 00:46:51,500
<i>It raised questions</i>
<i>about who is an American.</i>

825
00:46:57,458 --> 00:47:00,125
Gordon Parks
was often criticized

826
00:47:00,208 --> 00:47:01,625
as much as he was applauded

827
00:47:01,708 --> 00:47:03,375
for his position
at<i> LIFE</i> magazine,

828
00:47:03,458 --> 00:47:08,166
and he was very aware of
being in a conflicted position.

829
00:47:08,250 --> 00:47:13,166
<i>He talks about how he was seen</i>
<i>as often going in</i>

830
00:47:13,250 --> 00:47:15,500
<i>as</i> LIFE's,<i> quote,</i>
<i>"Black photographer,"</i>

831
00:47:15,583 --> 00:47:18,500
<i>and creating stories</i>
<i>that were meant to appeal</i>

832
00:47:18,583 --> 00:47:20,125
<i>to a White audience.</i>

833
00:47:20,208 --> 00:47:22,083
At the same time,
he understood that

834
00:47:22,166 --> 00:47:25,416
when he was covering stories
that had to do with race,

835
00:47:25,500 --> 00:47:27,416
that he was in a unique position

836
00:47:27,500 --> 00:47:30,041
to tell those stories
from his point of view.

837
00:47:30,125 --> 00:47:34,500
And a great example of that
was in 1963, when he was sent

838
00:47:34,583 --> 00:47:36,416
to do a story about
the Nation of Islam.

839
00:47:38,000 --> 00:47:40,333
MALCOLM X:<i> America</i>
<i>is a White man's country.</i>

840
00:47:40,416 --> 00:47:42,833
<i>A country</i>
<i>that was stolen by the White man</i>

841
00:47:42,916 --> 00:47:44,500
<i>from the dark-skinned Indians,</i>

842
00:47:44,583 --> 00:47:49,041
<i>who then kidnapped our people</i>
<i>and brought us here in chains.</i>

843
00:47:49,125 --> 00:47:52,208
PARKS:<i> I saw Malcolm for</i>
<i>the very first time in person</i>

844
00:47:52,291 --> 00:47:55,500
<i>on the corner of 125th Street</i>
<i>and 7th Avenue.</i>

845
00:47:55,583 --> 00:47:58,708
MALCOLM:<i> There's no such thing</i>
<i>as justice in this country</i>

846
00:47:58,791 --> 00:48:00,000
<i>for a Black man.</i>

847
00:48:00,083 --> 00:48:02,666
<i>And there's no such thing</i>
<i>as equality in this country</i>

848
00:48:02,750 --> 00:48:04,291
<i>for a Black man.</i>

849
00:48:04,375 --> 00:48:07,291
<i>This is a White man's country!</i>

850
00:48:07,375 --> 00:48:10,541
PARKS:
<i>The first thing I asked him</i>
<i>was about the possibility</i>

851
00:48:10,625 --> 00:48:13,000
<i>of my covering</i>
<i>the Black Muslims.</i>

852
00:48:13,083 --> 00:48:15,250
And he said, "Well,
the honorable Elijah Muhammad

853
00:48:15,333 --> 00:48:16,791
would have to decide that."

854
00:48:18,791 --> 00:48:20,958
<i>Malcolm and I flew</i>
<i>to Phoenix, Arizona.</i>

855
00:48:21,041 --> 00:48:23,041
<i>The first thing Elijah Muhammad</i>
<i>said to me was,</i>

856
00:48:23,125 --> 00:48:25,000
"Why are you working
for the White devils?"

857
00:48:26,333 --> 00:48:29,458
I said, "Well, you know,
you've heard of

858
00:48:30,500 --> 00:48:32,208
getting behind the iron horse

859
00:48:32,291 --> 00:48:33,625
and finding out
what's going on?"

860
00:48:33,708 --> 00:48:35,458
He said, "I don't buy that."

861
00:48:35,541 --> 00:48:36,625
(LAUGHS)

862
00:48:36,708 --> 00:48:39,750
Well, in any case,
he said, "We'll give you a try.

863
00:48:39,833 --> 00:48:42,166
<i>Brother Malcolm is</i>
<i>gonna escort you through</i>

864
00:48:42,250 --> 00:48:45,291
<i>the world of Islam,</i>
<i>and if I like what you do,</i>

865
00:48:45,375 --> 00:48:47,958
<i>I'll send you</i>
<i>a big box of cigars.</i>

866
00:48:48,041 --> 00:48:51,500
If I don't like what you do,
we'll be out to visit you."

867
00:48:51,583 --> 00:48:53,000
(LAUGHS)

868
00:48:53,083 --> 00:48:55,750
And that's the way
Malcolm and I got started.

869
00:48:55,833 --> 00:48:58,333
MALCOLM:<i> In the name of Allah,</i>
<i>the beneficent, the merciful,</i>

870
00:48:58,416 --> 00:48:59,916
<i>to whom all praise is due.</i>

871
00:49:00,000 --> 00:49:02,458
<i>Whom we forever thank</i>
<i>for giving us</i>

872
00:49:02,541 --> 00:49:03,958
<i>the honorable Elijah Muhammad</i>

873
00:49:04,041 --> 00:49:05,916
<i>as our leader,</i>
<i>teacher, and guide.</i>

874
00:49:07,000 --> 00:49:09,375
PARKS:<i> I found in the mosques</i>
<i>such order,</i>

875
00:49:09,458 --> 00:49:12,416
<i>uniformity</i>
<i>in just about everything.</i>

876
00:49:12,500 --> 00:49:14,458
<i>Malcolm would walk</i>
<i>with a long stick</i>

877
00:49:14,541 --> 00:49:18,375
<i>and point to a blackboard</i>
<i>and explain what Elijah Muhammad</i>

878
00:49:18,458 --> 00:49:19,916
<i>expected of Muslims.</i>

879
00:49:23,500 --> 00:49:27,583
<i>I was surprised to see them</i>
<i>training German Shepherd dogs.</i>

880
00:49:27,666 --> 00:49:29,458
<i>Malcolm would look at me</i>
<i>and smile.</i>

881
00:49:29,541 --> 00:49:31,500
<i>He says, "If they can face</i>
<i>that dog</i>

882
00:49:31,583 --> 00:49:32,875
<i>with its vicious fangs,</i>

883
00:49:32,958 --> 00:49:34,625
<i>they can face</i>
<i>a lot of other things."</i>

884
00:49:36,791 --> 00:49:39,000
<i>I went into some of</i>
<i>the Muslim families.</i>

885
00:49:39,083 --> 00:49:41,375
<i>I asked one father in Brooklyn,</i>

886
00:49:41,458 --> 00:49:43,791
<i>I said, "Suppose your son came</i>
<i>home one day</i>

887
00:49:43,875 --> 00:49:47,083
<i>and told you that he was</i>
<i>renouncing the Muslim religion."</i>

888
00:49:47,166 --> 00:49:49,208
<i>He said, "I would turn him</i>
<i>from my door</i>

889
00:49:49,291 --> 00:49:51,666
<i>and would</i>
<i>never allow him in again."</i>

890
00:49:51,750 --> 00:49:54,000
<i>It was amazing,</i>
<i>the faith that they had</i>

891
00:49:54,083 --> 00:49:56,291
<i>in Elijah Muhammad</i>
<i>and in Malcolm.</i>

892
00:49:57,708 --> 00:49:59,750
RAZ-RUSSO:<i> Gordon Parks</i>
<i>spends several months</i>

893
00:49:59,833 --> 00:50:02,291
<i>with members</i>
<i>of the Nation of Islam.</i>

894
00:50:02,375 --> 00:50:04,250
It becomes a true collaboration

895
00:50:04,333 --> 00:50:08,250
<i>where Gordon Parks is allowed</i>
<i>unprecedented access.</i>

896
00:50:14,666 --> 00:50:17,541
I was in New York
when I got a call from Malcolm.

897
00:50:17,625 --> 00:50:21,375
He had just reached
the Los Angeles Airport.

898
00:50:22,458 --> 00:50:24,333
<i>He said, "Can you get out here?"</i>

899
00:50:24,416 --> 00:50:26,333
MALCOLM:
<i>The person, whom you have come</i>

900
00:50:26,416 --> 00:50:30,541
<i>to know as Ronald Stokes,</i>
<i>we know him as brother Ronald.</i>

901
00:50:30,625 --> 00:50:34,375
<i>And an innocent man</i>
<i>when he was murdered.</i>

902
00:50:34,458 --> 00:50:36,833
PARKS:<i> That's when</i>
<i>Ronald Stokes was shot.</i>

903
00:50:36,916 --> 00:50:38,583
<i>Police had gone to the mosque,</i>

904
00:50:38,666 --> 00:50:40,083
<i>and there'd been</i>
<i>some confrontation</i>

905
00:50:40,166 --> 00:50:42,583
<i>with the young Muslims</i>
<i>out in front of the mosque.</i>

906
00:50:42,666 --> 00:50:44,875
MALCOLM:<i> These are the victims</i>
<i>of police bullets.</i>

907
00:50:45,000 --> 00:50:48,208
<i>And it is the police who should</i>
<i>be on trial here in Los Angeles.</i>

908
00:50:48,291 --> 00:50:50,375
PARKS:<i> Malcolm wanted to show</i>
<i>the rest of the world</i>

909
00:50:50,458 --> 00:50:52,375
<i>that these guys</i>
<i>were using brutality,</i>

910
00:50:52,458 --> 00:50:54,416
<i>especially against Muslims.</i>

911
00:50:54,500 --> 00:50:57,750
MALCOLM:<i> They can go in</i>
<i>and murder unarmed,</i>

912
00:50:57,833 --> 00:50:59,208
<i>innocent Negroes,</i>

913
00:50:59,291 --> 00:51:03,000
<i>and the White public is</i>
<i>gullible enough to back them up.</i>

914
00:51:03,083 --> 00:51:04,500
PARKS:<i> Malcolm was</i>
<i>terribly angry,</i>

915
00:51:04,583 --> 00:51:07,416
<i>as were a lot of Black people</i>
<i>who were not Muslims.</i>

916
00:51:07,500 --> 00:51:09,541
I was angry myself,
terribly angry.

917
00:51:10,958 --> 00:51:12,708
<i>It was very tense out there.</i>

918
00:51:12,791 --> 00:51:15,041
<i>Cops were patrolling</i>
<i>the streets.</i>

919
00:51:15,125 --> 00:51:19,625
<i>I knew if something happened,</i>
<i>I would be in the firing line.</i>

920
00:51:19,708 --> 00:51:22,083
<i>I never separated myself</i>
<i>from them</i>

921
00:51:22,166 --> 00:51:24,041
<i>in terms of being a reporter.</i>

922
00:51:25,458 --> 00:51:29,000
I felt, frankly, like a Muslim.

923
00:51:36,708 --> 00:51:39,125
<i>Malcolm and I</i>
<i>really felt like brothers.</i>

924
00:51:39,208 --> 00:51:41,750
(CHUCKLES)
<i>He was not the fiery monster</i>

925
00:51:41,833 --> 00:51:44,083
that he was on
the street corner.

926
00:51:44,166 --> 00:51:47,333
He was a gentle, sweet guy.

927
00:51:47,416 --> 00:51:49,875
<i>Coming between</i>
<i>Los Angeles and New York,</i>

928
00:51:49,958 --> 00:51:51,458
<i>we took a night plane.</i>

929
00:51:51,541 --> 00:51:53,791
And he leaned over
on my shoulder and said to me,

930
00:51:53,875 --> 00:51:55,958
"Brother, you know I have a lot
of respect for you."

931
00:51:56,041 --> 00:51:57,166
Things of that sort.

932
00:51:57,250 --> 00:51:59,333
And I said, "Well, I have
a lot of respect for you."

933
00:51:59,416 --> 00:52:02,125
<i>He dropped his head on</i>
<i>my shoulder and went to sleep.</i>

934
00:52:06,208 --> 00:52:08,708
When we reached New York,
I said, "You called me 'brother'

935
00:52:08,791 --> 00:52:10,375
for the first time." He said,

936
00:52:10,458 --> 00:52:12,791
"Well, for the first time,
you deserved it."

937
00:52:12,875 --> 00:52:13,875
(LAUGHS)

938
00:52:13,958 --> 00:52:20,500
♪ (EMOTIONAL MUSIC PLAYS) ♪

939
00:52:24,125 --> 00:52:26,375
When the story came out in<i> LIFE,</i>

940
00:52:26,458 --> 00:52:30,500
<i>the headline and the disposition</i>
<i>of the text to photographs</i>

941
00:52:30,583 --> 00:52:33,208
<i>turned it into something</i>
<i>very inflammatory.</i>

942
00:52:34,416 --> 00:52:36,333
The text is quite critical.

943
00:52:36,416 --> 00:52:39,500
It presents this, you know,
what was the popular view

944
00:52:39,583 --> 00:52:41,541
<i>of the Nation of Islam</i>
<i>at the time.</i>

945
00:52:41,625 --> 00:52:45,291
<i>As an outsider group,</i>
<i>as a somewhat violent group.</i>

946
00:52:46,583 --> 00:52:48,541
What's fascinating is
that Gordon Parks

947
00:52:48,625 --> 00:52:51,833
actually contributes
his own separate text

948
00:52:51,916 --> 00:52:54,375
<i>saying, "These are</i>
<i>systemic problems</i>

949
00:52:54,458 --> 00:52:55,875
<i>across the United States.</i>

950
00:52:55,958 --> 00:52:59,125
<i>These are problems</i>
<i>that are relevant</i>
<i>to everyone's life.</i>

951
00:52:59,208 --> 00:53:03,083
<i>These are problems</i>
<i>that you should see from</i>
<i>this point of view."</i>

952
00:53:03,166 --> 00:53:05,375
And that's where he
becomes an activist.

953
00:53:13,666 --> 00:53:16,875
-ASSISTANT CAMERAMAN: B-mark.
-Backward action!

954
00:53:16,958 --> 00:53:18,958
LAURA HARRIER:
Are you down for
the liberation of Black people?

955
00:53:19,041 --> 00:53:21,000
JOHN DAVID WASHINGTON:
Do we always
have to talk politics?

956
00:53:21,083 --> 00:53:22,583
What's more important?

957
00:53:22,666 --> 00:53:24,083
LEE: Cut! Check the gate.

958
00:53:24,166 --> 00:53:25,708
<i>I love Gordon.</i>

959
00:53:25,791 --> 00:53:28,166
<i>We just have</i>
<i>great respect for each other.</i>

960
00:53:28,250 --> 00:53:29,333
Action!

961
00:53:32,125 --> 00:53:35,583
<i>He's one of the guys,</i>
<i>without them,</i>

962
00:53:35,666 --> 00:53:38,916
<i>I would not be</i>
<i>the filmmaker I am.</i>

963
00:53:39,000 --> 00:53:41,625
OSSIE DAVIS:
<i>Harlem has come to bid farewell</i>

964
00:53:41,708 --> 00:53:44,166
<i>to one of its brightest hopes.</i>

965
00:53:44,250 --> 00:53:48,000
LEE:<i> At the end of</i> Malcolm X,
<i>we had my brother, Ossie Davis,</i>

966
00:53:48,083 --> 00:53:50,916
<i>re-record the eulogy</i>

967
00:53:51,000 --> 00:53:54,041
<i>which he gave</i>
<i>at Malcolm's Muslim funeral.</i>

968
00:53:55,250 --> 00:53:57,333
<i>And there's a montage.</i>

969
00:53:57,416 --> 00:54:02,375
<i>Many of the pictures were taken</i>
<i>by my brother, Gordon Parks.</i>

970
00:54:02,458 --> 00:54:03,708
<i>We were very happy that</i>

971
00:54:03,791 --> 00:54:06,166
<i>Gordon gave us the permission</i>
<i>to use those</i>

972
00:54:06,250 --> 00:54:08,583
<i>historic photographs</i>
<i>of Malcolm X.</i>

973
00:54:10,833 --> 00:54:14,041
<i>That camera in his hands</i>
<i>was a weapon.</i>

974
00:54:15,458 --> 00:54:17,250
That was a
motherfuckin' bazooka!

975
00:54:17,333 --> 00:54:18,333
(LAUGHS)

976
00:54:18,416 --> 00:54:23,000
That wasn't no
six shooter or rifle.

977
00:54:23,083 --> 00:54:28,375
When Mr. Gordon Parks
had that camera in his hand,

978
00:54:28,458 --> 00:54:29,708
that was a bazooka.

979
00:54:34,083 --> 00:54:36,458
But you're not gonna get
the great photographs

980
00:54:36,541 --> 00:54:39,583
if you don't establish trust.

981
00:54:41,375 --> 00:54:43,916
<i>Gordon come in, light up a room,</i>

982
00:54:44,000 --> 00:54:46,791
<i>gave everybody respect.</i>
<i>No matter if you were</i>

983
00:54:46,875 --> 00:54:49,541
<i>Gloria Vanderbilt</i>
<i>or some bum on the street.</i>

984
00:54:49,625 --> 00:54:56,375
It's only when people feel safe
that they open themselves up.

985
00:54:56,458 --> 00:54:59,791
And then, the camera
will capture the essence.

986
00:55:03,166 --> 00:55:04,833
<i>At least with</i>
<i>the films I'm doing,</i>

987
00:55:04,916 --> 00:55:07,083
<i>especially more</i>
<i>for documentaries I think,</i>

988
00:55:07,166 --> 00:55:09,791
<i>you gotta ask people</i>
<i>personal questions</i>

989
00:55:09,875 --> 00:55:12,875
about very painful moments
in their life.

990
00:55:12,958 --> 00:55:16,166
For example,<i> 4 Little Girls</i>
was about the bombing

991
00:55:16,250 --> 00:55:18,625
<i>of the 16th Street</i>
<i>Birmingham Baptist Church.</i>

992
00:55:19,750 --> 00:55:22,416
<i>And when you're talking</i>
<i>to someone</i>

993
00:55:22,500 --> 00:55:24,500
<i>whose kid was--</i>

994
00:55:24,583 --> 00:55:26,666
dynamite blew their body apart.

995
00:55:28,416 --> 00:55:30,541
That's not easy.

996
00:55:30,625 --> 00:55:34,250
<i>When did you find out that</i>
<i>Carole had been in the blast?</i>

997
00:55:34,333 --> 00:55:37,666
When- when my husband
and my mother-in-law came back-

998
00:55:37,750 --> 00:55:39,125
came in to tell me.

999
00:55:42,166 --> 00:55:43,333
Oh, boy.

1000
00:55:45,958 --> 00:55:48,041
It was just-- It was awful.

1001
00:55:49,583 --> 00:55:51,458
It's the job of the artist

1002
00:55:51,541 --> 00:55:53,000
to have
your subject comfortable.

1003
00:55:54,875 --> 00:55:57,750
And Gordon had that gift.

1004
00:56:05,833 --> 00:56:09,208
Freedom, freedom.

1005
00:56:09,291 --> 00:56:12,166
KAREEM ABDUL-JABBAR:
<i>Gordon's photography</i>
<i>forms a foundation</i>

1006
00:56:12,250 --> 00:56:14,833
for a visual narrative
of Black Americans

1007
00:56:15,666 --> 00:56:17,833
seen through Black eyes.

1008
00:56:20,375 --> 00:56:23,125
<i>If you look at it and date it,</i>

1009
00:56:23,208 --> 00:56:26,875
<i>you see the evolution of</i>
<i>the Civil Rights Movement.</i>

1010
00:56:26,958 --> 00:56:29,375
ANNOUNCER:<i> I have the pleasure</i>
<i>to present to you</i>

1011
00:56:29,458 --> 00:56:32,125
<i>-Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.</i>
-(CROWD CHEERS)

1012
00:56:32,208 --> 00:56:35,250
ABDUL-JABBAR:<i> If you look</i>
<i>at his photographs, it's</i>
<i>a great chronological record</i>

1013
00:56:35,333 --> 00:56:38,375
<i>of what the 20th century</i>
<i>was about for Black Americans.</i>

1014
00:56:40,000 --> 00:56:43,666
<i>Gordon made us visible to people</i>
<i>in a way that</i>

1015
00:56:43,750 --> 00:56:45,833
<i>no other photographer</i>
<i>could have done it.</i>

1016
00:56:45,916 --> 00:56:48,958
<i>He came from the community,</i>
<i>and that was always obvious.</i>

1017
00:56:55,416 --> 00:56:58,750
WALKER:
<i>The hold of White supremacy</i>

1018
00:56:58,833 --> 00:57:03,083
on the Black psyche
was profound.

1019
00:57:03,166 --> 00:57:04,291
And it was when we started

1020
00:57:04,375 --> 00:57:08,083
to see the images
that lifted us up,

1021
00:57:08,166 --> 00:57:12,125
<i>that made us feel</i>
<i>that we were worthy,</i>

1022
00:57:12,208 --> 00:57:15,083
<i>that we began</i>
<i>to really demand justice.</i>

1023
00:57:23,041 --> 00:57:28,333
And so Gordon Parks
was a warrior for justice.

1024
00:57:28,416 --> 00:57:33,916
♪ (TRIUMPHANT MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

1025
00:57:35,583 --> 00:57:37,958
Cassius Clay is your name
no more, is that right?

1026
00:57:38,041 --> 00:57:39,708
Yes, sir, it's Muhammad Ali.

1027
00:57:39,791 --> 00:57:41,666
Muhammad means worthy
of all praises,

1028
00:57:41,750 --> 00:57:45,000
and Ali means most high in
the Asian-African language.

1029
00:57:45,083 --> 00:57:46,291
How long have you had the name?

1030
00:57:46,375 --> 00:57:49,375
Well, for about um-
two weeks now.

1031
00:57:49,458 --> 00:57:51,166
Is there anybody special
who gave you the name?

1032
00:57:51,250 --> 00:57:54,333
Yes, sir, my leader
and teacher, the most honorable
Elijah Muhammad.

1033
00:57:56,583 --> 00:57:59,125
BERGER:<i> Muhammad Ali began</i>
<i>as a reluctant assignment.</i>

1034
00:57:59,208 --> 00:58:02,541
<i>I mean, Parks wasn't quite sure</i>
<i>who Muhammad Ali was,</i>

1035
00:58:02,625 --> 00:58:05,083
<i>his conversion to Islam.</i>

1036
00:58:05,166 --> 00:58:06,833
The fact that he
sort of transformed from

1037
00:58:06,916 --> 00:58:10,333
Cassius Clay into a much more
radical political figure.

1038
00:58:10,416 --> 00:58:14,500
I just don't understand yet
how I can be reclassified as 1-A

1039
00:58:14,583 --> 00:58:16,250
without testing me in no way,

1040
00:58:16,333 --> 00:58:19,125
just calling me like this,
and I just don't understand it.

1041
00:58:19,208 --> 00:58:21,083
In other words,
you think they called you

1042
00:58:21,166 --> 00:58:23,166
only because you're
the heavyweight champion of--

1043
00:58:23,250 --> 00:58:24,250
And a Muslim too!

1044
00:58:24,333 --> 00:58:26,166
Ever since I've joined
the Muslim religion,

1045
00:58:26,250 --> 00:58:27,708
I've been catching hell
from here,

1046
00:58:27,791 --> 00:58:29,916
they've been trying to ail me,
and trick me into this...

1047
00:58:30,000 --> 00:58:34,750
At the time that Muhammad Ali
was opposing the Vietnamese War,

1048
00:58:34,833 --> 00:58:37,708
he was very controversial.

1049
00:58:37,791 --> 00:58:40,000
<i>He really surprised people</i>
<i>when he said that</i>

1050
00:58:40,083 --> 00:58:43,250
<i>he was taking a stand</i>
<i>for himself</i>
<i>and for all Americans</i>

1051
00:58:43,333 --> 00:58:45,083
<i>who did not support the war,</i>

1052
00:58:45,166 --> 00:58:47,541
<i>and that blew a lot</i>
<i>of people's minds.</i>

1053
00:58:47,625 --> 00:58:50,291
"Ain't no Vietcong
ever called me nigger."

1054
00:58:50,708 --> 00:58:52,583
Wow.

1055
00:58:52,666 --> 00:58:55,833
<i>That crystalized it</i>
<i>for all Black Americans.</i>

1056
00:58:55,916 --> 00:58:57,625
REPORTER 1:
Are you gonna resume
your boxing career?

1057
00:58:57,708 --> 00:58:59,041
REPORTER 2:
Are you talking to us, champ?

1058
00:58:59,125 --> 00:59:01,333
No, I will not say nothing.
It is all in here.

1059
00:59:01,416 --> 00:59:03,041
PARKS:
<i>When I met Muhammad Ali,</i>

1060
00:59:03,125 --> 00:59:06,208
<i>he was getting in trouble a lot</i>
<i>with the press.</i>

1061
00:59:06,291 --> 00:59:08,500
<i>I then took it upon myself</i>

1062
00:59:08,583 --> 00:59:10,958
<i>to say, "Hey don't let</i>
<i>the reporters rile you,</i>

1063
00:59:11,041 --> 00:59:13,041
<i>you know, be cooler about it."</i>

1064
00:59:13,125 --> 00:59:15,666
(INDISTINCT CLAMOR)

1065
00:59:21,250 --> 00:59:24,500
When Parks began
to speak with Ali

1066
00:59:24,583 --> 00:59:25,958
and follow him around,

1067
00:59:26,041 --> 00:59:28,458
the two of them realized they
had a tremendous amount
in common.

1068
00:59:30,666 --> 00:59:32,916
MUHAMMAD:
<i>In Gordon Parks's understanding</i>

1069
00:59:33,000 --> 00:59:37,041
<i>of Muhammad Ali,</i>
<i>was the continuation</i>

1070
00:59:37,125 --> 00:59:41,583
of being in the presence
of a genius

1071
00:59:41,666 --> 00:59:47,416
whose art was just his hands
and his attitude,

1072
00:59:47,500 --> 00:59:49,375
<i>as compared to Langston Hughes,</i>

1073
00:59:51,583 --> 00:59:52,875
<i>or Richard Wright,</i>

1074
00:59:54,291 --> 00:59:55,750
<i>or Ralph Ellison.</i>

1075
00:59:57,333 --> 01:00:00,000
<i>That was</i>
<i>the Malcolm X story too.</i>

1076
01:00:00,083 --> 01:00:03,666
<i>Parks could see,</i>
<i>in these people,</i>

1077
01:00:03,750 --> 01:00:05,375
a version of himself.

1078
01:00:06,500 --> 01:00:11,416
<i>And was also trying to say,</i>
<i>"If you can see me,</i>

1079
01:00:12,541 --> 01:00:15,125
then you should also be able
to see them as well."

1080
01:00:19,958 --> 01:00:24,000
I wish I was there to see,
like, how he really shot.

1081
01:00:31,416 --> 01:00:32,666
<i>Even the action moments,</i>

1082
01:00:32,750 --> 01:00:34,666
<i>you could tell he slowed</i>
<i>the shutter down a little bit</i>

1083
01:00:34,750 --> 01:00:36,166
<i>to get that blur.</i>

1084
01:00:37,625 --> 01:00:39,333
<i>You could tell his hands</i>
<i>were so steady,</i>

1085
01:00:39,416 --> 01:00:42,500
<i>where he could just</i>
<i>focus on Ali's face,</i>
<i>and you can see that emotion,</i>

1086
01:00:42,583 --> 01:00:44,333
but you can see
the speed of Ali.

1087
01:00:48,333 --> 01:00:50,458
<i>Those things that I emulate</i>
<i>in my own photography</i>

1088
01:00:50,541 --> 01:00:53,666
is about knowing when
to speed up that shutter speed

1089
01:00:53,750 --> 01:00:55,041
to get that locked-in focus.

1090
01:00:57,000 --> 01:00:58,875
<i>When I was starting, I just</i>
<i>was always worrying about,</i>

1091
01:00:58,958 --> 01:01:00,916
is the image clear?
Is the ISO perfect?

1092
01:01:01,000 --> 01:01:02,083
Is everything just perfect?

1093
01:01:02,166 --> 01:01:04,666
<i>But sometimes, some of</i>
<i>the most imperfect pictures</i>

1094
01:01:04,750 --> 01:01:05,875
<i>is how you relay that emotion,</i>

1095
01:01:05,958 --> 01:01:08,041
<i>and that's what I think</i>
<i>he was so good at too.</i>

1096
01:01:11,833 --> 01:01:15,250
<i>This image is just, like, one</i>
<i>of my favorite pictures of Ali.</i>

1097
01:01:15,333 --> 01:01:17,833
<i>The look in his eyes,</i>
<i>you see, like that glare.</i>

1098
01:01:17,916 --> 01:01:20,708
He's not even looking at Gordon.
He's, like, gazing off.

1099
01:01:20,791 --> 01:01:22,833
And it's just, like,
a beautiful portrait.

1100
01:01:30,041 --> 01:01:33,458
<i>He really captured Ali</i>
<i>at every moment.</i>

1101
01:01:34,458 --> 01:01:36,208
<i>You saw the goofiness of him.</i>

1102
01:01:37,375 --> 01:01:38,791
You saw the seriousness.

1103
01:01:40,541 --> 01:01:44,000
Many of us know Muhammad Ali as
this loudmouthed boxer,

1104
01:01:44,083 --> 01:01:47,750
<i>but Gordon brought out</i>
<i>the humanitarian side of him.</i>

1105
01:01:47,833 --> 01:01:51,083
ABDUL-JABBAR:
This to me talks about
the peace and serenity

1106
01:01:51,166 --> 01:01:53,791
that you get
from your spiritual discipline.

1107
01:01:55,458 --> 01:01:57,291
<i>Muhammad Ali got a lot</i>
<i>from that.</i>

1108
01:02:01,791 --> 01:02:05,250
Even though an image
is quick, it's quick,

1109
01:02:05,333 --> 01:02:08,041
but the time you put
in with that person,

1110
01:02:08,125 --> 01:02:09,750
you can tell in the image.

1111
01:02:09,833 --> 01:02:12,500
You can tell if a person
just came in and just snapped
and then kept moving.

1112
01:02:12,583 --> 01:02:14,125
But you-- if you can see
it in their eyes,

1113
01:02:14,208 --> 01:02:16,166
it was a real human connection
right there.

1114
01:02:17,458 --> 01:02:18,666
<i>Muhammad Ali and Gordon,</i>

1115
01:02:18,750 --> 01:02:21,666
<i>that relationship</i>
<i>that was able to build,</i>

1116
01:02:21,750 --> 01:02:23,458
<i>you can tell that</i>
<i>it was genuine,</i>

1117
01:02:23,541 --> 01:02:25,166
<i>and it was real,</i>
<i>and it was authentic.</i>

1118
01:02:31,791 --> 01:02:32,958
COACH CALVIN: Switch!

1119
01:02:33,500 --> 01:02:35,125
There you go.

1120
01:02:35,208 --> 01:02:38,375
You working all that.
Give it the same.

1121
01:02:38,458 --> 01:02:40,791
ALLEN:<i> Right now, I've been</i>
<i>focusing on sports a lot.</i>

1122
01:02:40,875 --> 01:02:42,500
<i>With everything</i>
<i>that's going on in my city,</i>

1123
01:02:42,583 --> 01:02:45,375
<i>a lot of kids are dying</i>
<i>because they're in the streets.</i>

1124
01:02:45,458 --> 01:02:46,666
CALVIN: Switch.

1125
01:02:46,750 --> 01:02:48,333
ALLEN:<i> So what I want to do</i>
<i>is to change that narrative</i>

1126
01:02:48,416 --> 01:02:50,875
<i>around the youth</i>
<i>and give them something</i>
<i>to inspire them.</i>

1127
01:02:50,958 --> 01:02:53,291
CALVIN:
Change up. Where's Rico at?

1128
01:02:54,916 --> 01:02:57,208
All y'all still gotta train.

1129
01:02:57,291 --> 01:02:59,625
ALLEN:<i> We have</i>
<i>this amazing boxing coach</i>

1130
01:02:59,708 --> 01:03:00,958
<i>by the name of Calvin.</i>

1131
01:03:01,041 --> 01:03:03,541
CALVIN: See how fast that was?
(GIGGLES)

1132
01:03:03,625 --> 01:03:06,333
ALLEN:<i> I wanted to use</i>
<i>my photography to highlight him.</i>

1133
01:03:07,166 --> 01:03:08,250
CALVIN: Box!

1134
01:03:08,958 --> 01:03:10,708
Good, no backing up.

1135
01:03:10,791 --> 01:03:12,625
Side to side. Good.

1136
01:03:14,458 --> 01:03:17,083
If Kenny tell him
to work the jab,
you work your jab.

1137
01:03:18,875 --> 01:03:20,083
There you go!

1138
01:03:20,166 --> 01:03:22,333
Whoever says work the jab,
you beat him to the punch.

1139
01:03:22,416 --> 01:03:24,375
ALLEN:<i> Capturing someone</i>
<i>getting punched in the face</i>
<i>is pretty easy...</i>

1140
01:03:24,458 --> 01:03:26,166
(CHUCKLES)<i> ...but it's those</i>

1141
01:03:26,250 --> 01:03:27,875
<i>intimate moments,</i>
<i>those down moments,</i>

1142
01:03:27,958 --> 01:03:31,750
<i>that I really, I love, like,</i>
<i>just seeing people be human.</i>

1143
01:03:34,833 --> 01:03:38,416
<i>When a coach is giving</i>
<i>a pep talk or he hugs a kid.</i>

1144
01:03:40,291 --> 01:03:42,000
<i>I like seeing people</i>
<i>be vulnerable.</i>

1145
01:03:44,583 --> 01:03:47,666
<i>I've been documenting</i>
<i>Coach Calvin for a while now.</i>

1146
01:03:47,750 --> 01:03:49,875
<i>He's saving lives</i>
<i>in West Baltimore.</i>

1147
01:03:50,916 --> 01:03:52,333
<i>So what I've been doing is like,</i>

1148
01:03:52,416 --> 01:03:54,916
<i>taking a page</i>
<i>out of Gordon Parks's book.</i>

1149
01:03:55,000 --> 01:03:58,458
<i>I've been embedding myself</i>
<i>at the gym with these kids,</i>

1150
01:03:58,541 --> 01:04:01,500
<i>and kids love images</i>
<i>of themselves.</i>

1151
01:04:01,583 --> 01:04:03,958
And that's when I really started
realizing how important

1152
01:04:04,041 --> 01:04:06,291
my imagery was to my city.

1153
01:04:06,375 --> 01:04:09,333
CALVIN: When your hands up,
the hands up, go to the body!

1154
01:04:09,416 --> 01:04:11,833
He ain't listening.
Oh, he listening. Okay!

1155
01:04:13,166 --> 01:04:14,416
Oh, good right hand!

1156
01:04:15,500 --> 01:04:18,000
Stop wrestling. Punch. Box!

1157
01:04:25,458 --> 01:04:27,708
"Gordon Parks's
personal history includes

1158
01:04:27,791 --> 01:04:30,666
a Kansas Farm,
a Minneapolis brothel,

1159
01:04:30,750 --> 01:04:33,750
a flophouse in Chicago,
a St. Paul jail.

1160
01:04:33,833 --> 01:04:36,833
The story of one American
who overcame loneliness,

1161
01:04:36,916 --> 01:04:38,875
the Depression, poverty,

1162
01:04:39,000 --> 01:04:41,458
and his color to find security

1163
01:04:41,541 --> 01:04:43,541
and the beginnings
of a success."

1164
01:04:43,625 --> 01:04:47,125
His book is titled
<i>A Choice of Weapons.</i>

1165
01:04:47,208 --> 01:04:48,458
Here is Gordon Parks.

1166
01:04:48,541 --> 01:04:49,916
(AUDIENCE APPLAUDS)

1167
01:04:50,000 --> 01:04:53,125
RAZ-RUSSO:<i> By this point,</i>
<i>he's a larger-than-life figure.</i>

1168
01:04:53,208 --> 01:04:55,125
<i>You know, he's an</i>
<i>incredibly well known,</i>

1169
01:04:55,208 --> 01:04:57,250
well respected, powerful figure.

1170
01:04:57,333 --> 01:05:01,708
Your pictures of
the story of the little boy...

1171
01:05:01,791 --> 01:05:02,958
-Flavio?
-Flavio.

1172
01:05:03,041 --> 01:05:04,375
Flavio, they pronounce it.

1173
01:05:04,458 --> 01:05:07,333
...in Rio de Janeiro
will long be remembered.

1174
01:05:12,916 --> 01:05:15,958
PAUL ROTH:<i> Gordon was asked</i>
<i>to make an effective photo essay</i>

1175
01:05:16,041 --> 01:05:18,250
<i>that would</i>
<i>help Americans understand</i>

1176
01:05:18,333 --> 01:05:21,458
the scale of
the problem of poverty
in Latin America.

1177
01:05:21,541 --> 01:05:23,125
MERV GRIFFIN: And here's Flavio?

1178
01:05:24,000 --> 01:05:25,333
Yes, that's Flav.

1179
01:05:25,416 --> 01:05:27,208
GRIFFIN:<i> Oh, you got so,</i>
<i>you called him "Flav."</i>

1180
01:05:27,291 --> 01:05:30,208
PARKS:<i> Yes, I called him Flav.</i>
<i>He called me Gordo.</i>

1181
01:05:30,291 --> 01:05:34,083
ANDERSON COOPER:
<i>I remember as a kid looking at</i>
<i>pictures of Flavio in Brazil,</i>

1182
01:05:34,166 --> 01:05:38,083
<i>and it absolutely sparked</i>
<i>an interest in going places</i>

1183
01:05:38,166 --> 01:05:41,041
<i>and telling stories, and seeing</i>
<i>things with your own eye</i>

1184
01:05:41,125 --> 01:05:43,041
<i>and through your own lens.</i>

1185
01:05:43,125 --> 01:05:46,333
I wouldn't be a reporter today
if it wasn't for Gordon Parks.

1186
01:05:47,333 --> 01:05:49,291
BERGER:
<i>Those photographs would not just</i>

1187
01:05:49,375 --> 01:05:50,958
<i>inspire a response,</i>

1188
01:05:51,041 --> 01:05:53,000
they saved Flavio's life.

1189
01:05:53,916 --> 01:05:55,375
ROTH:
<i>Gordon actually took Flavio</i>

1190
01:05:55,458 --> 01:05:57,958
<i>to a doctor for the first time,</i>
<i>and that doctor said</i>

1191
01:05:58,041 --> 01:06:00,041
that he had
very little time left to live,

1192
01:06:00,125 --> 01:06:03,250
no more than two years and
probably much less than that.

1193
01:06:03,333 --> 01:06:04,958
GRIFFIN:<i> Have you heard</i>
<i>from him since?</i>

1194
01:06:05,041 --> 01:06:07,458
Well, yes,
I brought him to America, uh.

1195
01:06:07,541 --> 01:06:10,250
<i>People, many of you possibly</i>
<i>out there,</i>

1196
01:06:10,333 --> 01:06:13,333
<i>sent in money,</i>
<i>over 100,000 dollars,</i>

1197
01:06:13,416 --> 01:06:15,541
<i>and demanded</i>
<i>that I go back and get Flavio</i>

1198
01:06:15,625 --> 01:06:18,458
<i>and bring him</i>
<i>to the United States</i>
<i>to be cured, which I did.</i>

1199
01:06:18,541 --> 01:06:20,041
<i>I brought him</i>
<i>to the Denver Clinic.</i>

1200
01:06:20,125 --> 01:06:21,791
LESLIE PARKS-BAILEY:
<i>All of these donations</i>
<i>started coming in,</i>

1201
01:06:21,875 --> 01:06:25,333
<i>and he took it upon himself</i>
<i>to get this child help</i>

1202
01:06:25,416 --> 01:06:26,958
<i>for his asthma.</i>

1203
01:06:27,041 --> 01:06:30,375
They built a new house for them,
and, you know, it's just...

1204
01:06:31,125 --> 01:06:32,500
Who does that?

1205
01:06:32,583 --> 01:06:36,333
♪ (UPLIFTING MUSIC FADES) ♪

1206
01:06:39,791 --> 01:06:43,166
Will you welcome please,
Mr. Gordon Parks.

1207
01:06:43,250 --> 01:06:46,083
COBB:<i> I think there's</i>
<i>an interesting trade off</i>

1208
01:06:46,166 --> 01:06:50,083
that Gordon makes
as he becomes more prominent.

1209
01:06:50,166 --> 01:06:53,916
What, looking back,
was the very first

1210
01:06:54,000 --> 01:06:56,291
photographic story
you ever covered?

1211
01:06:56,375 --> 01:06:59,083
Well, the very first
photographic story
I covered for<i> LIFE</i>

1212
01:06:59,166 --> 01:07:03,416
was, I think the 1948,
was the Harlem gang story.

1213
01:07:03,500 --> 01:07:08,958
COBB:
<i>He had previously been able</i>
<i>to observe uninterrupted,</i>

1214
01:07:09,041 --> 01:07:10,500
<i>you know, with his camera</i>

1215
01:07:10,583 --> 01:07:13,083
<i>and, you know,</i>
<i>capture the unguarded moment.</i>

1216
01:07:15,041 --> 01:07:18,125
<i>To be this Negro man</i>
<i>with a camera,</i>

1217
01:07:18,208 --> 01:07:21,208
<i>you know, who's going around</i>
<i>taking images.</i>

1218
01:07:21,291 --> 01:07:24,208
<i>You can't quite do that,</i>
<i>you know, when everyone</i>
<i>knows you,</i>

1219
01:07:24,291 --> 01:07:26,791
<i>where you're showing up</i>
<i>on television.</i>

1220
01:07:26,875 --> 01:07:29,125
We're talking
to Gordon Parks about
<i>The Learning Tree,</i>

1221
01:07:29,208 --> 01:07:31,250
his brilliant new novel. Poetic.

1222
01:07:32,333 --> 01:07:34,708
He has a song about it.

1223
01:07:34,791 --> 01:07:37,000
Gordon, I couldn't put it down
from the very first page,

1224
01:07:37,083 --> 01:07:39,083
and of course, the obvious
question comes first,

1225
01:07:39,166 --> 01:07:40,666
is it autobiographical?

1226
01:07:41,375 --> 01:07:43,625
Well, that's often asked, uh,

1227
01:07:43,708 --> 01:07:47,333
I have a--
I must say that it's fictional.

1228
01:07:47,416 --> 01:07:50,791
<i>LIFE</i> magazine calls it
"Fictional Autobiographical."

1229
01:07:50,875 --> 01:07:53,625
(CHUCKLES) It's a tricky one.
But I will admit

1230
01:07:53,708 --> 01:07:55,583
that I know most of
the characters in it.

1231
01:07:55,666 --> 01:07:58,541
COBB:<i> At this point,</i>
<i>Gordon's personal bearing</i>

1232
01:07:58,625 --> 01:08:01,708
<i>begins to become much more</i>
<i>distinct and distinguished.</i>

1233
01:08:03,208 --> 01:08:07,750
If celebrity was a language,
Gordon spoke it fluently.

1234
01:08:07,833 --> 01:08:09,458
Have you got anything else
in preparation?

1235
01:08:09,541 --> 01:08:11,916
Yes, I have
an autobiographical book

1236
01:08:12,000 --> 01:08:14,166
coming up for Harper's,
and a novel,

1237
01:08:14,250 --> 01:08:16,125
and there's great talk now

1238
01:08:16,208 --> 01:08:17,666
of a movie
for<i> The Learning Tree,</i>

1239
01:08:17,750 --> 01:08:20,875
and I will be asked
to direct that.
(CHUCKLES)

1240
01:08:20,958 --> 01:08:23,000
I hope certainly,
because you know it
so much better,

1241
01:08:23,083 --> 01:08:25,166
and I hope also
that they're going
to let you shoot it

1242
01:08:25,250 --> 01:08:26,541
just about in the same location.

1243
01:08:26,625 --> 01:08:29,750
We hope to go right back
to Kansas and shoot this there.

1244
01:08:35,833 --> 01:08:38,541
BERGER:
<i>I think he gravitated to film</i>

1245
01:08:38,625 --> 01:08:42,041
because he understood
the immense audience.

1246
01:08:42,791 --> 01:08:44,750
<i>Gordon was so interested</i>

1247
01:08:44,833 --> 01:08:47,875
<i>in reaching</i>
<i>as many people as possible.</i>

1248
01:08:47,958 --> 01:08:52,166
<i>The Learning Tree</i>
was the first major studio film

1249
01:08:52,250 --> 01:08:54,791
directed by
an African American director.

1250
01:08:54,875 --> 01:08:57,708
<i>So he broke tremendous ground</i>
<i>with the film.</i>

1251
01:08:57,791 --> 01:08:59,166
All of these things are clues.

1252
01:08:59,250 --> 01:09:01,416
Each one should know exactly
what they're coming to do,

1253
01:09:01,500 --> 01:09:02,625
and what they're gonna do.

1254
01:09:02,708 --> 01:09:05,541
DUVERNAY:<i> He demanded</i>
<i>that Black crew members</i>

1255
01:09:05,625 --> 01:09:06,833
<i>be around him.</i>

1256
01:09:07,625 --> 01:09:09,583
He really lifted as he climbed.

1257
01:09:09,666 --> 01:09:12,125
With<i> The Learning Tree,</i>
they took

1258
01:09:12,208 --> 01:09:15,833
a thoroughly integrated
crew and cast.

1259
01:09:15,916 --> 01:09:18,416
<i>They could work together.</i>
<i>They could live together.</i>

1260
01:09:18,500 --> 01:09:21,958
<i>They created a feeling</i>
<i>of goodwill, you might say.</i>

1261
01:09:22,041 --> 01:09:23,583
PARKS: All right,
let's shoot it now.

1262
01:09:24,708 --> 01:09:25,833
Action!

1263
01:09:25,916 --> 01:09:28,000
DUVERNAY:<i> He was not only able</i>
<i>to direct the film,</i>

1264
01:09:28,083 --> 01:09:31,375
<i>but to, you know,</i>
<i>play direct parts in a lot of</i>

1265
01:09:31,458 --> 01:09:33,916
the other art practice
and disciplines

1266
01:09:34,000 --> 01:09:35,375
that went into
making the film.

1267
01:09:35,458 --> 01:09:38,416
PARKS:<i> I wrote the screenplay,</i>
<i>I directed it,</i>

1268
01:09:38,500 --> 01:09:40,333
<i>I wrote the music,</i>

1269
01:09:40,416 --> 01:09:42,791
<i>and I produced it</i>
<i>for Warner Brothers.</i>

1270
01:09:42,875 --> 01:09:45,166
COBB:<i> Parks is kind</i>
<i>of like the guy in the band</i>

1271
01:09:45,250 --> 01:09:46,916
<i>who's gonna play</i>
<i>all the instruments.</i>

1272
01:09:47,000 --> 01:09:51,375
<i>That would still be</i>
<i>a pretty uncommon thing</i>

1273
01:09:51,458 --> 01:09:53,791
<i>to see one person do</i>
<i>all those things.</i>

1274
01:09:53,875 --> 01:09:57,208
<i>But I also think it falls into</i>
<i>the same sort of paradox</i>

1275
01:09:57,791 --> 01:09:59,666
of his career,

1276
01:09:59,750 --> 01:10:02,541
which is that in order to be
the first Black person
to do something,

1277
01:10:02,625 --> 01:10:04,875
you have to be
this exceptional talent.

1278
01:10:04,958 --> 01:10:08,000
NARRATOR:<i> The 15th</i>
<i>and youngest child</i>
<i>of a Kansas farmer,</i>

1279
01:10:08,083 --> 01:10:10,291
<i>he told of how</i>
<i>it was growing up</i>

1280
01:10:10,375 --> 01:10:12,875
<i>in his bestselling novel,</i>
The Learning Tree.

1281
01:10:13,000 --> 01:10:16,125
<i>And now Gordon Parks</i>
<i>has returned to the town</i>

1282
01:10:16,208 --> 01:10:18,708
<i>where he lived it.</i>
<i>And there, made that story</i>

1283
01:10:18,791 --> 01:10:20,083
<i>into a motion picture.</i>

1284
01:10:20,166 --> 01:10:21,125
(GUNSHOT)

1285
01:10:21,208 --> 01:10:22,125
<i>♪ My baby's gone ♪</i>

1286
01:10:22,208 --> 01:10:24,166
DUVERNAY:
<i>It is an essential film,</i>

1287
01:10:24,250 --> 01:10:26,458
<i>certainly in understanding</i>
<i>the Black cinematic canon,</i>

1288
01:10:26,541 --> 01:10:28,750
<i>but it should be a part</i>
<i>of the conversation</i>

1289
01:10:28,833 --> 01:10:31,291
<i>as we talk about</i>
<i>the American cinematic canon.</i>

1290
01:10:32,500 --> 01:10:34,833
And to make something
as lyrical and intimate

1291
01:10:34,916 --> 01:10:36,416
as<i> The Learning Tree,</i>

1292
01:10:36,500 --> 01:10:38,250
<i>and then create</i>
<i>a cultural phenomenon</i>

1293
01:10:38,333 --> 01:10:40,083
<i>like</i> Shaft<i> is remarkable!</i>

1294
01:10:40,166 --> 01:10:42,041
-PARKS: Now the sequence we saw
this morning...
-Right.

1295
01:10:42,125 --> 01:10:44,750
Times Square,
panned on off the skyscrapers

1296
01:10:44,833 --> 01:10:46,958
along 42nd Street
where the marquis is,

1297
01:10:47,041 --> 01:10:49,250
and when Shaft pops up out
of that subway,

1298
01:10:49,333 --> 01:10:51,458
-that's when
it should really come on.
-Right.

1299
01:10:51,541 --> 01:10:54,375
And there should be
a driving savage beat,

1300
01:10:54,458 --> 01:10:57,166
you know,
so that we'll be right
with him all the time.

1301
01:10:57,250 --> 01:10:59,958
-Mm-hmm.
-What I heard you
working on earlier

1302
01:11:00,041 --> 01:11:01,833
seems great
for that Shaft walk.

1303
01:11:01,916 --> 01:11:03,666
-Can we hear it now?
-HAYES: Yeah, okay.

1304
01:11:03,750 --> 01:11:05,791
Now watch the rhythm, man.
Just let it flow, you know?

1305
01:11:05,875 --> 01:11:09,666
One, two, three, four.

1306
01:11:09,750 --> 01:11:13,833
♪ ("THEME FROM SHAFT"
BY ISAAC HAYES PLAYING) ♪

1307
01:11:22,166 --> 01:11:24,583
COBB:<i> How many detectives</i>
<i>have we seen?</i>

1308
01:11:24,666 --> 01:11:27,791
<i>From</i> The Maltese Falcon,
<i>you know, all the way up.</i>

1309
01:11:27,875 --> 01:11:30,000
We have never seen it like this.

1310
01:11:30,083 --> 01:11:32,041
-Up yours!
-CAB DRIVER: Get out of the way.

1311
01:11:32,125 --> 01:11:35,625
COBB:<i> Richard Roundtree was like</i>
<i>this swaggering figure.</i>

1312
01:11:35,708 --> 01:11:38,291
As they called him back then,
the "Black James Bond."

1313
01:11:40,250 --> 01:11:41,583
I thought we were gonna get to.

1314
01:11:41,666 --> 01:11:43,333
We did, but you wanted me
to fidget.

1315
01:11:43,416 --> 01:11:45,583
I just said, "Up yours, baby."

1316
01:11:45,666 --> 01:11:48,250
The whole point of Shaft
is he wasn't part of the system,

1317
01:11:48,333 --> 01:11:50,083
that he had agency
outside of that.

1318
01:11:50,166 --> 01:11:53,208
Don't get wise with me, Shaft.
I'll put your goddamn ass in.

1319
01:11:53,291 --> 01:11:55,375
I'll sue your goddamn ass
for false arrest.

1320
01:11:55,458 --> 01:11:58,166
When Shaft interacts with
the police, he talks to them

1321
01:11:58,250 --> 01:12:01,166
the way that all Black people
wanted to talk to the police.

1322
01:12:01,250 --> 01:12:03,000
-Cool it, man.
-You cool it, boy.

1323
01:12:03,083 --> 01:12:05,500
GEORGE:<i> He talked the way</i>
<i>he wanted to talk</i>
<i>to whoever he wanted to,</i>

1324
01:12:05,583 --> 01:12:06,958
<i>and that included</i>
<i>the Black radicals,</i>

1325
01:12:07,041 --> 01:12:08,541
<i>that included</i>
<i>the Harlem gangsters.</i>

1326
01:12:09,666 --> 01:12:11,458
And the idea of Black power

1327
01:12:11,541 --> 01:12:13,833
became very, very popular
with younger people.

1328
01:12:13,916 --> 01:12:15,625
<i>You were seeing that</i>
<i>in the streets.</i>

1329
01:12:15,708 --> 01:12:18,083
<i>You were seeing that</i>
<i>in the pop culture.</i>

1330
01:12:18,166 --> 01:12:21,916
<i>And it comes through his work</i>
<i>as a photographer.</i>

1331
01:12:22,000 --> 01:12:24,750
DUVERNAY:<i> When you think about</i>
<i>what was going on in the country</i>
<i>at that time,</i>

1332
01:12:24,833 --> 01:12:30,000
you know, really the country was
at war in many ways with itself.

1333
01:12:30,083 --> 01:12:33,208
GEORGE: Shaft<i> was the movie</i>
<i>that kind of mainstreamed</i>

1334
01:12:33,291 --> 01:12:34,708
<i>a lot of that rebellion</i>

1335
01:12:34,791 --> 01:12:36,875
through this sort
of detective character.

1336
01:12:36,958 --> 01:12:38,000
Listen, Snow White,

1337
01:12:38,083 --> 01:12:39,791
me and you gonna tangle
sooner or later.

1338
01:12:39,875 --> 01:12:41,916
We ain't gonna do shit.

1339
01:12:42,000 --> 01:12:46,125
LEE:<i> John Shaft represented</i>
<i>Black manhood.</i>

1340
01:12:46,208 --> 01:12:49,000
We're kicking ass,
and we got the ladies too.

1341
01:12:49,083 --> 01:12:50,708
(LAUGHS)

1342
01:12:50,791 --> 01:12:53,375
We got it covered on all sides!

1343
01:12:53,458 --> 01:12:56,916
(LAUGHING)

1344
01:12:57,000 --> 01:12:58,625
I didn't see<i> Shaft</i>
until much later.

1345
01:12:58,708 --> 01:13:00,416
My mother didn't
want me watching that.

1346
01:13:00,500 --> 01:13:03,166
<i>She thought it was</i>
<i>a little too risqué</i>
<i>for her baby.</i>

1347
01:13:04,291 --> 01:13:06,500
GEORGE:<i> He had White</i>
<i>and Black women.</i>

1348
01:13:06,583 --> 01:13:09,000
<i>Shaft is in a shower</i>
<i>having sex with a White chick</i>

1349
01:13:09,083 --> 01:13:10,166
<i>he met at a bar.</i>

1350
01:13:10,625 --> 01:13:11,916
That was, whoa.

1351
01:13:15,041 --> 01:13:16,958
LEE:<i> I saw it on 42nd Street.</i>

1352
01:13:17,041 --> 01:13:18,166
SHAFT: (WHISPERING) No noise.

1353
01:13:18,250 --> 01:13:21,583
That motherfuckin' theater
was jam packed.

1354
01:13:21,666 --> 01:13:24,833
And Black folks
were going berserk.

1355
01:13:24,916 --> 01:13:28,416
It's like, we ain't never
seen no shit like this before.

1356
01:13:28,750 --> 01:13:29,791
Open it!

1357
01:13:29,875 --> 01:13:31,750
-(DOOR OPENS)
-(WOMAN GASPS)

1358
01:13:31,833 --> 01:13:35,041
We loved it!
Because on the screen

1359
01:13:35,125 --> 01:13:38,000
we're looking at
a Black superhero.

1360
01:13:38,083 --> 01:13:39,583
-(GUN FIRING)
-(SCREAMS)

1361
01:13:39,666 --> 01:13:40,916
(GUNFIRE)

1362
01:13:41,000 --> 01:13:43,500
Shaft is a guy, he has
an office in Times Square.

1363
01:13:43,583 --> 01:13:45,416
<i>He has a place in the Village,</i>

1364
01:13:45,500 --> 01:13:48,625
<i>but he's able to move in Harlem</i>
<i>and other spaces as well.</i>

1365
01:13:48,708 --> 01:13:50,250
Hey, man. What's goin' on?

1366
01:13:50,333 --> 01:13:52,375
GEORGE:<i> He has a relationship</i>
<i>with the police</i>
<i>and the authorities,</i>

1367
01:13:52,458 --> 01:13:55,166
<i>but he also has a relationship</i>
<i>with the radical element.</i>

1368
01:13:55,916 --> 01:13:57,416
That's Gordon!

1369
01:13:57,500 --> 01:14:00,458
And be sure, after you hit him
over the head with the bottle,

1370
01:14:00,541 --> 01:14:02,875
and you see
the blood gush out of his face,

1371
01:14:02,958 --> 01:14:06,291
that you maintain the cool
that Shaft should maintain.

1372
01:14:06,375 --> 01:14:11,041
Gordon introduced me
to Morty Sills, his tailor.

1373
01:14:11,125 --> 01:14:16,666
<i>He says, um, "He will put it</i>
<i>all together for you."</i>

1374
01:14:18,875 --> 01:14:22,041
<i>He never told me this,</i>
<i>and it was only years after</i>

1375
01:14:22,125 --> 01:14:24,916
that I looked back on it
in retrospect,

1376
01:14:25,000 --> 01:14:27,166
it was Gordon Parks.

1377
01:14:27,250 --> 01:14:30,083
PARKS: Gentlemen, do your scene
as you did it in the master.

1378
01:14:30,166 --> 01:14:32,041
No mistakes,
because this is the type

1379
01:14:32,125 --> 01:14:33,958
we don't like to retake.

1380
01:14:34,041 --> 01:14:35,458
GENEVIEVE YOUNG:
<i>The swaggering guy</i>

1381
01:14:35,541 --> 01:14:39,166
<i>with that black leather jacket,</i>
<i>which became an icon.</i>

1382
01:14:39,250 --> 01:14:42,416
This was Gordon's
other personality.

1383
01:14:44,125 --> 01:14:45,333
That was beautiful, sweetheart.

1384
01:14:47,208 --> 01:14:49,375
BERGER:
<i>The movie was a critical success</i>

1385
01:14:49,458 --> 01:14:50,791
<i>and a box office success.</i>

1386
01:14:51,875 --> 01:14:53,833
<i>It won an Oscar</i>
<i>for Isaac Hayes's</i>

1387
01:14:53,916 --> 01:14:56,166
<i>extraordinary</i>
<i>song for the opening credits.</i>

1388
01:14:59,041 --> 01:15:01,125
<i>It literally set into motion</i>
<i>the idea that</i>

1389
01:15:01,208 --> 01:15:04,083
if you make Black films,
people will come and see them.

1390
01:15:06,958 --> 01:15:08,666
NARRATOR:<i> Shaft is back!</i>

1391
01:15:10,166 --> 01:15:11,333
Drop the guns and freeze!

1392
01:15:11,416 --> 01:15:15,166
NARRATOR:<i> He's super hood,</i>
<i>super high, super dude,</i>

1393
01:15:15,833 --> 01:15:16,958
<i>super fly.</i>

1394
01:15:17,041 --> 01:15:18,708
COBB:<i> The arrival</i>
<i>of Blaxploitation</i>

1395
01:15:18,791 --> 01:15:21,500
<i>really shored up</i>
<i>Hollywood's fortunes.</i>

1396
01:15:21,583 --> 01:15:23,416
Those films were
inexpensive to make

1397
01:15:23,500 --> 01:15:26,416
and guaranteed
really significant box offices.

1398
01:15:26,500 --> 01:15:29,375
-Don't crowd me, boy.
-You better put that down
before I make you eat it.

1399
01:15:31,208 --> 01:15:32,708
COBB:<i> But after being</i>
<i>kind of a source</i>

1400
01:15:32,791 --> 01:15:36,000
<i>of a great deal of revenue,</i>
<i>there wasn't anything</i>
<i>beyond that.</i>

1401
01:15:37,000 --> 01:15:40,000
Very few times would
the story deviate

1402
01:15:40,083 --> 01:15:42,875
from the same old,
same old thing.

1403
01:15:42,958 --> 01:15:46,708
<i>And eventually,</i>
<i>the Black audience got tired</i>

1404
01:15:46,791 --> 01:15:48,708
<i>and the genre died out because</i>

1405
01:15:48,791 --> 01:15:51,291
they went to the well
way too often.

1406
01:15:51,375 --> 01:15:54,750
(EXPLOSIONS)

1407
01:15:54,833 --> 01:15:58,291
That whole wave of Black film,
that Gordon helped create,

1408
01:15:58,375 --> 01:16:01,125
<i>crested, and Hollywood moved on.</i>

1409
01:16:01,208 --> 01:16:02,958
♪ (SOMBER MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

1410
01:16:03,041 --> 01:16:05,250
COBB:<i> When Blaxploitation began</i>
<i>to fade out,</i>

1411
01:16:05,333 --> 01:16:08,791
<i>there was no avenue to say,</i>
<i>"Okay, we want Gordon Parks</i>

1412
01:16:08,875 --> 01:16:12,000
<i>to direct</i>
<i>this World War II epic."</i>

1413
01:16:12,083 --> 01:16:15,333
Or like any of the kind
of natural progressions

1414
01:16:15,416 --> 01:16:17,416
that you would've seen,
especially kind of the heyday

1415
01:16:17,500 --> 01:16:20,291
of the 1970s American director.

1416
01:16:20,375 --> 01:16:22,416
<i>You don't see him</i>
<i>get entrée into that.</i>

1417
01:16:25,416 --> 01:16:27,250
PARKS:<i> I've never been offered</i>
<i>some of the films</i>

1418
01:16:27,333 --> 01:16:29,583
<i>that would have been offered</i>
<i>to me had I been White.</i>

1419
01:16:29,666 --> 01:16:31,500
<i>Let's put it</i>
<i>very simply like that.</i>

1420
01:16:36,083 --> 01:16:38,458
YOUNG:<i> He really wanted</i>
<i>to keep on being a director,</i>

1421
01:16:38,541 --> 01:16:41,541
<i>but nobody asked him anymore.</i>
<i>That grieved him a lot.</i>

1422
01:16:43,958 --> 01:16:47,958
He had not achieved what
he wanted to in the movie world.

1423
01:16:50,583 --> 01:16:53,458
LEE:<i> No matter who you are,</i>
<i>as an artist,</i>

1424
01:16:53,541 --> 01:16:57,458
<i>and you're not able</i>
<i>to expand and grow,</i>

1425
01:16:57,541 --> 01:16:59,041
<i>it's gonna hurt your soul.</i>

1426
01:16:59,125 --> 01:17:01,000
Because your soul is what...

1427
01:17:02,208 --> 01:17:03,416
is what your art is.

1428
01:17:06,875 --> 01:17:09,250
ROTH:
<i>He was not a comfortable fit.</i>

1429
01:17:09,333 --> 01:17:11,791
<i>While he had been able</i>
<i>to walk a tightrope</i>

1430
01:17:11,875 --> 01:17:12,958
<i>at</i> LIFE<i> magazine,</i>

1431
01:17:13,041 --> 01:17:15,500
<i>he couldn't quite</i>
<i>walk the tightrope in Hollywood.</i>

1432
01:17:17,500 --> 01:17:20,250
So it was
a brief meteoric career,

1433
01:17:20,333 --> 01:17:21,666
and then it was all over.

1434
01:17:24,416 --> 01:17:27,208
DUVERNAY:<i> Of course, Hollywood</i>
<i>has changed from the late '60s,</i>

1435
01:17:27,291 --> 01:17:29,208
<i>when he started making films,</i>

1436
01:17:29,291 --> 01:17:32,166
but it's changed
because he changed it, you know.

1437
01:17:32,250 --> 01:17:35,083
It's changed because, you know,
he opened the door.

1438
01:17:35,166 --> 01:17:38,833
♪ (MUSIC CONCLUDES) ♪

1439
01:17:41,583 --> 01:17:44,750
All the years
that I knew Gordon,

1440
01:17:44,833 --> 01:17:46,958
over 20 years
that I worked with him...

1441
01:17:48,500 --> 01:17:51,375
<i>the next project</i>
<i>is what was important.</i>

1442
01:17:51,458 --> 01:17:54,250
How was this going
to affect the future?

1443
01:17:54,333 --> 01:17:55,708
And that's where
he wanted to go.

1444
01:17:55,791 --> 01:17:57,666
He was always moving forward.

1445
01:17:57,750 --> 01:18:01,166
PARKS:<i> I want to compose more.</i>
<i>I want to compose differently.</i>

1446
01:18:01,250 --> 01:18:03,791
<i>I want to write more.</i>
<i>I want to write differently.</i>

1447
01:18:03,875 --> 01:18:07,041
<i>This all takes time,</i>
<i>and I know I don't have</i>

1448
01:18:07,125 --> 01:18:08,333
<i>that much time.</i>

1449
01:18:09,541 --> 01:18:11,250
LESLIE:<i> He would stay up</i>
<i>until, you know,</i>

1450
01:18:11,333 --> 01:18:12,750
six o'clock
in the morning, typing.

1451
01:18:12,833 --> 01:18:14,291
I remember when
I would stay with him,

1452
01:18:14,375 --> 01:18:16,458
<i>just hearing</i>
<i>the typewriter going,</i>

1453
01:18:16,541 --> 01:18:19,625
<i>like, he just</i>
<i>never stopped working.</i>

1454
01:18:19,708 --> 01:18:21,875
<i>Being creative</i>
<i>was just something</i>

1455
01:18:21,958 --> 01:18:23,291
<i>he couldn't help doing.</i>

1456
01:18:24,875 --> 01:18:27,791
YOUNG:<i> He just had</i>
<i>this drive to work all the time.</i>

1457
01:18:27,875 --> 01:18:30,291
Expression of his talent
was his religion.

1458
01:18:32,791 --> 01:18:37,250
PARKS:<i> At 85, I really feel</i>
<i>that I'm just ready to start.</i>

1459
01:18:40,750 --> 01:18:43,708
SHABAZZ:
<i>I met him at the Leica Gallery</i>
<i>in the '90s.</i>

1460
01:18:43,791 --> 01:18:46,833
<i>I had just had</i>
<i>a really difficult day at jail</i>

1461
01:18:46,916 --> 01:18:49,375
where a young man
tried to kill himself.

1462
01:18:49,458 --> 01:18:51,416
You know,
like maybe two hours earlier,

1463
01:18:51,500 --> 01:18:53,250
and now I'm at an opening.

1464
01:18:53,333 --> 01:18:57,291
<i>I was downstairs about to leave,</i>
<i>and Gordon had come down.</i>

1465
01:18:58,666 --> 01:19:00,916
<i>And I asked him, you know,</i>
<i>with all due respect, sir,</i>

1466
01:19:01,000 --> 01:19:03,250
<i>may I take a photograph of you?</i>

1467
01:19:03,333 --> 01:19:06,583
<i>And he had</i>
<i>a really bad toothache,</i>
<i>and he couldn't speak.</i>

1468
01:19:06,666 --> 01:19:08,750
<i>He looked me in my eyes,</i>
<i>and he raised his right hand,</i>

1469
01:19:08,833 --> 01:19:12,333
<i>and he shook his fist</i>
<i>about three times</i>
<i>as he looked at me.</i>

1470
01:19:12,416 --> 01:19:15,458
<i>He must have saw</i>
<i>the pain inside me</i>
<i>at that point.</i>

1471
01:19:15,541 --> 01:19:17,625
Through his body language,
he let me know that

1472
01:19:17,708 --> 01:19:19,291
you are in a sense,

1473
01:19:19,375 --> 01:19:21,458
carry on that torch, like,
hang in there.

1474
01:19:25,750 --> 01:19:28,791
GEORGE:
<i>I had friends who knew him,</i>
<i>so I was able to be around him.</i>

1475
01:19:29,916 --> 01:19:32,166
<i>He wasn't just a guy</i>
<i>who photojournalists knew</i>

1476
01:19:32,250 --> 01:19:35,125
<i>or other people</i>
<i>in the photo art world knew.</i>

1477
01:19:35,208 --> 01:19:39,166
Gordon was able to leap out
of the world of photography

1478
01:19:39,250 --> 01:19:41,083
into the world
of popular culture.

1479
01:19:45,875 --> 01:19:48,583
<i>In the summer of 1998,</i>

1480
01:19:48,666 --> 01:19:52,250
<i>XXL</i> magazine, which was then
a fledgling hip-hop magazine,

1481
01:19:52,333 --> 01:19:54,500
decided to do
a photograph reenacting

1482
01:19:54,583 --> 01:19:57,833
the<i> Great Day in Harlem</i> photo
that he had taken in '58.

1483
01:19:57,916 --> 01:20:00,375
♪ (UPBEAT MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

1484
01:20:00,458 --> 01:20:03,166
GEORGE:<i> But the big deal was,</i>
<i>who was going to shoot it?</i>

1485
01:20:03,250 --> 01:20:05,750
<i>And they were desperately trying</i>
<i>to get Gordon,</i>

1486
01:20:05,833 --> 01:20:07,250
and he finally agreed to do it.

1487
01:20:13,125 --> 01:20:17,166
And him doing that photo made
the photo really important.

1488
01:20:17,250 --> 01:20:19,083
Legendary, legendary.

1489
01:20:19,166 --> 01:20:20,541
GEORGE:<i> Connecting</i>
<i>the generations</i>

1490
01:20:20,625 --> 01:20:22,541
<i>between the hip-hop world</i>
<i>and the jazz world.</i>

1491
01:20:22,625 --> 01:20:25,125
RAKIM:<i> I watched footage on</i>
<i>the Great Day in Harlem</i>

1492
01:20:25,208 --> 01:20:27,000
and what that meant
to them, man.

1493
01:20:27,083 --> 01:20:29,166
And how Thelonious Monk
came down.

1494
01:20:29,250 --> 01:20:31,875
And then, I mean, yo,
it means something to me.

1495
01:20:35,208 --> 01:20:36,958
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

1496
01:20:37,041 --> 01:20:38,625
I came out to do my part,

1497
01:20:38,708 --> 01:20:40,625
to represent my culture,
you know what I mean.

1498
01:20:40,708 --> 01:20:42,958
GEORGE:<i> A wide range of artists</i>
<i>all say part of the reason</i>

1499
01:20:43,041 --> 01:20:44,750
<i>for being there</i>
<i>was Gordon Parks.</i>

1500
01:20:44,833 --> 01:20:47,375
When they called, I said,
"Yo, who's doing it man?"
I had to be here man.

1501
01:20:47,458 --> 01:20:50,375
GEORGE:<i> Hip-hop was not</i>
<i>the number one pop culture</i>
<i>in '98.</i>

1502
01:20:50,458 --> 01:20:53,291
<i>So for Gordon to be there,</i>
<i>for them was a validation.</i>

1503
01:20:53,375 --> 01:20:55,083
<i>-There's times</i>
<i>when he walks up...</i>
-(APPLAUSE)

1504
01:20:55,166 --> 01:20:57,250
<i>...to try and move people around</i>
<i>during the photoshoot,</i>

1505
01:20:57,333 --> 01:21:00,500
and people are applauding
because he's there.

1506
01:21:00,583 --> 01:21:02,291
ADGER COWANS:<i> I think</i>
<i>he was really touched by that.</i>

1507
01:21:02,375 --> 01:21:04,041
<i>And when he got ready</i>
<i>to get in the car,</i>

1508
01:21:04,125 --> 01:21:05,166
he was like...
(GASPS)

1509
01:21:05,250 --> 01:21:06,791
I mean,
I was right behind him and I'm,

1510
01:21:06,875 --> 01:21:08,708
"Get in the car, man.
Quit fuckin' around."

1511
01:21:08,791 --> 01:21:12,333
♪ (UPBEAT JAZZ MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

1512
01:21:28,791 --> 01:21:31,625
FRAZIER: Zion,
go to your papa's shoulder.

1513
01:21:31,708 --> 01:21:32,958
Stand by him.

1514
01:21:33,041 --> 01:21:35,166
-Me?
-FRAZIER: You're taking
a portrait with me.

1515
01:21:35,250 --> 01:21:38,000
ZION:
Lights, camera, action!

1516
01:21:38,083 --> 01:21:40,041
FRAZIER:
So, here, let me show you.

1517
01:21:40,125 --> 01:21:43,958
So wrap your arm around,
and don't be stiff.

1518
01:21:44,041 --> 01:21:46,916
Come on. This is the shot.
This is an important shot.

1519
01:21:47,000 --> 01:21:49,166
-Yeah.
-FRAZIER: Because I don't have
this one, okay?

1520
01:21:49,250 --> 01:21:53,041
FRAZIER:<i> What Gordon Parks's</i>
<i>legacy in life has showed me</i>

1521
01:21:53,125 --> 01:21:56,041
<i>is that I am</i>
<i>visually representing people</i>

1522
01:21:56,125 --> 01:21:59,791
like how a lawyer
represents the plaintiff

1523
01:21:59,875 --> 01:22:03,541
and their client, right.
And that is a real fight.

1524
01:22:05,583 --> 01:22:07,666
Do you always wear your glasses?

1525
01:22:07,750 --> 01:22:09,250
MR. SMILEY:
I see better without them.

1526
01:22:09,333 --> 01:22:12,500
FRAZIER: Oh, yeah.
Look at those eyes.
All right, Mr. Smiley.

1527
01:22:13,125 --> 01:22:14,625
<i>These aren't projects.</i>

1528
01:22:14,708 --> 01:22:18,666
<i>There is real blood depending on</i>
<i>that work circulating,</i>

1529
01:22:18,750 --> 01:22:20,541
<i>and being out in the world.</i>

1530
01:22:20,625 --> 01:22:24,375
I get to tell this narrative
nobody wanted to tell.

1531
01:22:24,458 --> 01:22:27,208
FRAZIER: So Zion, you're going
to be focused and concentrating

1532
01:22:27,291 --> 01:22:28,583
on me and the lens.

1533
01:22:28,666 --> 01:22:32,166
And I want you to be like,
you know, proud.

1534
01:22:32,250 --> 01:22:34,083
Bring your chin down
just a little bit.

1535
01:22:36,583 --> 01:22:38,875
(CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKS)

1536
01:22:38,958 --> 01:22:42,416
FRAZIER:<i> I think it's important</i>
<i>to create this visual narrative</i>

1537
01:22:42,500 --> 01:22:46,041
<i>that pays homage</i>
<i>to Gordon's legacy</i>

1538
01:22:46,125 --> 01:22:47,875
<i>of understanding how to take</i>

1539
01:22:47,958 --> 01:22:50,875
the trauma
behind institutional racism,

1540
01:22:50,958 --> 01:22:54,000
or constantly being
under siege in America

1541
01:22:54,083 --> 01:22:55,250
because you're Black,

1542
01:22:55,333 --> 01:22:58,750
<i>and convey that to a viewer</i>
<i>with an evocative feeling.</i>

1543
01:23:09,041 --> 01:23:12,083
♪ (DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

1544
01:23:13,416 --> 01:23:16,208
RAZ-RUSSO:
<i>Looking at Gordon Parks's</i>
<i>photographs today,</i>

1545
01:23:16,291 --> 01:23:19,333
<i>what's incredible about them</i>
<i>is that they're timeless.</i>

1546
01:23:19,416 --> 01:23:22,250
They're as relevant today
as they were, you know,

1547
01:23:22,333 --> 01:23:24,375
thirty, 40, 50 years ago.

1548
01:23:24,458 --> 01:23:26,791
STEVENSON:<i> He's created</i>
<i>this catalogue of images</i>

1549
01:23:26,875 --> 01:23:29,916
<i>that today now tell</i>
<i>an important story</i>

1550
01:23:30,000 --> 01:23:32,333
<i>that we're still</i>
<i>trying to understand,</i>

1551
01:23:32,416 --> 01:23:36,083
and if we're willing
to look at that story,
we'll gain an appreciation

1552
01:23:36,166 --> 01:23:39,250
of some truths that we've been
slow to recognize.

1553
01:23:41,125 --> 01:23:44,833
COBB:<i> Gordon resonates</i>
<i>because life</i>

1554
01:23:44,916 --> 01:23:51,083
has continually reminded us
of things that he tried
to tell us.

1555
01:23:52,541 --> 01:23:55,083
<i>We have seen in Minneapolis,</i>

1556
01:23:55,166 --> 01:23:57,208
you know, a city that Gordon
had personal connection to,

1557
01:23:57,291 --> 01:23:59,333
there's a high school
named for him there,

1558
01:23:59,416 --> 01:24:02,583
<i>the most brutal depictions</i>
<i>of racism.</i>

1559
01:24:04,500 --> 01:24:06,833
<i>And you know, we've seen</i>

1560
01:24:06,916 --> 01:24:11,625
<i>just how crucial</i>
<i>images are to us</i>

1561
01:24:11,708 --> 01:24:13,500
<i>understanding our own humanity.</i>

1562
01:24:15,208 --> 01:24:17,291
<i>I don't think</i>
<i>that we really get to understand</i>

1563
01:24:17,375 --> 01:24:19,458
<i>the world that we operate in</i>

1564
01:24:19,541 --> 01:24:22,291
in the same way
that we understand it now
without Gordon.

1565
01:24:25,208 --> 01:24:27,791
BERGER:<i> His influence</i>
<i>is now legendary.</i>

1566
01:24:27,875 --> 01:24:31,250
<i>And I think it's</i>
<i>because he represented something</i>

1567
01:24:31,333 --> 01:24:34,250
that was both
dynamic in its own time

1568
01:24:34,333 --> 01:24:36,208
and years ahead of its time.

1569
01:24:37,541 --> 01:24:38,791
DUVERNAY:<i> When you look at him</i>

1570
01:24:38,875 --> 01:24:41,791
<i>and the many disciplines</i>
<i>and tools he was using.</i>

1571
01:24:42,833 --> 01:24:45,375
Photography,
he was writing books,

1572
01:24:45,458 --> 01:24:48,333
he was making movies.
I mean, he was doing it all.

1573
01:24:48,416 --> 01:24:51,166
<i>That kind of gave me</i>
<i>permission to think,</i>

1574
01:24:51,250 --> 01:24:53,166
you can do more.

1575
01:24:53,250 --> 01:24:56,000
SHABAZZ:<i> As a photographer</i>
<i>and as photographers,</i>

1576
01:24:56,083 --> 01:24:58,000
<i>I think that we</i>
<i>have a responsibility</i>

1577
01:24:58,083 --> 01:24:59,458
to kind of, like, lend our voice

1578
01:24:59,541 --> 01:25:01,166
and use our cameras as weapons

1579
01:25:01,250 --> 01:25:03,333
to counterbalance a lot
that's going on out there.

1580
01:25:04,375 --> 01:25:05,625
<i>You know, so like Gordon,</i>

1581
01:25:05,708 --> 01:25:08,833
what I'm just trying to do now
is offer a counter narrative

1582
01:25:08,916 --> 01:25:10,791
to a lot of the negative images

1583
01:25:10,875 --> 01:25:13,000
<i>that we are</i>
<i>so accustomed to seeing.</i>

1584
01:25:13,083 --> 01:25:15,333
Of course, the photographs
can make a difference.

1585
01:25:17,041 --> 01:25:19,625
BUNCH:<i> What Parks reminds us is</i>

1586
01:25:19,708 --> 01:25:22,625
that the price of liberty
is eternal vigilance.

1587
01:25:22,708 --> 01:25:25,916
<i>That vigilance only comes</i>
<i>from a visual way</i>

1588
01:25:26,000 --> 01:25:28,083
<i>of understanding what</i>
<i>we're experiencing</i>

1589
01:25:28,166 --> 01:25:29,958
<i>and what needs</i>
<i>to be confronted.</i>

1590
01:25:30,041 --> 01:25:32,000
And I think
contemporary photographers

1591
01:25:32,083 --> 01:25:34,333
are really standing
on his shoulders
when they do that.

1592
01:25:37,208 --> 01:25:39,333
ALLEN:<i> When you think about</i>
<i>Gordon Parks and his legacy,</i>

1593
01:25:39,416 --> 01:25:41,625
<i>yes, we love the work,</i>
<i>this is our passion,</i>

1594
01:25:41,708 --> 01:25:43,083
<i>but it's also about</i>
<i>the people you touch</i>

1595
01:25:43,166 --> 01:25:45,875
and how we change their lives
using this art form

1596
01:25:45,958 --> 01:25:47,791
to bring people together.

1597
01:25:54,916 --> 01:25:57,333
FRAZIER:<i> When I'm</i>
<i>shooting images of people,</i>

1598
01:25:57,416 --> 01:26:01,166
<i>I will see a Gordon Parks image,</i>
<i>and I'll know</i>

1599
01:26:01,250 --> 01:26:03,500
that I'm making that portrait

1600
01:26:03,583 --> 01:26:06,666
that's in conversation
with all of that legacy.

1601
01:26:06,750 --> 01:26:12,125
♪ (ORCHESTRAL MUSIC
INTENSIFIES) ♪

1602
01:26:18,875 --> 01:26:22,291
♪ (MUSIC FADES) ♪

1603
01:26:22,375 --> 01:26:24,750
FRAZIER:<i> Whenever I get lost,</i>
<i>or stumble, or trip,</i>

1604
01:26:24,833 --> 01:26:28,833
I'll never tire
of always looking to Gordon.

1605
01:26:31,458 --> 01:26:36,000
♪ (INTENSE MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

1606
01:27:40,125 --> 01:27:44,583
♪ (MELANCHOLIC MUSIC PLAYING) ♪

1607
01:28:25,750 --> 01:28:28,625
♪ (MUSIC FADES) ♪



