Portrait by Kenturah Davis, 2022, on display in the National Portrait Gallery. Photo credit - WWP team.
A director, writer, producer, and film distributor. The first African American woman to win Best Director at the Sundance Film Festival.
Ava Marie DuVernay was born and raised in California. She studied English literature and African-American studies at the University of California. While at college, DuVernay was interested in broadcast journalism and interned for CBS News during the O.J. Simpson trial. Following been assigned to look through the trash of the jury, DuVernay decided to change her career path and get into public relations.
After receiving her Bachelor’s degree, she began to work as a junior publicist at several production studios and PR agencies. In 1999, when she is 27 years old, she opened her PR firm, The DuVernay Agency, working on campaigns for films such as Shrek 2, Dreamgirls, and Collateral. At the time, she also launched numerous lifestyle and promotional networks, including the Urban Beauty Collective for African-American beauty salons and barbershops and HelloBeautiful for millennial women of color.
As a PR agent, DuVernay frequently visited film sets, observing filmmakers on the job, figuring that she can be one as well. She bought books on the art of screenwriting, and in 2003 she began to work on her first script. In the following year, at the age of 32, DuVernay directed her first short film, Saturday Night Life, based on her mother’s experiences in a discount grocery store. At 38, DuVernay released her first narrative feature, I Will Follow, about a woman who losses her aunt to cancer. The film was the official selection of several film festivals, including the American Film Institute Fest and the Chicago International Film Festival. A year later, DuVernay’s film Middle of Nowhere premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and won Best direction, making her the first African-American woman to receive the award.
In the following years, she continued creating movies and TV series, winning awards as the first African-American woman. In 2018, she made history again by becoming the first woman of color to direct a live-action film with a budget higher than $100 million in the movie A Wrinkle in Time, featuring Oprah Winfrey.
Between one feature film to another, DuVernay directed many TV documentary films, music videos, and commercials. She also founded the African-American Film Festival Releasing Movement (AFFRM) to support films made by black artists, later rebranded as ARRAY, expanding the movement’s mission to women artists. She also co-founded the Evolve Entertainment Fund, promoting inclusion and providing opportunities for under-served communities in the entertainment industry.
Ava DuVernay - Keynote Address | 2013 Film Independent Forum
Ava DuVernay delivers the filmmaker keynote address at the 2013 Film Independent Forum
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“Ignore the glass ceiling and do your work. If you’re focusing on the glass ceiling, focusing on what you don’t have, focusing on the limitations, then you will be limited.”
“Ignore the glass ceiling and do your work. If you’re focusing on the glass ceiling, focusing on what you don’t have, focusing on the limitations, then you will be limited.”
Fun Facts
- During summer vacations as a kid, she traveled to her father's childhood home near Selma, Alabama. It motivated her, later on, to direct the movie Selma about the Civil Rights Movement protest marches.
- The DuVernay test, named after her, is the racial equivalent of the Bechdel test, questioning whether blacks and other minorities have fully realized lives rather than serve as scenery in white stories.
- Mattel produced a one-of-a-kind Barbie in her image.
- She is the second black woman to join the writer's branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and the second to join the director's branch.
- In 2013, she started the podcast The Call-In – a series of conversations with Black filmmakers.
- She directed several episodes of Shonda Rhimes's TV series Scandal.
- Her movie, 13th, about race and mass incarceration embedded in the American criminal justice system, was declared as "the most important movie you'll ever see."
Awards
- The Tribeca Film Institute's Heineken Affinity Award
- African-American Film Critics for Best Screenplay (2011)
- Sundance Film Festival's Directing Award (2012)
- Black Reel Awards for best director, best screenplay, and best film (2013)
- The Dorothy Arzner Directors Award (2015)
- Smithsonian Magazine's American Ingenuity Award for Visual Arts (2017)
- The Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize (2020)
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Ava DuVernay - Keynote Address | 2013 Film Independent Forum
Ava DuVernay delivers the filmmaker keynote address at the 2013 Film Independent ForumThis post is also available in:
Español