Home / Breaking News / George C. Wolfe Transforms ‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’

George C. Wolfe Transforms ‘Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom’

Written by Demetria Wambia

Director George C.  Wolfe talks to Viola Davis , Taylour Paige and the others while 1st AD Michele 'Shelley' Ziegler stands by.

Photo courtesy of Netflix

BET.com: Many of the Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom cast members have performed August Wilson’s work before. What was your relationship to his plays prior to this project?

George C. Wolfe: 
I’m familiar with August Wilson’s work as an audience member. I’ve never directed August Wilson before, so this was my first time. It’s such glorious language! The more I dug into the material while working with screenwriter Ruben Santiago Hudson, I was just dazzled and enraptured by the craftsmanship of the writing. He was a brilliant storyteller.

BET.com: With such rich material to work with, you still found a few ways to tweak it for the film adaptation. Tell us about that. 

George C. Wolfe: It’s about making as complex and complete of a world as possible. We’re talking 1927 here. The Black community had to support itself because it wasn’t being supported by the government and by laws. They built their own communities and their own ways of existence. Ma Rainey was this incredible, showbiz entrepreneur, who owned two theaters. I had to make it clear that she was having a vibrant career when we catch up with her on this day in Chicago. She’s not going there with any degree of desperation. She’s going there as a very skilled and accomplished businessperson and as a commanding energy who was acutely aware of her work and powers.


Photo courtesy of Netflix

BET.com: I loved the part when she said “Bessie who?”

George C. Wolfe: Exactly. She had been Bessie’s mentor, and some believe they were lovers. But, also by this time, Bessie Smith was usurping her in record sales, so part of her defiance was about feeling very threatened.

BET.com: Denzel Washington is a producer of this project and that title can mean different things. What contributions did he make to the project?

George C. Wolfe: Denzel has taken on the stewardship of the estate and is making sure that August Wilson’s 10 plays (The Century Cycle) are filmed and so Ma Rainey was the second one filmed. We talked about casting choices and Denzel was there every day on set. We both wanted Viola and I think I brought up Chadwick and he was so excited about that. We just shared ideas and came up with the cast and worked with casting directors for other roles. Denzel gave us very strong, supportive, generous, smart energy.

BET.com: Chadwick has this great speech where he’s essentially cursing out God and it was really an energy shifting moment in the film.  What was it like to witness that scene on set?

George C. Wolfe: I don’t know how many takes we did, maybe three or four. It’s a Herculean scene for everybody. It was a monster undertaking. The actors were incredible and after every take, Chadwick would go to the stairs, which was outside of the room and rest and I’d come over and hassle him about notes or an idea. Take after take, moment after moment, he delivered and then some. 

Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom premieres on Netflix on Dec. 18.

Photo courtesy of Netflix


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