Jessie Maple is an American cinematographer and film director most noted as a pioneer for the civil rights of African-Americans and women in the film industry.[1] Her 1981 film Will was one of the first feature-length dramatic films created by an African-American woman."[2]
Maple was born in Louisiana in 1947 in a family of 4 brothers and seven sisters.[3] In the 1960s and 1970s, Maple was head of a bacteriology and serology laboratory in Philadelphia and New York.[4] She later wrote for the New York Courier. She received film training through Ossie Davis's Third World Cinema, and through the National Education Television Training School, a program run by WNET public television in New York City.[3] The latter program was established for African Americans to learn behind-the-scenes camera jobs in order to get into the union, but funding for this program was short-lived; as Maple noted, "It was so successful that after one year they shut it down."[5] She began her career in film as an apprentice editor for Shaft's Big Score! and The Super Cops.[6] After being admitted to the Film Editor's Union, Maple studied and passed the examination for the Cinematographer's Union.[3]
Following a prolonged legal struggle in 1973, Maple became the first African-American woman admitted to the New York camera operators union.[3][7] She described her lawsuits and struggle in a self-published autobiographical book, How to Become a Union Camerawoman (1976). In a 2020 interview, she said, "After I passed the test and got into the cameraman’s union, then they told the studios not to hire me and blacklisted me. I decided, well, I’m going to fight this....I decided, let me get this out the way, I sued them all at once, ABC, CBS, NBC, and I won."[8]
Working for many years as a news camerawoman, Maple recounts she had her best moment when she realized she could "edit the story in the camera and prevent the editor from taking a positive story and making a negative one out of it," particularly in stories with a race element where black people were often left out of the news story.[5] According to Maple, "I would shoot [the story] in a way where they couldn't cut the black person out of [it]. They had to see both sides of what happened and what they had to say."[5] In 1974 Maple cofounded LJ Films Productions with her husband, Leroy Patton, to produce short documentaries.[9]
In 1981, Maple released the independent feature film Will, a gritty drama about a girls' basketball coach struggling with heroin addiction. With that release, Maple has been cited as the first African-American woman to direct an independent feature-length film in the post-civil rights era.[10][11] In order to show her own film, and other independent movies by African-Americans, Maple and Patton opened the 20 West Theater, Home of Black Cinema in their Harlem brownstone home in 1982.[12] Her second independent feature film was Twice as Nice from a screenplay by poet and actress Saundra Pearl Sharp.[13] Released in 1989, the film is a tale of twin sisters who play basketball.
The Black Film Center/Archive at Indiana University holds the papers and films of Maple in the Jessie Maple Collection, 1971–1992.[14]
Jessie Maple and Kathleen Collins...were among the first black women to create long-form narrative dramatic feature films: Maple directed Will (1981) and Collins directed Losing Ground (1982).
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link)Jessie Maple at IMDb
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