2024-12-06
35 分钟I think there's so much power in being naive.
You know this.
It's like one of the greatest gifts is doing something for the first time.
When I started working on it, I'd never seen it before.
I'd only read it.
We were unburdened by the legacy of it a little bit.
So it was like it was all just fabric that we could do what we wanted with and we could really adapt it.
And I thought that was so exciting.
So I think that working from that space of feeling free and unburdened by it, just kind of trying to tell your truth every day, like bring yourself to it every day and don't lie.
Hello and welcome back to the Director's Cut, brought to you by the Director's Guild of America.
In this episode, the fate of a treasured object threatens to tear a family apart in director Malcolm Washington's drama the Piano Lesson.
Based on the acclaimed play by August Wilson, the film navigates the lives and legacies of the Charles family.
In the aftermath of the Great Depression.
A brewing battle lurks over what to do with the family heirloom, a piano documenting the family history with carvings made by an enslaved ancestor, the Piano Lesson is Washington's feature directorial debut.
Following a screening of the film at the DGA Theater in Los Angeles, Washington spoke with director David E.
Talbert about filming the Piano Lesson.
Listen on for their spoiler filled conversation.
What do you think of the film?
Yeah, he's doing his thing, huh?
You camper.