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‘A Wrinkle In Time’s Storm Reid Wants To Empower Other African-American Girls With Her Role

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Black Women in Entertainment

‘A Wrinkle In Time’s Storm Reid Wants To Empower Other African-American Girls With Her Role

Ava DuVernay’s A Wrinkle In Time hits theaters March 9, and 2018 can’t seem to get here fast enough. With all of the press surrounding the film — from cast and crew highlights to its mind-blowing first photos — there’s no doubt that the production won’t be inspiring to watch. But more specifically, Storm Reid hopes that A Wrinkle In Time will empower other little black girls, just like her.

The actor sat down with Entertainment Weekly to discuss her role as Wrinkle‘s leading lady Meg Murry, and couldn’t help but boast about what the career move means to her. In the interview, Reid says,

“It means everything to be a girl of color and play Meg Murry bec

In addition to having a diverse cast in front of the camera, having a diverse crew behind-the-scenes is as integral a part of the package. And today, there’s no one better than director and producer Ava DuVernay to lead this production. From the start of her career, her mission has always been to tell inclusive stories, and by being a minority herself, she was able to recognize that there was a strong need to have a brown girl in the starring role of the adventure flick.

In a separate interview with EW in July 2017, DuVernay talked a bit about her efforts to cast a brown girl as “Meg” while developing Wrinkle, saying, “There aren’t any other black women who have been invited to imagine what other

ause Meg Murry is, in the books, a Caucasian little girl.”

The science-fiction novel, written by Madeleine L’Engle, follows the story of Murry as she tries to locate her scientist father in an alternate universe. Sci-fi fans can attest to the fact that it’s pretty unusual to see a person of color at the helm of many of the genre’s stories, and so Reid starring in its adaptation is kind of big deal. Diversity and inclusion within science fiction is hard to come by — whether that be having female lead characters, or lead characters of color. And along with recent film adaptations Fahrenheit 451 and sci-fi thriller Annihilation— placing women and people of color as their leads — Wrinkle is working to disrupt the genre’s status quo…

 

Please read original article- ‘A Wrinkle In Time’s Storm Reid Wants To Empower Other African-American Girls With Her Role

 

I am a future butterfly at the stage of growth when I am turning into an adult. I am enclosed in a hard case shell formed by love, family, and friends. It is the hardest stage of becoming a black butterfly. You will encounter many hardships only to come out stronger and better than what you went in. At this stage, you are finding out who you truly are and how to love yourself.

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