In 2013, British director Sir Steven Rodney McQueen became the first black man to win an Academy Award for best director, and his film, “Twelve Years a Slave,” won for best picture that year. This year, he was knighted for his services in film. Here, the filmmaker and artist reflects on his life in art in his “Letter To My Younger Self.” His letter is part of a series for Street Roots’ sister paper in the U.K., The Big Issue.
As a teenager my passions were art, art, art, art and art. It started at a young age. I could always draw and it was great to have a talent. As a kid you have dreams and you’re supposed to want to be a footballer or whatever, but at 16 you’re scared of the future. A lot of people that age are unsure but curious. I wasn’t encouraged to do art, but it was something I wanted and needed to do. I’m lucky I followed my instincts because a lot of people were thrown off course. I somehow, miraculously — and I do say miraculously — followed my instincts.
I don’t admire my younger self for following his path. I just think of the other people that could have gone on a similar path but didn’t. I was an exception because of hard-headedness and luck. Or hard-headedness and talent. My hard-headedness and a certain innate talent to draw made that luck.
I came from a situation in which equality wasn’t there and found my way to the other side of the minefield. I look back and see what might have been and what occurred through that journey to get to the other side. I mean, I’m not even there yet, to be honest. It is well documented how people were split into different groups at my school. (At 13, McQueen was placed in the third tier of students — seen as destined, he says, for “manual labor”) To say certain people are better than other people? The whole idea of having the worst teachers given to the students that needed the best teachers? Everything about my career was shaped by my childhood — inequality and the gloominess of unfair society was everywhere.
I never saw any people who looked like me who were artists. When I discovered Jean-Michel Basquiat I was grateful to discover someone like that. But at the time, even he wasn’t taken seriously. I would tell my younger self to follow your instincts and go for it. There’s so much trying to pull you down, even gravity sometimes. You have to be tenacious and forceful if necessary.
I used to think of cinema as somewhere you take girlfriends for a snog. To pay to see a movie rather than watch on TV was weird. My biggest influence of that time was a girlfriend who was into cinema — that is how I discovered movies and it was a revelation. You are seeing people from all over the world falling in love, having breakfast, getting into fights. It was wonderful.
I’m a black man, so how can I not be politically engaged? From day one I was asking questions. People are politicized very early because you are asking certain questions about your existence. I was engaged and I am engaged. You often end up disappointed with politics and politicians. Even people who are apparently on your side are actually about what they can gain personally.
Sometimes you have to ruffle feathers. I think about my art and my movies, and to me it’s all about taking risks. You’ve got to throw yourself a curve ball and experiment. I’m not interested in getting comfortable or staying in the same place or everyone agreeing with me. I’m after some idea of what the truth could be. As an artist you want to experiment and move forward — that is how it is. Tomorrow I might want to make something else, like a pair of trousers.
“Twelve Years a Slave” opened a lot of doors for other filmmakers. Certain movies would not have been made without it — and I know that for a fact because the producers told me. So it was a catalyst for filmmaking. It was me being headstrong again. Everyone was telling me no and I didn’t take any notice, just like before. I was told a movie with black leads wouldn’t make any money internationally, especially one about slavery — and that was by someone supportive of the movie! So that picture changed a lot. I’m very grateful. The picture itself won Best Picture (at the 2014 Academy Awards) and I’m extremely proud of it, but it is what came after that I’m especially proud of. It was a difficult film to make. Lupita Nyong’o, Michael Fassbender, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Sarah Paulson — all these people risked a lot.
To commit and learn and grow with someone is the best thing in the world. Falling in love and being in love, and not just when you are young — it is wonderful when you are in love with someone and you are developing as a person, listening as well as learning. I have been very fortunate with that. I would tell my younger self to jump in with two feet. Because to commit is to put yourself into a situation where you’re learning about yourself and someone else — and there’s real development within that.
I grew up in a very working-class situation. My view on life was narrow because of where I came from. The people I had relationships with came from elsewhere. So to talk to people from other vantage points in life opened my eyes and was hugely important. That is why I say the commitment of actually engaging with someone is what gave me my liberty, actually. I learned about myself through other people.
This new show at Tate Modern, "Year 3," the Grenfell film — all this stuff feels like a homecoming. (McQueen was given permission by relatives of the victims to film inside Grenfell Tower from a helicopter before it was covered up.) And we have shot "Small Axe" for the BBC and are editing now. This is where I come from. The only person I am representing, to a certain extent, is me. But we are also part of a community. The only reason I am sitting here today is because of other people. So it is not a pressure to represent lots of people’s stories — it’s a privilege.
The only thing the British offered to build in Jamaica was a prison. They didn’t offer to build a university, they offered to build a prison. The irony of that! At certain points one has to talk about compensation. So let’s be moral, let’s be correct. People have to be compensated for slave labor that was never paid for. I won’t get too much into the deportation flights but this stuff just has to stop. Windrush has to stop. (The Windrush scandal is the name of a Britsh scandal involving the unlawful deportation and detainment of British citizens.)
I don’t need to whisper anything in my younger self’s ear. I didn’t need those whispers. I did it. What I would have liked and which I didn’t get — and which I had to get from myself — was a sense that you have the authority to do what you want. A lot of people were spooked into a position where they thought certain things weren’t for them. I wasn’t scared off so easily.
Courtesy of INSP.ngo / The Big Issue UK, Twitter @BigIssue