Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Steve McQueen says 12 Years a Slave wouldn’t have been made if Obama wasn’t president

‘I wouldn’t have gotten the money,’ director and artist told an audience

Nicole Vassell
Sunday 29 January 2023 15:45 GMT
Comments
12 Years A Slave wins Oscar

Steve McQueen has shared his belief that his Oscar-winning film 12 Years a Slave would never have been made if Barack Obama wasn’t the president.

The filmmaker and artist directed the 2013 Best Picture winner, based on the true account of Solomon Northup, a Black man who was born free but was captured and sold into slavery in Louisiana in 1841. He was released 12 years later.

For its strong performance and its portrayal of the brutal experiences of enslaved people, the film and McQueen received widespread praise.

Lupita Nyong’o received a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for playing Patsey, an enslaved woman.

Despite 12 Years a Slave’s successes, McQueen believes that without President Obama being in office, and the specific cultural and social moment that it represented, the film would not have had received essential funding.

Speaking at the International Film Festival Rotterdam on Saturday (28 January), the Small Axe creator recalled how the film didn’t get screened at the White House due to Obama having recently referred to a police department acting “stupidly” after arresting Skip Gates, a Black professor who was suspected of breaking and entering at his own home.

“At that time, everything Obama was doing was being scrutinised,” McQueen told the audience, “and that was the theory of why 12 Years a Slave was not projected – 99 years after The Birth of a Nation – at the White House.”

According to Variety, the filmmaker added: “But then again, 12 Years a Slave wouldn’t have been made without Obama being president, that’s for sure. Absolutely not. I wouldn’t have gotten the money.

“I think the fact that people wanted to illustrate that particular time of history when there was a Black president made the movie possible.”

McQueen was at the festival to show his latest piece of visual artwork “Sunshine State”, which marks his first since “Year 3” at Tate Britain in 2019.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in