BFI Black Star 1950-70: Risk, reward and revolution - the black star as activist

The Black Star podcast continues with the story of a civil rights campaigner, who also happened to be one of the 1950s' biggest movie stars: Harry Belafonte. Tracing Belafonte’s political awakening back to Paul Robeson – and that star’s unlikely political awakening thanks to a group of striking Welsh miners – we see how Belafonte’s activism has inspired a whole new generation of political black stars. The Black Star podcast is a six-week series celebrating some of the most influential black film stars across the ages. This episode of Black Star contains short clips of the following: - The Banana Boat Song, performed by Harry Belafonte and released by RCA Victor in 1956 - Jesse Williams’s speech at the 2016 BET awards, held on June 26th of this year and presented by BET Networks - Amandla Stenberg’s video essay, Don’t Cash Crop My Cornrows, produced by Quinn Masterson and Amandla Stenberg AND - Harry Belafonte’s address to the 2016 #MKNOW event, footage directed by Paul Fant For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy

Om Podcasten

Hosted by BFI programmer Anna Bogutskaya and the BFI’s digital editor, Henry Barnes, The Bigger Picture covers the best in screen culture, from film to TV to gaming. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.