In his classic novel “Native Son,” Richard Wright tells the story of a
poverty-stricken young black man who takes a job as a chauffeur to a
white family in Chicago, accidentally kills the daughter and tries to
cover it up.
For decades, the film version of “Native Son” didn’t tell the whole
story — the result of censorship before its U.S. release. Only in recent
years has the original version been available, thanks to a restoration
done by the Library of Congress.
The film was shot in Argentina by French director Pierre Chenal from a
screenplay written by Wright, who also (and unusually) starred as the
lead character, Bigger Thomas.
“Native Son” premiered in Argentina in 1951 but was heavily censored
for its U.S. release. Censors cut, among other things, comments about
white “race hatred,” shortened sequences depicting Thomas’ consultations
with lawyers and his murder trial and removed scenes showing a white
lynch mob and police violence.
Those cuts resulted in another loss: the near-disappearance of the original version.
For some six decades, the censored version of “Native Son” was the
only one available — until the Library restored the original film to its
original 107 minutes using a 16mm Argentine print and an international
version discovered in an abandoned nitrate film vault in Puerto Rico.
The Library documents the original film in another way, too. Its
Copyright Deposit Descriptions collection — material acquired through
copyright submissions — holds the “dialogue continuity,” a transcription
of the final version of the film complete with corrections, amendations
and passages struck by censors. In one scene, censors cut a scene in
which Thomas kills a footlong rat in the family apartment, softening the
depiction of brutal living conditions. In another, censors delete a
discussion about smashing the Jim Crow system.
In the Library’s collections, however, Wright’s original vision lives
on, both on film and paper, for future audiences. Scroll down to view a
portion of the dialogue continuity acquired by the Library through
copyright deposit. A larger version is available in the printed LCM.
via https://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2019/02/african-american-history-month-native-son-uncensored/
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