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May 31, 2017 The Skanner Page 7 By Maryclaire Dale Associated Press With Kam Williams For The Skanner News PHOTO BY NATE SMALLWOOD/PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW VIA AP, Cosby Seeking New Solidarity with Blacks He Once Alienated Arts & Entertainment Nefertite Nguvu: The “In the Morning” Interview PHILADELPHIA — Af- ter two years of silence amid an onslaught of sex- ual assault allegations, comedian Bill Cosby is sending carefully target- ed messages about racial bias across the media landscape ahead of his June 5 trial in suburban Philadelphia. Cosby, 79, spoke to a black news outlet last month for a story that Bill Cosby and his attorney leave Allegheny County Courthouse after meandered from his the third day of jury selection in his sexual assault trial in Pittsburgh self-described blindness on May 24. to the racist history of the United States to his dream of re- er Black comedians who once paid trib- ute to him have instead taken to calling turning to the stage. His daughters sent audio statements him out onstage. Hannibal Burress inspired more ac- to select radio stations last week in cusers to come forward when he called which Ensa Cosby said her father had Cosby a rapist in his act in 2014, while been “lynched” in the media. Dave Chappelle has talked poignantly The messaging continued this week about losing faith in his childhood idol. in the Pittsburgh courtroom where On his Facebook page, Cosby posted jury selection was conducted. a photo this month of a bold, new por- After prosecutors struck two Black trait of a younger “Dr. Cosby” as the art- women from the panel, defense lawyer ist delivered it to his New York home. Brian McMonagle attacked what he Cosby calls the portrait, “Restoration of called the other side’s “systemic exclu- Legacy.” sion of African Americans.” And in a longer SiriusXM inter- view last week, he reiterated his desire to clear his name, resume his career and restore his legacy. “I want to get back to the laugh- ter and the enjoyment of things that I’ve written and things that I Two Black people were among the perform on stage,” Cosby said. 12 people chosen for the jury, and two “I still feel that I have an awful lot to more were among the six people cho- offer.” sen as alternates. Loyola Law School professor Laurie They will be sequestered 300 miles Levenson wonders if Cosby is trying from home in suburban Philadelphia to signal to Blacks on the jury with his for the trial. Cosby’s lawyers had asked recent comments, by sending the mes- for an outside jury because the case sage “that you have a mission on this was a 2015 campaign issue in Montgom- jury, to make sure he’s not treated as a ery County, where Cosby is accused of Black man who’s come on aggressively drugging and molesting a Temple Uni- to White women.” versity employee in 2004. “ Ensa Cosby said her fa- ther had been ‘lynched’ in the media Lawyers on both sides said late Wednesday they were satisfied with the jury’s makeup, given that it exceeds the 13 per- cent black population in Allegheny County, where the jurors were chosen. “The Cosby team (now) cares about how the pub- lic and maybe even how the Black community feels about this whole situation, which is strik- ing given his diatribes against the most vulner- able people in that com- munity. But we’ve seen stranger things in these big trials,” said James Braxton Peterson, direc- tor of Africana Studies at Lehigh University. “It’s ironic how he makes that pivot, given that he’s de- monized poor Black peo- ple in the past.” Cosby broke barriers as the first Black actor to star in a network show, “I Spy,” in the 1960s and created the top-ranked “Cosby Show” two de- cades later. But he has since alienated young Blacks with his criticism of their clothes, music and lifestyle. And young- Albina Jazz Festival Fundraiser: The legendary LLOYD ALLEN SR. and BAND FRIDAY, JUNE 2ND, 7-10PM Stingray Café 240 North Broadway, Portland, OR 97232 (across from the Moda Center) DOORS OPEN: 6:30pm | SHOW STARTS: 7pm | COVER: $10 Full bar and Fresh beer, wine Please come join us for a great evening of electric home-grown jazz blues! Presented by Albinajazzfestival.com and Portland Pioneers of Color Walking Tours (on Facebook) All Rights Reserved. Sponsors: KBOO N efertite is a graduate of New York’s School of Visual Arts, where she obtained a B.F.A in Film. Her thesis project at SVA won the award for outstanding screenplay. Nefertite has written, produced and directed two short films: a uniquely stylized black and white romance entitled “I Want You,” and “The End of Winter,” an emotion- al meditation on loss, both of which screened at numerous film festivals. Amongst other web-based pro- gramming, Nefertite also directed a ten-part web series featuring Queen Latifah for Cover Girl and Flavor Unit Entertainment entitled ‘U.N.I.T.Y. Re-ignighted’, ‘Love Star’ a mini music documentary, as well as an eight-part web series entitled “Black America Again,” featuring Academy Award-winner Common for Univer- sal Music and Freedom Road Produc- tions. As a writer/director/producer, Ne- fertite made her feature film debut with “In The Morning,” a film about love and its inevitable change/decline charting the emotional anatomy of several relationships over the course of one day. “In The Morning” delves into the emotional landscape of con- temporary Black life in a way rarely seen in modern cinema. The picture debuted at the Urban World Film Festival in New York Nefertite Nguvu City and won the Audience Award for Best Feature Film. After a string of successful film festival screenings across the country and in Paris, Rome and Johannesburg, the film also won the award for Best International Film at the Terra Di Siena Film Festival in Italy, Best Narrative Feature at the BlackStar Film Festival in Philadel- phia, and Best Feature Film and Best Overall at the Bronzelens Film Festi- val in Atlanta. The film is now avail- able worldwide via Video on Demand. “In the Morning” will be showing in Philadelphia on Friday, May 26th at 7 pm at the Leonard Pearlstein Gallery, located at 3401 Filbert Street. Follow- See NGUVU on page 11