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Oprah Winfrey says Color Purple helped her deal with childhood rape

LOS ANGELES - American talk-show host Oprah Winfrey said The Color Purple helped her cope with the trauma of being raped as a young girl, as she introduced a new film based on author Alice Walker’s acclaimed novel on Nov 16.

The movie – a musical – is the second big-screen adaptation, after director Steven Spielberg’s 1985 drama, and again portrays the hardships and sexual abuse faced by black women in Southern United States during the early 20th century.

“From the very first time I read The Color Purple, it was a blessing in my life – because until that time, I didn’t know that there was language for what had happened to me,” Winfrey, 69, said after a screening in Los Angeles.

“I had been raped and had a child at 14, who later died, and I did not have any language to explain what that was. That book was the first time that there was a story about me.”

The Color Purple tells the coming-of-age story of Celie, a black girl living in rural Georgia who is raped by her father and forced to give away two children.

As it unfolds, Celie is forced into an abusive marriage, but comes to bond with and find strength from other women dealing with their own various traumas and prejudice.

Winfrey recalled how, in the 1980s, upon learning that Spielberg was adapting the film, she had “literally prayed on my knees every night for the opportunity to be in that movie”.

Spotted on her television talk show by musician Quincy Jones, who was producing the film, Winfrey was cast in 1985 as Sofia, a strong and feisty woman who encounters racism and tragedy.

Winfrey, who was nominated for Best Supporting Actress for the role at the Oscars in 1986, told Thursday’s audience that the movie “changed my life”, and to now be producing a remake meant life had “come so full circle”.

‘Passing the baton’

After Spielberg’s film, The Color Purple was adapted into a stage musical which opened on Broadway in 2005. The new movie is inspired by that musical and strikes a lighter, often joyous and uplifting tone.

Spielberg, Winfrey and Jones all serve as producers, while The Color Purple’s Broadway actresses Fantasia Barrino and Danielle Brooks return as Celie and Sofia.

Winfrey said the character of Sofia became so “iconic for me” that she had insisted on being on set during the shooting of one particularly memorable scene.

In the scene, Celie – jealous of Sofia’s independence – has advised her friend’s husband to beat her, prompting Sofia to confront her.

“It felt like passing the baton,” she told the audience at the headquarters of the Oscar-awarding Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

The movie is directed by Blitz Bazawule, a Ghanaian filmmaker best known for overseeing American pop star Beyonce’s musical film Black Is King (2020).

The cast also includes Colman Domingo, Taraji P. Henson and Louis Gossett Jr. Music stars H.E.R., Jon Batiste and Halle Bailey – seen in The Little Mermaid (2023) – also feature.

The Color Purple will open in Singapore cinemas on Feb 29, 2024. - AFP

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