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The Most Famous Unknown Filmmaker in America
An Interview with Jamaa Fanaka

(Director of Welcome Home Brother Charles, Emma Mae, and the Penitentiary series)
By Millie De Chirico

MD: Tell me a little about your upbringing. I understand that you were born in Jackson, Mississippi but then moved to Los Angeles later in your childhood.

JF: I was born Walter Gordon by mid-wife on September 6, 1942 in the bedroom of my family home at 2636 Prosperity Street in Jackson, Mississippi. When I was 12, my father wrote a letter to the head of his employer, Graybar Electric Company, asking to be transferred to the company’s Los Angeles warehouse. I guess I got whatever writing talents I may possess from daddy because his letter so impressed the boss that my father got the transfer, forthwith.

Did you experience any kind of culture shock moving from the South to LA?

Moving to Los Angeles from Jackson, Mississippi was culture shock-personified. I never knew I had a southern accent until my fellow students at Junipero Serra High Catholic School in Gardena teased me mercilessly about it. At that time, my brother and I were the only black students (there was one “hi-yella” black who tried to pass for white), and they hated us like the plague. They figured that when two Negroes showed up, more would soon follow. And they were right.

When did you become interested in making films?


My interest in moving pictures came early in life when my parents gave me an 8mm camera for my 11th birthday. My father and older brother, June, loved baseball (and all other sports for that matter). I liked sports, but they could find enjoyment listening to a baseball game over the radio. I’d rather watch paint dry. So, I found joy in playing with an 8mm camera. I’d shoot anything that moved—without film in the camera, that is. Film was just too expensive. Simply pointing the camera from different angles and playing with the zoom was enough for me. My parents gave me money for film when family events were approaching so that I could memorialize those events. The film had a very low ASA, so I had to use a tremendous amount of light which generated an enormous amount of heat. This occasioned many-a-family-member to run away every time they saw me coming with the camera.

I read somewhere that your favorite director was William Wyler and that you were inspired to make movies after watching Ben-Hur

That film really touched me. It was the first epic that I saw which had an intermission; but I couldn’t wait for the intermission to end. King Kong had been my favorite film of all time until I saw Ben-Hur. That film so affected me that I looked up all I could find about the director of the film, William Wyler, who to this day remains my all-time favorite director.

You studied film at UCLA in the 70’s…how was the experience and what was it like there culturally or artistically at that time?

Things were great culturally and artistically for [the] black filmmaker at the UCLA Film School. Indeed, only after I was accepted as a junior student in the film school did I realize that becoming a filmmaker was a realizable possibility. It is well known by now that I was about to commit a stupid felony when I espied an UCLA outreach sign in a Compton storefront window. That affirmative action on the part of UCLA led me to prepare myself for entrance into the famed film school by maintaining a 3.5 average in obligatory courses at Compton College.

The atmosphere was absolutely wonderfully encouraging for aspiring black film students. UCLA provided us with cameras, lights, and sound equipment---the means to the production of films that were conceived and produced by us. And we flourished both culturally and artistically. The sky was the limit, and our imaginations were the rockets.

I also read that you were a classmate of [legendary African American filmmakers] Julie Dash and Charles Burnett, the latter of whom you worked with on Welcome Home Brother Charles…

Charles Burnett was my camera operator on [that film], but I never had the opportunity to work with my friend, Julie Dash. She transferred to UCLA from the American Film Institute late in my UCLA career. The 70’s were the halcyon days for black film students at the university. At least 25 black film students attended during the height of affirmative action. Among my fellow students were Ben Caldwell (I and I), Larry Clark (As Above, So Below), Billy Woodberry (Bless Their Little Hearts), Julie Dash, Charles Burnett, and our then-hero, [Ethiopian filmmaker] Haile Gerima. And we all were there on our merits.

Like I said, Burnett was my cameraman on my first feature film that I made as an undergraduate. We all worked crew on each other’s films and we all remain friends to this day.

Welcome Home Brother Charles, Emma Mae, and Penitentiary were all made while you were at UCLA, right?

UCLA provided me with the means to make cinema history by writing, producing, directing and gaining theatrical release for three, count ‘em, three feature films, as part of my academic curricula.

Was there any time in particular were you were forced to get really creative, dealing with the financial setbacks?
Being a student filmmaker has its share of frustration, I imagine…

Besides the loan of what amounted to the life savings from my wonderful parents, I gained financing for my films through competitive academic grants from such great American institutions as the Ford and Rockefeller foundations, the UCLA Chancellor, the UCLA Black Studies Center and even the New York State Council for the Arts. With the succor of MGM’s Roger Mayer, who then headed that great studio’s physical plant, including its excellent film lab, I made my Master’s thesis film, Emma Mae, in part with an Independent Filmmaker Grant from the American Film Institute, which at the time was the Holy Grail of filmmaking grants.

Instead of bemoaning the lack of capital to do my films, I applied all the wherewithal at my command to accomplish whatever it was I was trying to do. For instance, I needed a courtroom to shoot the ‘kangaroo court’ trial of Brother Charles. Although UCLA has three excellent sound stages, building a court room would have been time consuming and extremely costly. So, citing my credentials as an honor student at one of the best universities in America, I approached a judge (my pro bono attorney, Robert Edelen, got me [the] appointment) at the Compton courthouse and asked him to allow me to shoot in his courtroom. He was a black judge and he stated to me: “After sentencing young blacks to prison every day, I’m happy to help a black university student succeed.” The court bailiff who grabs Brother Charles and forcefully removes him from the court was the actual bailiff of that courtroom. He was happy not only to help, but to be in my film. When I first screened the film in UCLA’s Melnitz Hall, the judge and the bailiff were there---with their wives.

Would you classify your films as “blaxsploitation”?

No. My films are absolutely not blaxploitation films. First of all, practically all of those films that are called “blaxploitation” were directed by white directors. Legendary white cult film director Jack Hill directed practically all the Pam Grier films and I do not even consider them black films. A “black film” must be directed by a black director. The director controls the making of a film. My good friend, director Bill Duke, once did an excellent film on widowed old Jewish ladies. Not one star of that film was black, but I consider it a black film because the director was black. The term “blaxploitation”, of course, is a combination of the words black and exploitation. Before the so-called “blaxploitation films” came about, any low budget independent film was called an exploitation film. There was nothing negative about calling them “exploitation” films. They were shown in neighborhood theaters and drive-ins across America. Many of us were conceived to the sound of Tommy guns in the back seats of sedans at drive-in movie theaters. Only when white directors began casting blacks in those films did the exploitation term become pejorative. None of my films are “blaxploitation” films. They are extremely personal low budget attempts at using the media of cinema artistically. Black? Yes. Exploitative? Certainly not! In fact, them’s fightin’ words!

So, let’s talk a little about Welcome Home Brother Charles. I’d seen the trailer for it many times and was always intrigued before I finally saw it.

[That] was my first feature film and I made it as an undergraduate. Ben-Hur taught me that you could make a film with deep meanings and still provide your audience with entertainment. When I was in the Air force, I attended a party while on leave in Philadelphia where two lesbians repaired to the bedroom of a small apartment in the projects. Pretty soon, the most gloriously erotic sounds of female sexual gratification undulated from the room. And, at the tender age of 18, I was highly intrigued by the fact that such corporal female pleasure could erupt from a room that contained not one penis. If, I thought to myself, such pleasure could be had by women who possessed no penises, then the size of a man’s penis must be highly irrelevant. Research at UCLA’s great library revealed that the myth of black male sexual superiority based or size came about when, in order to frighten white women from having surreptitious sex with the slaves, the slave owners told them that black men has penises that were not only enormous but prehensile. However, this despicable slave owner lie backfired when the white women were not frightened, but intrigued. I made up my mind to make a film that took this myth and blew it up to ridiculous proportions for all to see the despicability of this “great lie”.

Welcome Home has many subtexts but it has one overwhelming raison d’etre: the enormous penis in the famous strangulation scene in Welcome Home is a massive metaphor for the inexorable manhood of mankind to defend itself against oppression, whether physical, spiritual or psychological, and to destroy whatever elements that seek to dehumanize its humanness.

How did you come about casting Marlo Monte in the lead role?

Besides the writing of the script, my first challenge was finding the perfect actor to play the lead role of Brother Charles. That problem was solved when the black film students at UCLA were invited to attend a showcase of the Performing Arts Society of Los Angeles (PASLA). When I observed one of the actors, Marlo Monte, delivering Hamlet’s soliloquy with power and idiomatic eloquence, I knew that I had found my lead.

The penis strangulation scene is probably my favorite in the movie. Can I ask you how you shot that, and more specifically, what was it made out of?!

[That] scene has become quite famous, and many people are beginning to see the work for the artistic statement that it was meant to be. To make that scene happen, I approached a company on Santa Monica Boulevard to make the prop. They were so intrigued by the boldness of my vision as a starving UCLA film student that they agreed to make the prop for free. The fake penis was made of foam and painted to match the actor’s skin color. While not in use, it was held erect by a long rod that kept the paint from cracking. When I shot the scene, to show growth, I had [Marlo Monte] sling the prop over his shoulder and slowly push it down between his legs. The actor who was strangled made it work because he manipulated the prop, slowly pulling it around his throat as he pretended to struggle against it.

I think a lot of what’s appealing about both Welcome Home Brother Charles (and more specifically, Emma Mae) is that they’re also “slice of life” films about 1970’s Los Angeles…

I wanted to make films on location in the city in which I grew up, Compton. Indeed, my dream was to start a film studio in the “Hub City.”(The fact that this did not happen is my own fault. But that’s a story for my memoirs.) I shot on the streets of Watts and Compton, at my own apartment, the home of my parents, my mother’s sister’s home. And the penis strangulation scene in Welcome Home Brother Charles was shot at the apartment of my younger sister.

This was the 70’s and America was enjoying the fruits and advantages that flowed from the “Great Society.” Martin, John and Robert had died to redeem the soul of our great land, and I wanted to depict 70’s black culture in my moving pictures. If I wanted to show life in the projects, I went to quintessential government projects, the Nickerson Gardens in Watts. I pointed my camera at our community and told stories with moving pictures intended to “move people.”

I heard that there’s also a true life Emma Mae!


There was indeed a true-life Emma Mae in the person of my cousin, Daisy Lee. Most people think that all of Mississippi is rural; but Jackson, the capitol, is a sprawling city. Right outside of Jackson (‘the country’ as they called it then), is a little hamlet called Crystal Springs where my mother was born. Daisy Lee was born and also raised in Crystal Springs; but every summer she would come to the “big city” to live with my family. Daisy Lee was a tomboy. But, she was not the run-of-the-mill tomboy who tries to emulate the things that boys do. Daisy Lee was about 11 years old but she could kick a 15 year-old boy’s butt. And I don’t mean the “close your eyes and swing wildly” girl fighting. Daisy Lee could punch and she could move. And when Daisy Lee was visiting, nobody, and I mean NOBODY messed with June and Bula. (My family and close friends called me “Bula” after my toddler brother, June, tried to say “Brother”).

So, how did Emma Mae become alternatively titled Black Sister’s Revenge and Welcome Home Brother Charles become Soul Vengeance?

When Emma Mae was licensed to Great Britain, the distributors asked to change the name for British audiences. Unfortunately, when the license lapsed and the masters were returned to me, I forgot that the Black Sister’s title was on it when I licensed it for video domestically. By the time I realized the mistake, a large number of videos had already been struck. The video distributors of Welcome Home Brother Charles changed the name without my permission.

The Penitentiary Series is probably what you’re best known for, and is seen as very influential. How did the idea for the film come about?

After finishing Emma Mae, the next thing to do was register my thesis with the university and graduate in 1977 with a Masters degree. But, graduate to what? No one in Hollywood would return my calls. All the Hollywood agents thought that blacks-in-film was a fad that faded with the so-called “blaxploitation” era. They refused to even see [me]. So I decided to hold off filing my thesis and keep my student status so I could make another feature film at UCLA, [which was] Penitentiary.

When I shot scenes from both Welcome Home and Emma Mae at the old closed-down Lincoln Heights jail in Los Angeles, the idea [of the movie] occurred to me to write a script whereby I could shoot the entire film at that old, funky building. It is expensive to move about the city when one makes a film. However, at that old jail, when I called “wrap” for the night all we had to do was turn off the equipment, leave it in place, and “incarcerate” the equipment for the night. One of the male extras agreed to stay there overnight to guard the equipment if this female extra that he was hitting on agreed to stay there with him. Somehow, she agreed.

Did you visit any prisons, or talk to any real life inmates?


Yes, I had a friend who was teaching drama to inmates at Terminal Island federal penitentiary in San Pedro, south of Los Angeles. I vetted drafts of the script with the inmates and found their feedback invaluable. Since people find Penitentiary so authentic, I am often asked whether I have ever been. My stock answer is, no, but do you think George Lucas has ever visited outer space?

I love the names of the characters, too…

As I have said, my nickname is “Bula.” Like “Bula”, many nicknames come about when toddlers try to say a name or word. Many arise out of the behavior of the person nicknamed. For instance, the character Half Dead was inspired because in every neighborhood there is at least one person whose actions are so grossly out of the pale that people say things like, “That guy ain’t gonna live to be 18;” or, “That fool won’t make it to 21.” I took that to mean the person was “half dead” already. Thus, the nickname, “Half Dead.” The character “Do Dirty” came about because he represents people who are constantly doing dirty things to other people. “Simp” is short for Simpson, and so on and so on.

Tell me a little about the boxing scenes…were you interested in boxing at all?

Some people think the boxing in Penitentiary was inspired by Rocky. Although I love [the film], I wrote Penitentiary before I ever saw that great film. In fact, the boxing scenes were inspired by my four-year tour in the Air Force. Airmen would join the base’s boxing team just to get out of ordinary duty, like KP, so that they could train for the base’s annual boxing tournament. These guys had no idea about how rough that sport can be. For me, those tournaments were the highlights of the year. It was the first and only time that I saw a boxer actually turn tail and run, actually run, from his opponent in the ring.

I read somewhere that the role of Two Sweet was written for Glynn Turman [from Cooley High], but he ended up not doing the film because he married Aretha Franklin!

Yes, the role was written initially for Glynn after [he did] Cooley High. When we were about to start principal photography, Glynn approached me about delaying the film because he was about to marry Aretha. I was already mobilized, so I could not and would not await Glynn’s return from his honeymoon. Leon [Kennedy], who I had brought aboard as an Associate Producer, had attended every rehearsal that we had had in a screening room at UCLA. When Glynn dropped out, suddenly a _” tape suddenly appeared in the hand of Leon. This was 1978 and Leon was one of the few lay people who owned a _” videotape camera. On the tape, his beautiful then-wife Jayne Kennedy read the lines of Seldom Seen off-camera while Leon acted the Too Sweet part on camera. His performance impressed me so much that I hired him on the spot. And I have never regretted that decision.

What was it like working with Mr. T in Penitentiary 2?

Working with Mr. T was a beautiful experience. I wrote a role for Mr. T while we were in pre-production after I received a call from Sylvester Stallone. [He] invited over to his editing room and he and his editor showed me the scene where Mr. T causes the Burgess Meredith character to have a heart attack. Mr. T was very professional, always knew his lines, and became a good friend of my brother and father whose job was to pick Mr. T up from his hotel room every morning.

Also, is it true there might be a Penitentiary 4?!

Yes. If I tell you more I’ll have to kill you. I like you too much for that.

I saw recently that the Alamo Drafthouse in Austin did a double feature of Welcome Home Brother Charles and Penitentiary, and invited you as their special guest. Were you surprised to see that your films are still being celebrated by cult movie fans?

I first heard about the Alamo Drafthouse after reading a “customer review” of Emma Mae on the Internet. The reviewer said she had seen [the movie] at a Wednesday night screening; and it was the first time in her life that an audience gave a film a “standing ovation.” Lars Nilsen [Drafthouse programmer] invited me to screen Penitentiary and Emma Mae. I must say for the record that it was one of the most satisfying events of my career. The audience was amazingly informed on my career, and one of them approached me saying, “Mr. Fanaka, you are the most famous unknown filmmaker in America”.

Let’s talk about your new project, Hip Hop Hope. It’s a documentary, correct?

The theme of Hip Hop Hope is: from the fertile welter of self-reliance hope springs eternal. [It’s] about the underground hip hop movement and I have shot excellent artists from New York City to Los Angeles.

I understand that Snoop Dogg is a big fan of yours…

Yes, [he] is a big fan of mine. I’m also a big fan of his. In my backstage conversation with Snoop, he stated on tape that my moving pictures are his favorite of all time. And Doggystyle is one of my favorite albums of all time. Dr. Dre and Ice Cube and many other rappers also have told me how much they love my moving pictures.

…and, I read, Quentin Tarantino is a fan too.

I have yet to meet [him] in person. However, I have heard from many people, including Penitentiary star Leon Isaac Kennedy, that Tarantino is a great fan of the Fanaka films. Tarantino was initially scheduled to moderate my appearance at the Alamo Drafthouse, but in the end it conflicted with his very busy schedule. I love Tarantino’s films and I believe he is an excellent director. I am very flattered by his respect for my work and I appreciate all that he has done to salute low budget, grunge filmmaking.

What’s your opinion of black cinema now vs. black cinema of your generation?


I am extremely optimistic about the future of blacks in cinema. I love the work of Spike Lee and John Singleton. In fact, I view black cinema in the abbreviations, BS and AS– “before Spike” and “after Spike.” Spike is a cinematic line of demarcation for black filmmaking. And I am very much impressed and encouraged by the young black filmmakers in this year 2007. Many of their careers started shooting Hip Hop videos. For instance, it is my understanding that Ice Cube gave F. Gary Gray his first break. And, not unlike the start of hip hop, there are many aspiring black filmmakers out there honing their skills with a camcorder as I polished my camera angles with an 8mm camera back in the 1950’s. Of course, it is much easier to make a feature film today. With the advent of You Tube and Myspace, everybody, it seems, wants to be a filmmaker. But, just like the ownership of a pen and paper does not a writer make, the ownership of a camcorder does not a filmmaker make.

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