Black AIDS Institute honors Lee Daniels on World AIDS
Lee Daniels, director, producer and activist, known for Monsterâs Ball, Precious, The Butler and Empire. (Black AIDS Institute)
By BAI Staffers (Black AIDS Institute)
     The Black AIDS Instituteâs Heroes in the Struggle Gala and Award Celebration honors, in a star-studded event and photographic tribute, individuals who, over the past year, have made a heroic contribution to the fight against HIV/AIDS.
He is the Academy Award winning filmmaker of films like Precious: Based on the novel push by Sapphire, The Paperboy, Lee Danielsâ The Butler and Monsterâs Ball, and the producer of the hit television series EMPIRE and the soon to be released STAR on Fox, but since the earliest days of the epidemic writer/director/producer Lee Daniels has also been an HIV/AIDS activist.
âPeople know me as Lee Daniels the filmmaker. But they donât really know of my early beginnings when I had a nursing agency prior to that, as I was directing theater,â says Daniels, 56. âI had the first nursing agency under contract with AIDS Project Los Angeles over 30 years ago. I had people taking care of people with HIV, because people didnât want to touch them. So I lived on the front line. Thatâs a whole different life and something Iâm really proud of.â
After a prodigious career that brought us films like Shadow Boxer and The Woodsman, in 2009 Daniels brought to the big screen an AIDS story that no one wanted to talk about through the character of 16-year-old Claireece Precious Jones, played by then-newcomer Gabourey Sidibe, who learned that her father had died of AIDS and that she was HIV positive. âIt began a conversation that had not been had until thenâat that point it was considered a White gay disease, for sure,â Daniels says, recalling his own surprise upon discovering so many Black women and children when he visited Gay Menâs Health Crisis in New York City to do research. âI wanted people to understand that it wasnât just a gay manâs disease, but it was an epidemic that affected the African American community in a very big wayâway beyond the gay sphere.â
Precious was nominated for six Academy Awards, including nominations for Daniels in the category of âAchievement in Directingâ and âBest Motion Picture of the Year,â and wins in the categories of âBest Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Roleâ and âBest Writing, Adapted Screenplay.â The film won the Best writing, adapted Screenplay Oscar, and an Oscar for former Heroes in the Struggle honoree, MoâNique, Best Supporting Actress.
Daniels was the first African American to be nominated for a Directorâs Guild of America Award for âOutstanding Direc-torial Achievement in Feature Filmâ on behalf of Precious. The film won both the Grand Jury Prize and Audience Award in the U.S. Dramatic Competition at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival, only the third film in Festival history to do so. It was also nominated for three Golden Globe awards including âBest Picture Drama,â and was nominated for eight NAACP Image Awards, six of which it won, in categories including âOutstanding Motion Pictureâ and âOutstanding Directing in a Motion Picture, Theatrical or Television.â The film also garnered a total of five 2010 Independent Spirit Awards, including âBest Featureâ and âBest Director.â
In 2012, Daniels wrote, directed, and produced The Paperboy, with Matthew McConaughey, Nicole Kidman, John Cusack, David Oyelowo and Macy Gray. The film, about a reporterâs return to his Florida hometown to investigate a case involving a death row inmate, peeks into the fluidity and situational nature of sexual orientation and the unique rules that apply to Black men in our society.
âIâm a gay Black man. Everything I do, everything I say, everything I utterâmy workâ speaks to that. Even in a subliminal way, I canât help but to articulate who it is that I am,â Daniels says. âWhether itâs Jane Doe walking down the street, Iâm going to give you the perspective of a gay, Black manâthatâs the lens that I see. So, EMPIRE and everything you ever see of any of mineâBUTLER, PRECIOUS, MONSTERâS BALLâis from that perspective. Iâm winking at the camera.â
Monsterâs Ball was Lee Daniels Entertainmentâs feature film debut, and made Daniels the sole African-American producer of an Oscar-winning and Oscar-nominated film.
Probably Danielsâ most biographical work is his hit television show EMPIRE on Fox. In one scene during season one, Lucious Lyons, portrayed by Terrence Howard, is so outraged that his son Jamal is gay he literally throws Jamal into the trash. Danielsâs own father, Philadelphia police officer William Daniels, was killed in the line of duty. He speaks openly about how his father tried to beat the gay out of him.
As someone who has been involved in the HIV/AIDS epidemic in his life and his art, Daniels worries about the current cultural and political climate. He recalls the 1980sâthe fear, the stigma, the waiting for the other shoe to drop, the wondering when it was going to be him.
âEveryone was dying around meâall of my friends. None of them did anything I did not do and more,â said Daniels. âIt could have been me. That thought is never far from my mind.â
The reality of the new administration casts a pall over Danielsâ hopes to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic. The election of Donald Trump has brought a lot of those feelings rushing back.
âIt has been a very long time since I felt that scary feeling, where, OMG, Iâm looking over my shoulder and wondering what are we going to do?â said Daniels.
Daniels continued: âIf you had asked me prior to Trumpâs election, I would have said yes we could have ended AIDS in my lifetime. But I donât believe thatâs going to happen now.
âI think weâre going to go backwards now. And thatâs a travesty. And it cracks my heart. But, now is not the time to give up. Now is the time to step up. Now is the time to speak out. Now is the time to resist.â
Daniels said that more people need to become activists, advocates and volunteers in the fight against the AIDS epidemic.
âWe need to contribute our talent, our wisdom, and our dollars,â said Daniels. âFor example, one of my priorities is raising money for the Black AIDS Institute. No matter who we are or where we are, we have to do our part.â