A PIECE OF MAGIC
by T.K. Thorne
Suspicious eyes tracked us as we drove through the tightly
clustered apartment complex on the Northside of Birmingham,
Alabama. Without a word spoken, we heard the question in
those eyes: Outsiders, what are you doing here? The answer
lay there as well: Nothing good for us.
Narrow concrete walks sectioned the yards where bits
of glass and trash wove inseparably into the grass and
dirt. Yellow vinyl siding identified every unit and bleached
them all into a blur of sameness. One apartment, however,
seemed different. Beneath an ancient tree, chairs and
a swing-bench sat on the tiny yard that had seen the trod
of so many feet, it was bare of any grass. A pot of flowers
perched atop a protruding window air conditioning unit.
It was home to Miss Kitty. Miss Kitty was the neighborhood's
Central Station. Her fingers rested on the twines of gossip
that crisscrossed the community like the tangled back
of an embroidery. Miss Kitty listened to what we wanted
to do and her eyes lit, especially when we identified
her yard as the perfect spot.
We knocked on doors and talked to the apartment residents,
explaining what we wanted to do and inviting them to be
part of it. I expected some rejection, even hostility,
but heads nodded. Some smiles even emerged, but with tentative
energy, as if the mouths had learned that reality too
readily crushed enthusiasm and hope.
In that apartment complex, over a beautiful November
weekend, ShapeFilms shot an independent short film from
a script I penned. In SIX BLOCKS WIDE, Gran, a spunky
old woman with a mouthful of chewing tobacco rocks on
her tiny porch in a poor neighborhood and demonstrates
what it means to be rich in spirit. Tonea Stewart,
of "A Time to Kill," "In the Heat of the
Night," and "The Rosa Parks Story," slipped
into Gran's skin as if she'd been born there. Ms. Stewart's
sister confided that their own grandmother had provided
a perfect role model for the character. Rising film star,
Lauren McClain (Daddy's Little Girls), played Faye,
the young girl raised by Gran. Downtown's CAP, Thomas
Pams, became Thomas, the simple, gentle man with strength
no one ever expected.
In the film, Gran and Faye stand up to a drug dealer
who holds the neighborhood in a grip of fear. The old
woman and young girl know that even when the cost is high,
there is a time to draw the line. As Gran says, "The
world may only be six blocks wide, but it's our world."
As the crew and cast assembled in predawn light, I marveled
at how all these people had come together, almost all
of them without promise of a penny, to make this story
come to life. Even the police officers who guarded us,
were there out of a partnership with Weed & Seed,
a program that assists targeted neighborhoods become stronger
and healthier.
What was it like to see characters and a story created
from the soup of my mind actually take place in front
of me? Even a writer is sometimes lost for words. The
best I can manage is that magic happened when Tonea Stewart
sat in that rocking chair and became Gran. Even in the
swirl of people, cameras, lighting filters, sound equipment,
interruptions from airplanes and trains, barking dogs,
and constant retakes, the story unfolded, piece by piece,
captured forever on film.
Little by little people ventured from their apartments
to watch, nervous at first, wary perhaps of the police
officers. But when it came time for their part, when the
community in the story came out and stood up, they came
out and stepped forward. They became part of the story.
By the next day, children were sitting in our laps and
begging to take pictures with the stars. Miss Kitty had
requested to keep the rocking chair in her house overnight.
People asked when the film would come out and were excited
when we promised they would get to see it first. After
award-winning Birmingham director, Yuri Shapochka,
finishes his own magic putting it all together, we plan
a special showing for them. We hope it will stimulate
discussion, and from that will emerge a sense of community
and a new understanding that they can determine their
own fate. The Weed & Seed Program will be there to
help.
After that, we hope we can find other ways to spread
the story's message, and that Sidewalk Film Festival and
many other festivals across the country and possibly,
the world, will be in the stars. Whatever happens, we
have been part of something special and definitely ... magic.
For more information, more photos, and the story of Six Blocks Wide, vist
www.TKThorne.com