Story Of A Legend

RJD11

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Althea Gibson Documentary Project “Althea” Selected for Film

Festivals, Still Needs Funding




“ALTHEA”, a feature documentary, 88 mins, 2014.

Rex Miller, Director/DP

Althea Gibson, a truant from the rough streets of Harlem, emerged as a most unlikely queen of the highly segregated tennis world of the 1950′s, becoming a two-time winner of both Wimbledon and Forest Hills (now the US Open), the first African-American to win those prestigious events, a decade before the great Arthur Ashe. Althea’s life and achievements transcend Sports. Her roots as a sharecropper’s daughter, her family’s migration north to Harlem in the 30’s, her mentoring from Sugar Ray Robinson, David Dinkins and others, her fame that thrust her unwillingly into the glare of the early Civil Rights movement, all bring the story into a much broader realm of African-American History.

Rex Miller – Producer, Director and DP

Elisabeth Haviland James – Producer, Editor


March 2014 – “ALTHEA”, a feature documentary about tennis great Althea Gibson is set to make its debut this spring being selected for a few major film festivals to be announced. Filmmaker Rex Miller began searching for Althea Gibson’s story because of a photograph that hung on the wall of his childhood bedroom. Taken in 1958, it shows two brown-skinned women, dressed in their tennis whites, holding tennis rackets and standing on the front lawn of the Merion Cricket Club, a prestigious and highly restricted tennis club outside of Philadelphia. One woman was his Jamaican-born mother, Millicent Miller. The other was Althea Gibson. In the background, one can see a small scoreboard, that tells the tale of the match, a one-sided victory for Gibson.

“I was told that story from a very young age, the story of my mom’s big (and fleeting) moment of glory, a chance to play the Wimbledon Champion Althea Gibson,” Miller said. “Over the years I came to realize that most people–even in tennis–have little idea of who she was and all she accomplished. Not only did she succeed in Tennis, but in Golf and music as well. Fifty years after she broke the color barrier, I think it is time for a fitting recognition of the legacy of this great champion and trailblazer.”

This project has been a labor of love for Miller – and this labor has taken over five years. Miller was inspired to do this documentary, not just from seeing the photo of her mother with Gibson, but also because after doing some initial research on Gibson he said that even in the tennis community, not many people knew much about her.

“Everyone knows who Arthur Ashe is,” Miller explained, “but pretty much not many people knew anything about Althea. And she was on the scene before 15 years before Arthur, and that’s how I got intrigued.”

“People don’t know the scope of who she was. She was literally born in the cotton fields, her parents were sharecroppers and she went on to receive the Wimbledon trophy from Queen Elizabeth.


http://www.tennispanorama.com/archives/44850
 
R

Rose

Althea was playing when I was very young and at the time not interested in tennis at all. But reading about her and seeing things about her on TV I don't feel she ever got the credit she deserved. But also she was such a classy lady I don't think she cared about credit.