Filmmaker Angela Tucker spotlights Black joy
February 1st, 2023 | Africa, ŠÓ°ÉŌ““ Study Abroad
'My work is about representing underrepresented communities in unconventional ways'

Photos courtesy of Angela Tucker.
For filmmaker Angela Tucker, an ŠÓ°ÉŌ““ Study Abroad arts and culture semester in Ghana in the ā90s proved pivotal. It was there, she says, that she first got behind the camera.
āIt was a formative time in life,ā she says. As a theater and African-American Studies major at Wesleyan, she found Ghanaian ideas about where art and culture reside different in some interesting ways. āIn America, you go to a play or watch a film and thatās what art is, where art is. Thatās a very western idea. But someplace like Ghanaāart and culture is everywhere.ā
Angela says her ŠÓ°ÉŌ““ program was focused on the idea of going somewhere in the country, having an experience, then writing about it. āWe did something with the national theater in Accraāa performance art thing. The actors would go into areas where women were selling skin-bleaching cream, and theyād provoke a conversation about bleaching.ā
Itās about Black joyāand thatās radical in a world that wants to show Black pain.
When the students went to observe, Angela ended up with the job of filming. āI had never done anything like that! It was my introduction to filming something.ā Angela went from Wesleyan to Columbia, where she received an MFA in Film. The native New Yorker now resides in New Orleans.

These days, as an Emmy and Webby award-winner, itās pretty easy to find Angela's work. Christmas 2022 saw the debut of her first Lifetime Christmas movie, A New Orleans Noel. And sheās done many documentaries, including All Skinfolk, Aināt Kinfolk on PBSā Reel South; Black Folk Donāt, an intriguing web series of shorts including interviews about perceptions of what is and isnāt āBlackā; and (A)sexual, a look at people for whom sexual attraction is not a part of life.
No matter the format or length, Angela says thereās a common thread running through everything she does: āMy work is about representing underrepresented communities in unconventional ways. I think my Christmas movie had a place in my work as much as a documentary about forced sterilization. Itās about representation, and the importance of showing the experiences of Black people.ā
She puts a finer point on it, too. āItās about Black joyāand thatās radical in a world that wants to show Black pain.ā
Black Folk Don't is a good example of how that difference manifests in her work. The series is often funny, and consistently insightful. In it she examines, primarily through interviews, things that are often considered outside the usual Black cultural parameters, like, for instance, yoga.
From that premise, Angela says, āI just thought, āHow do you make something that explores stereotypes?ā So many are problematic, and some are based in truth.ā
Many filmmakers reside primarily in the world of narrative feature or the world of documentaries. Angela has explored both and finds each rewarding in its own way. āWhat I love about doing a documentary is that you can keep moving it along yourself; you don't need a big entity to give you money. Life-wise, thatās really nice, to have a lot of control over what youāre doing. But with documentaries, you also have to give over to whatever happens.ā
With narrative films, she says, thereās a different kind of control. āThereās a lot of time that goes into writing and planning, and then the experience of making it is actually a very short experience.ā That kind of shorter experience, she says, has been ālighter. Itās given me the strength and stamina to do the other work.ā

When you spend time with her work, you may notice a through-line of an aesthetic sort, too. Thereās a somewhat similar look throughout. And that, of course, is intentional. āThe lighting of brown skināmaking brown skin look beautifulāitās often about finding a crew and a team that knows how to do that.
āI also think about color palette a lot. I can't always control that, though. I think going to film school for fiction was probably good, in that I didnāt come at documentary from the perspective of being a journalist. I came to it from having to understand look and feel and the aesthetic piece first. Thatās always on my mind.ā
The recent arrival of New Orleans Noel may well help Angela reach more people and realize more opportunities in all the varieties of work she pursues. The chance to make a film for Lifetime, she says, came about through a New Orleans-based producer whoād pitched a Christmas movie. Lifetime, she explains, wanted a Black writer and director, preferably based in Louisiana.
The lighting of brown skināmaking brown skin look beautifulāitās often about finding a crew and a team that knows how to do that.
The filming took longer because of the pandemic, but finally wrapped for a Christmas 2022 release. The experience was different in some highly specific ways, Angela says. āThereās a whole way of doing things. Lifetimeāthey have their own rules and trends. This year, for instance, there are a lot of movies about architects. But this film was always primarily a vehicle for Keisha Knight Pulliam.ā And, it bears noting, New Orleans Noel also attracted a big name in singer Patti Labelle.
From here, this ŠÓ°ÉŌ““ alum hopes to open new doors and explore some intriguing new projects. āIām working on a feature documentary about [trailblazing Texas congresswoman] Barbara Jordan. And another about holistic ways for women to take care of their bodies. And Iām working on something about an older love affair.ā Itās all a through-line that stretches back to picking up a camera to film the arts and culture of Ghana with ŠÓ°ÉŌ““.