Ellise Shafer While receiving amfAR’s Award of Inspiration at the AIDS nonprofit’s Venice gala on Sunday night, Ava DuVernay recalled the first time she fell in love with movies. “It was the original ‘West Side Story,'” DuVernay said. “The colors, the Brown people, the romance, warring gangs, dance fighting, Maria and Tony… it ignited my passion for film and led me to leave Compton, Calif.
and speak to all of you in a 16th century old school building in Venice.” Held at the Scuola Grande della Misericordia, an imposing building featuring walls embossed with centuries-old Venetian art, this year’s amfAR Venezia kicked off with a cocktail hour where guests could admire the art that would be on auction later that night, including pieces from Andy Warhol and Slim Aarons.
The event included performances from Leona Lewis and Rita Ora, backed by a live string orchestra, while guests including Bella Thorne, Taika Waititi, Milla Jovovich, Kate Beckinsale, Michelle Rodriguez and Luke Evans enjoyed a three-course meal consisting of chilled tomato soup, roasted sea bass and Bellini-flavored ice cream.
DuVernay, whose newest film, “Origin,” is premiering in competition at the Venice Film Festival on Wednesday, discussed the direct connection the movie has to amfAR’s mission. “How many women and people of color and members of the LBGTQ community have been similarly inspired, but their passion and creativity doesn’t have a viable road to fulfill their passions?” DuVernay observed. “My next film, ‘Origin,’ explores this idea — most notably, why we as a human race treat some people as less than others and how these ideas are ingrained in the systems and everyday habits that we might not be aware of.” As she delved into stats regarding.
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