Success Story

John Singleton: youngest ever filmmaker to be nominated for the best director Oscar

At 24, John Singleton became the first African American and the youngest person ever to receive an Academy Award nomination for Best Director.

With his Oscar nomination, Singleton broke barriers for black filmmakers and an entirely new genre emerged. He negotiated with studio executives and insisted on directing the film, ‘Boyz n the Hood’ with no experience in that field. The film portrayed the lives of young black men forced to become adults due to awful conditions on the violent streets of South Central Los Angeles.

He recruited Ice Cube, then known as a hip-hop performer, for a leading role as a neighborhood enforcer who seeks to avenge a gang-related killing and he brought together a cast that included Cuba Gooding Jr, Angela Bassett, Tyra Ferrell, Morris Chestnut, and Laurence Fishburne.

Singleton reflected in a poster for Boyz n the Hood –   Pic Credit: Carlo Allegri/Getty Images

“When we first did the movie, we felt like we was teaching America about a part of itself that they don’t see,” Ice Cube told MTV in 2011. “We was teaching you about people like Doughboy and why he is the way he is.”

Singleton grew up in Los Angeles where he fell in love with movies probably because his mother’s apartment was next to a drive-in theatre. At a young age, he had gone to see a movie with his mom and saw her cry.

“I looked at my mother and I said, ‘Why are you crying?’” he told Vanity Fair. “And she said, ‘Because it’s such a good movie.’ So I start thinking, when I get to make a movie, I got to make people cry. I got to make them feel something.”

During the latter part of the 1980s and early 1990s, Los Angeles was a predominantly African American neighborhood confronted with segregation and economic deprivation which saw constant police on patrol in response to gang-turf violence.

23-year-old John Singleton as he was finishing ‘Boyz N The Hood’ – Pic credit: Bob Galbraith/AP

The experiences he garnered from this environment growing up ultimately served as a catalyst for his film.

Whilst in college, he won scriptwriting prizes, which led to a three-picture deal with Columbia Pictures and $6.5m (£5m) to make Boyz n the Hood. He wrote the ‘Boyz n the Hood’ screenplay.

“I’m a writer first, and I direct in order to protect my vision,” Singleton told The New York Times. “It’s my story, I lived it. What sense would it have made to have some white boy impose his interpretation on my experience?”

Reportedly, Singleton maintained that, despite his lack of experience, his “Boyz n the Hood” script could only be directed by himself. He was said to have turned down a $100,000 offer to turn over the script to another director.

Pic Credit: Rich Fury/Getty Images

“You know, I just felt this dude was a little delusional,” Ice Cube told Vanity Fair in 2016, reflecting on Singleton’s single-minded determination. “It’s just a pipe dream – that’s what I was thinking.”

Eventually, Columbia Pictures got behind it and “Boyz” became the first film about L.A.’s “hood strife” with an all-black cast, written and directed by a black filmmaker, and bankrolled by a major Hollywood studio.

Singleton filmed on location in neighbourhoods plagued by violence, in which drugs and police brutality were prevalent, describing the movie as “my American Graffiti, my coming-of-age story.” He even enlisted local gang members to add an extra edge of realism to the clothes and dialogue.

Critic Roger Ebert noted that the movie was not just a “brilliant directorial debut, but an American film of enormous importance”.

Upon release, ‘Boyz n the Hood’ became a huge mainstream success reportedly grossing $100m. He was 24 years only when he was nominated for his Academy Awards.

Although he lost the directing Oscar to Jonathan Demme and the screenplay Oscar to Callie Khouri, “Boyz n the Hood” later led to what came to be known as the “hood film” sub-genre, which went on to include “South Central” (1992), “Menace II Society” (1993), “Juice” (1992), “Sugar Hill,” (1993), “Dead Presidents” (1995), and “Friday” (1995).

Singleton became a mentor for a new generation of black film-makers. He went on to make many other films such as the Remake of Shaft, Four Brothers and 2 Fast 2 Furious.

In April 2019 after suffering a stroke, the first African American and the youngest ever filmmaker to be nominated for the best director Oscar, John Singleton died aged 51.

Theodora Aidoo

Theodora Aidoo is a young woman who is passionate about women-related issues. Her Love: To bring to fore the activities of women making a global impact. This stems from her journalism background from the Nigerian Institute of Journalism and Ghana Institute of Journalism.

Recent Posts

Cardi B shares for the first time how she felt guilty canceling her Invasion of Privacy tour because of her daughter

Cardi B has spoken for the first time on the guilt she felt canceling her…

9 mins ago

How A’ja Wilson repaid her parents for their sacrifice besides retiring her mom

A'ja Wilson is one of the top women's basketball players and an athletic hero. Before…

1 hour ago

Louisiana teen earns almost $1 million in scholarships from 13 colleges

Cur'Dericka Rice has made headlines after receiving nearly $1 million in scholarships from 13 universities.…

3 hours ago

Florida mother accused of fatally beating 4-year-old boy she adopted from Haiti

Authorities in Florida have brought charges against a woman accused of fatally beating her 4-year-old…

5 hours ago

Autopsy reveals cause of death for teen who died after eating spicy tortilla chip during viral challenge

Harris Wolobah, the 14-year-old whose family said he died after suffering complications from eating a…

5 hours ago

Georgia man charged after allegedly ejaculating on woman shopping at grocery store

Authorities in Chamblee, Georgia, have arrested and charged a 28-year-old man who allegedly ejaculated on…

5 hours ago

Meet Manika Gamble, who is now the first Black woman to complete Namibia’s 155-mile race

Manika Gamble recently made history as the first Black woman to complete a 155-mile, seven-day…

21 hours ago

How Tiffany Dean built a $45M brand without a bank loan: ‘That is not heard of as a Black woman’

Meet Tiffany Rose Dean; she is the founder of Hollywood Hair Bar, a $45 million…

21 hours ago

Lil Baby’s music video shoot was marred by gunshots with 3 people hospitalized

Lil Baby's music video shoot was marred by gunshots on Tuesday evening, leading to three…

23 hours ago

Georgia mom outraged after teacher combs out her daughter’s $150 locs

Micaela Varlack is extremely upset that her daughter's hair was changed without her consent by…

24 hours ago

74-year-old retiree who has lived in UK for nearly 50 years told he is not British

Nelson Shardey, a retired 74-year-old Ghanaian man who has resided in the UK for nearly…

1 day ago

How Nigeria’s Tunji Balogun is turning Def Jam into destination for global black music after becoming CEO

Tunji Balogun runs the iconic Def Jam record label. He took charge of the company…

1 day ago

The story behind Mary J. Blige’s golden boot that sold out in a day

Mary J. Blige has taken the footwear market by storm following the release of her…

1 day ago

Georgia man accused of burning girlfriend’s body during argument over his secret marriage

Authorities in Georgia said a man fatally choked his girlfriend and the mother of his…

1 day ago

Deaf teen from Nairobi slum makes waves in community ballet program

Gorrety Akinyi, a 17-year-old from Nairobi, Kenya, is thriving in a community ballet program despite…

1 day ago