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Spike Lee honoured with BFI Fellowship

Director, writer, actor, producer, author and NYU Grad Film tenured professor Spike Lee received a BFI Fellowship, the highest honour bestowed by the BFI. The fellowship recognises Lee’s pioneering body of work, which has spanned over 30 years and has chronicled Black lives through bold and inventive cinematic works of art from feature films and documentary to television, music, commercials and books.

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Director, writer, actor, producer, author and NYU Grad Film tenured professor Spike Lee received a BFI Fellowship, the highest honour bestowed by the BFI. The fellowship recognises Lee’s pioneering body of work, which has spanned over 30 years and has chronicled Black lives through bold and inventive cinematic works of art from feature films and documentary to television, music, commercials and books.

The fellowship was presented to Lee at a special celebration event at BFI Southbank, hosted by BFI chair Tim Richards and BFI chief exec Ben Roberts.
“I am honoured and excited to be awarding Spike Lee the prestigious BFI Fellowship,” said Richards. “Lee has such a distinctive voice as an auteur, unafraid to challenge ideas of race, gender and class throughout his career with his unique cinematic style. A true renaissance man and pioneer, he has excelled in so many art forms, staying original, fresh and as relevant to contemporary audiences as those who have enjoyed his work for over 30 years. I am delighted to be celebrating his enormous talent and individuality with a BFI Fellowship.

Spike Lee said: “I’m Blessed to live up to my ancestors credo ‘DEEDS, NOT WORDS’. I Thank The BFI for helping me in continuing my generations of family legacy. Peace And Love. YA-DIG? SHO-NUFF.”

While in the UK, Lee will also visit teams at the BFI National Archive, who have liaised with him on a new 35mm print of Malcolm X (1992), made possible thanks to funding from the National Lottery, to premiere at the BFI’s inaugural Film on Film Festival taking place at BFI Southbank, 8 to 11 June 2023.

Born in Atlanta in 1957 but raised in Brooklyn, New York City, Shelton Jackson Lee received his MFA in Film Production at NYU/Tisch. After graduation, he founded 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks, based in Brooklyn. A cinematic original, Lee has stamped his personality onto a range of bold and powerful subjects, producing cinematic works of art that display his skill and ability to showcase outspoken and proactive socio-political critiques and challenge cultural assumptions about race, class and gender identity, through his keen direction, fresh dialogue, striking visual style and pitch perfect use of music.

Lee has directed and produced over 30 films since his first feature film, the independently produced She’s Gotta Have It (1986), which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival receiving the esteemed Prix de la Jeunesse Award. Do the Right Thing (1989), earned Spike Lee his first Academy Award nomination for best original screenplay and was recently voted 24th film in the top 100 Sight and Sound Greatest Films of All Time Critics’ Poll 2022. Lee was awarded an Honorary Oscar in 2015 for his lifetime achievement and contributions to the state of motion picture arts and sciences. Both Do the Right Thing and Jungle Fever (1991) screened in competition at Cannes.

In 2018 Lee returned to the Cannes Competition with BlacKkKlansman (2018), where it won the Grand Prix. BlacKkKlansman went on to win the Oscar for best adapted screenplay and BAFTA for best adapted screenplay. In 2021 Spike Lee was named the president of the jury at the 74th edition of the Cannes Film Festival.

As a pioneering Black filmmaker Spike Lee has paved the way for a new generation of Black directors including Ryan Coogler (Black Panther) Jordan Peele (Get Out), Barry Jenkins (Moonlight) and Ava DuVernay (Selma). He began teaching a course on filmmaking at Harvard in 1991, and in 1993 he joined the faculty at NYU/Tisch in the Graduate Film Programme, where he was appointed artistic director in 2002, a position which he still holds today. He is a tenured professor of film at NYU’s Graduate film programme.

While in the UK to receive his BFI Fellowship, Lee will take a masterclass with young filmmakers.

Posted: February 17, 2023