CHEVALIER Q&A with Kelvin Harrison Jr., Minnie Driver, Samara Weaving | TIFF 2022
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 Published On Sep 12, 2022

The team behind CHEVALIER in conversation with TIFF in advance of its premiere at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival. Featuring a dynamic performance from Kelvin Harrison Jr. (Waves), this opulent historical drama — brimming with intrigue, romance, and sumptuous music — turns the spotlight on a brilliant Black artist whose legacy has been woefully obscured.

The 47th Toronto International Film Festival runs September 8 to 18, 2022. For more, visit http://tiff.net.

Featuring a magnetic performance from Kelvin Harrison Jr. (TIFF ’19’s Waves; TIFF ’19 Rising Star), this opulent historical drama, brimming with intrigue, romance, and sumptuous music, turns the spotlight on a brilliant Black composer and violinist whose legacy has been woefully obscured. Chevalier opens with an audacious bang, as Joseph Bologne (Harrison) interrupts a Paris concert conducted by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and makes a dramatic impression on the preening genius and his fancy, 18th-century audience. From there we watch as Bologne, propelled by talent, ambition, and a drive to surmount the racist barriers all around him, climbs his way up from outcast to a place in Marie Antoinette’s inner circle. Born in Guadeloupe as the illegitimate son of an enslaved African and a white French aristocrat, Bologne grew up in Paris as a privileged but stigmatized son. He was afforded the finest education and excelled in music and fencing. But he was still Black. As a gifted, vital young man, Bologne cuts a dashing figure at court, attracting the attention of an older woman, La Guimard (Minnie Driver). His attempts to manage her overtures, while his own desires lead him to the very married Marie-Josephine (Samara Weaving), complicate any hope he has of achieving his greatest ambition: becoming the next leader of the prestigious Paris Opera. Director Stephen Williams returns to the Festival 27 years after his groundbreaking debut feature, Soul Survivor. Having directed premium series since then (Watchmen, Lost, How to Get Away with Murder), he brings masterful craft and genuine visual invention to Stefani Robinson’s screenplay. By the time it reaches its surprising, rewarding conclusion, Chevalier has distinguished itself as a riveting, truly original life story.

Stephen Williams is a producer and director with extensive television credits including Dark Angel (02), Crossing Jordan (03–05), and Lost (08–09). Born in Jamaica, he lived in London before immigrating to Canada. In 1992, he entered the director’s program at the Canadian Film Centre. His first short, A Variation on the Key 2 Life (93), was followed by the feature Soul Survivor (95), which played the Festival. Chevalier (22) is his latest feature.

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