![]() Henrietta’s name, though, was changed by Johns Hopkins, which treated black patients in segregated wards during the Jim Crow era, to Helen Lanes in order to disguise her true identity from the public and media. Henrietta checked herself into Johns Hopkins in the early 1950s, suffering from cervical cancer, and from her body the hospital extracted cells-without her knowledge or consent-that would become instrumental in major medical breakthroughs, such as the Polio vaccine, and AIDS research. Wolfe strives to bring this “mother of modern medicine” to the forefront of a story that was essentially taken away from her. Wolfe ambitiously aims for but ultimately fails to achieve: to give, like the Rebecca Skloot nonfiction bestseller on which the HBO film is based, Henrietta Lacks her due. ![]() The emotion being evinced here isn’t sorrow or sadness, but overwhelming confusion and chaos, and this speaks to what director George C. In the aftermath of learning that both her mother and her late older sister, Elsie (Tyvonna Jones), were mistreated by a predominantly white scientific community because of racism and credit-mongering, she loses a grip on her emotions and is cast back to the day her mother was buried, when a great storm interrupted the mournful ceremony and blew the roof off the family’s barn.Įschewing the solemn strings or atmospheric synths typical of scenes like this, the moment is bolstered by brassy percussion-the kind of big, rolling drums reminiscent of Duke Ellington’s more bombastic numbers. Toward the end of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Deborah Lacks (Oprah Winfrey), the eldest living daughter of the titular black cancer victim (Renee Elise Goldsberry), loses her mind for a moment. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |