Charles Lane(II)
- Actor
- Director
- Writer
Charles Lane, with a host of awards and credits to his name, is a
force to be reckoned with. Born in New York's South Bronx in 1953 and inspired by Hitchcock films, Lane knew early in his childhood what his true
calling was. His passion for film transpired when while in junior
high he made his first film, a spy spoof, with a Super-8 camera his
father had given him for Christmas. Lane furthered this pursuit with
his enrollment for a film degree at State University of New York at
Purchase. During his years in college Charles Lane wrote and directed
A Place in Time (1977), a short that won the Student Academy Award. However,
Lane grew up in a time when the prospects for African American
filmmakers were limited, but during the 1980s a revival for black
films that strayed away from the blaxploitation features arose. Then
after a brief inspirational conversation with a homeless man on his way
back from a boxing match, Lane created his launching vehicle to filmmaking history, Sidewalk Stories (1989) (1989). This poignant comedy examined homelessness through the eyes of a street artist played charmingly
by Lane himself. Shot on a low budget and plagued with time constraints
to meet film submission deadlines 'Sidewalk Stories' was shot in
15 days. The movie was received favorable
by critics worldwide, propelling Charles Lane in the forefront of
American filmmaking. 'Sidewalk Stories' almost not making the Cannes
deadline walked away with the prestigious Prix du Public and a record
12 minute ovation. The success of Sidewalk
Stories led to multiple film contracts with Island pictures and
Disney's Touchstone. Touchstone proposed a two-picture arrangement,
beginning with the feature-length film True Identity (1991). Released in 1991,
True Identity was adapted from Andy Breckman's sketch "White Like Me,"
which was originally conceived for a segment by comedian Eddie Murphy
on NBC's popular television show Saturday Night Live. 'True Identity'
is a tale of an unemployed black actor who dons a white face to escape a
mobster's death threat. True Identity
featured British comedian Lenny Henry, Oscar award nominee Frank Langella, Anne Marie Johnson and the late J.T. Walsh. An underrated
performance by Lenny Henry who in the film dubbed a series of American
accents that matched his fine comedic timing with Lane's satirical
story telling. Lane began work on several projects. The Blue Hour, "a
contemporary adaptation of the Greek myth of Orpheus and Eurydice [in
which Orpheus, whose musical gifts could tame wild beasts, descends to
Hell to bring back his dead wife, Eurydice] and Inertia, an
"action-comedy-romantic-thriller" were both in production by the
spring of 1992.