Ruth E. Carter Becomes 1st Black Woman To Win 2 Oscars
Ruth E. Carter poses with the award for best costume design for "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever" in the press room at the Oscars on Sunday, March 12, 2023, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP)
BY JONATHAN LANDRUM JR.LOS ANGELES (AP) ā Ruth E. Carter made history: The costume designer behind the āBlack Pantherā films became the first Black woman to win two Oscars.
Carter took home best costume design Sunday night at the 95th Academy Awards for the Marvel sequel āBlack Panther: Wakanda Forever.ā Carter also won in 2018 for āBlack Panther,ā which made her the first African American to win in the category.
In her acceptance speech, Carter thanked the filmās director Ryan Coogler and asked if āBlack Pantherā star Chadwick Boseman could look after her mother, Mabel Carter, who she said died āthis past week.ā Boseman died in 2020 of cancer at 43.
āThis is for my mother. She was 101,ā Carter said. āThis film prepared me for this moment. Chadwick, please take care of mom.ā
Carter then paid tribute to her mother backstage.
āI had a great relationship with her in her final years. The same relationship I always had with her. I was her ride-or-die. I was her road dog. I was her sidekick,ā she said. āI know sheās proud of me. I know that she wanted this for me as much as I wanted it for myself.ā
āBlack Panther: Wakanda Foreverā grappled with the grief of losing Boseman, its superhero.
In her career, Carter has been behind-the-scenes in some of Hollywoodās biggest films. Sheās received Oscar nominations for her work in Spike Leeās āMalcolm Xā and Steven Spielbergās āAmistadā and received praise for her period ensembles in other projects such as Lee Danielsā āThe Butler,ā Ava DuVernayās āSelmaā and the reboot of āROOTS.ā Sheās created costumes for Oprah Winfrey, Denzel Washington, Eddie Murphy and even Jerry Seinfeld for the āSeinfeldā pilot.
Carter played an influential role as lead costume designer in making āBlack Pantherā a cultural phenomenon as she infused the pride of African diaspora into the characterās stylish and colorful garments to help bring Wakanda to life. She wanted to transform the presence of Queen Ramonda - played by Oscar nominee Angela Bassett ā as a queen in the first film to being a ruler in the sequel.
āAngela always wanted to play a queen, so to amplify her, we added vibranium ā¦ we gave her the royal color of purple, and adorned her in gold as she wore the crown at the UN,ā Carter said. āWhen she sits on the throne, sheās in a gray one shouldered dress. The exposed shoulder shows her strength ā Angela, she got those guns, right?ā
Carter said she was able to pull off the win against a ātough lineup.ā She was up against designers from āElvis,ā āMrs. Harris Goes to Paris,ā āEverything Everywhere All at Once,ā and āBabylon.ā
She got her start in 1988 on Leeās āSchool Daze,ā the directorās second film. Theyāve since collaborated on more than 10 films, including āDo the Right Thingā and āJungle Fever.ā Sheās also worked with Robert Townsend on āThe Five Heartbeatsā and Keenen Ivory Wayans on āIām Gonna Git You Sucka.ā
āI pulled myself up from my bootstraps,ā Carter said. āI started in a single parent household. I wanted to be a costume designer. I studied. I scraped. I struggled with adversity in an industry that sometimes didnāt look like me. And I endured.ā
Through the Oscar-nominated āMalcolm X,ā she reached new heights. That film, starring Denzel Washington, propelled her into the āHollywood makeup,ā offering her more opportunities to work with directors who had different points-of-views and scripts.
Carterās wish is that her historic win Sunday will offer more opportunities to women of color.
āI hope this opens the door for others ā¦ that they can win an Oscar, too,ā Carter said.
___ For more coverage of this yearās Oscars, visit: https://apnews.com/hub/academy-awards
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