

ZINGHA STEWART is a blossoming director that is preparing to live out a vision that she concocted on a red eye flight from Los Angeles to New York. On this fateful journey Stewart pulled out her copy of For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf that she received her Aunt Joan on her fifteenth birthday . Though she’d read the book many times over the years, this time it was very different. This time the words turned into pictures and the pictures were in motion. As she frantically scribbled these ideas into the book itself – setting off a creative process that led to her securing the rights to develop the screenplay.
Last week Lionsgate Films announced that it had acquired these rights and signed Stewart to direct from her adaptation of “For Colored Girls,” the critically acclaimed play by Ntozake Shange, that was written as a series of 20 poems telling stories of love, abandonment, domestic abuse and other issues faced by black women.
It is important to understand that Stewart, who is mostly known for directing music videos, wasn’t just “signed” by Lionsgate to write and direct; This is a project that evolved by Stewart putting the motion pictures of her mind into real life motion, thus creating a dream job for herself. (interview after the jump)


