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Arts & Culture

Boss: The Black Experience In Business

Richelieu Dennis, founder, CEO and executive chairman of Sundial Brands.
Courtesy of WNET
Richelieu Dennis, founder, CEO and executive chairman of Sundial Brands.

Stream now or tune in Monday, Dec. 28, 2020 at 10 p.m. on KPBS TV

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Filmmaker Stanley Nelson brings the largely unknown stories of enterprising African Americans to the forefront

The history of business and entrepreneurship lies at the heart of the American story, but often absent from that narrative are the experiences of African Americans. From the country’s earliest days, African Americans have embodied the qualities of innovation, risk-taking and determination to forge a path toward a better life.

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“Boss: The Black Experience In Business” traces the lives of African American entrepreneurs over 150 years, from those bound by bondage to moguls at the top of million-dollar empires.

Directed by Peabody - and Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Stanley Nelson (“Tell Them We Are Rising: The Story of Historically Black Colleges,” “The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution” and “Freedom Summer”), the new two-hour documentary shines a light on the story of resilience and resistance within the black American experience in the face of racial hostility and violence, economic exclusion, segregation and discrimination.

Tying together the past and the present, “Boss: The Black Experience In Business” explores the inspiring stories of trailblazing African American entrepreneurs and the significant contributions of contemporary business leaders.

Ursula Burns, CEO of Xerox from 2009 to 2016, and the first black woman CEO to head a Fortune 500 company.
Courtesy of Ursula Burns
Ursula Burns, CEO of Xerox from 2009 to 2016, and the first black woman CEO to head a Fortune 500 company.

Stories featured in the film include those of entrepreneur Madam C.J. Walker, publisher John H. Johnson, Motown CEO Berry Gordy, and business pioneer and philanthropist Reginald F. Lewis, among others.

The film features new interviews with:

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As a capitalist system emerged in the United States, African Americans found ways to establish profitable businesses in numerous industries, including financial services, retail, beauty, music and media.

“Boss: The Black Experience in Business” brings viewers on a journey from the end of Reconstruction through the present, tracing the emergence of a stable black business community alongside the greater struggle for civil rights.

Notable historians and scholars help tell the story, including:

Linotype operators of the Chicago Defender. (undated photo)
Courtesy of Library of Congress
Linotype operators of the Chicago Defender. (undated photo)

“African Americans have played a central role in the history of American business, but their stories are often left untold,” said Nelson. “Today, as we see talented black businessmen and women not only building successful companies in mainstream America, but also emerging as managers and CEOs for some of the most powerful corporate entities in the world, 'Boss: The Black Experience In Business' shares the remarkable stories of a community facing tremendous obstacles to pursue social, political and economic progress.”

E.J. Crane, watchmaker and jeweler in Richmond, Va. (undated photo)
Courtesy of Library of Congress
E.J. Crane, watchmaker and jeweler in Richmond, Va. (undated photo)

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Credits:

A Firelight Films production for THIRTEEN Productions LLC, in association with The HistoryMakers, the nation’s largest African American video oral history archive. Stanley Nelson is director and producer. Traci Curry is producer. Marcia Smith is writer. For The HistoryMakers: Julieanna Richardson is co-executive producer. For THIRTEEN: Lesley Norman is executive producer. Benjamin Phelps is coordinating producer. Stephen Segaller is executive in charge.