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Lemonade Director Melina Matsoukas: Beyoncé Wanted To Show The Historical Impact Of Slavery On Black Love

The singer also funded the visuals for the album herself.

February 27, 2017

Speaking in an interview with the The New Yorker, director Melina Matsoukas has revealed some key details about the creation of Beyoncé's "Formation" music video, the Lemonade visuals, as well as her work with Rihanna and for HBO's Insecure. Matsoukas has been involved with some of Beyoncé's visuals since 2006, when Jay Z introduced the two at an awards show afterparty.

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Matsoukas said that Beyoncé paid for the Lemonade film project herself, which writer Alexis Okeowo acknowledges allows "for a kind of artistic control that few black artists have experienced." As many fans and critics have explored, the film's themes were explicitly radical but Matsoukas shared the specifics of Beyoncé's concept: "She wanted to show the historical impact of slavery on black love, and what it has done to the black family. And black men and women — how we’re almost socialized not to be together."

The "Formation" video was inspired by Matsoukas's research into the ideas of writers Toni Morrison, Maya Angelou, and Octavia Butler, as well as scenes of protest and parade from black American history. "I wanted to show—this is black people. We triumph, we suffer, we’re drowning, we’re being beaten, we’re dancing, we’re eating, and we’re still here.” After Beyoncé approved the treatment, "Formation" was filmed in two days between rehearsals for the 2016 Super Bowl halftime show.

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Read more behind-the-scene details at The New Yorker, as well as insight into Matsoukas's working relationships with Beyoncé, Rihanna, and Solange.

Thumbnail image courtesy of Parkwood Entertainment

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