Films

‘The League’ Trailer | Journey of Negro League Baseball

“The League” Premieres at The Tribeca Festival June 12th.

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The League” celebrates the dynamic journey of Negro League baseball’s triumphs and challenges through the first half of the twentieth century.

The League” will world-premiere at the Tribeca Festival on Monday, June 12th. The film will open exclusively in AMC Theaters starting July 7th, and will be available on digital July 14th.

The story is told through previously unearthed archival footage and never-before-seen interviews with legendary players like Satchel Paige and Buck O’Neil – whose early careers paved the way for the Jackie Robinson era – as well as celebrated Hall of Famers Willie Mays and Hank Aaron who started out in the Negro Leagues.

(African American baseball players from Morris Brown College Atlanta)

From entrepreneurial titans Cumberland Posey and Gus Greenlee, whose intense rivalry fueled the rise of two of the best baseball teams ever to play the game, to Effa Manley, the activist owner of the Newark Eagles and the only woman ever admitted to the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

The League” explores Black baseball as an economic and social pillar of Black communities and a stage for some of the greatest athletes to ever play the game, while also examining the unintended consequences of integration.

(Rube Foster (center)
while managing the 1916 Chicago American Giants)

Directed by acclaimed filmmaker Sam Pollard, executive produced by Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, Tariq Trotter, and produced by RadicalMedia.

Directors Statement!

Baseball – I grew up in the 1960s being a huge baseball fan. My dad’s favorite team was the St. Louis Cardinals, so that became my favorite team. They had a roster of great players, many of whom happened to be Black or Latino, like Bill White, Curt Flood, Orlando Cepeda, Lou Brock. They were a team that excited ball fans during that decade and would go on to win the 1964 and 1967 World Series. Now I knew who Jackie Robinson was and that it was because of him Blacks had integrated the Major Leagues in 1947.

But what I did not know much about in 1964 at the age of 14 was that he had come out of the Negro Leagues and that the Negro Leagues had been home to Black and Latino ballplayers who had to play segregated baseball during the height of the Jim Crow era. But being the curious young man that I was, I began to do research about the Negro Leagues and some of the teams: the Kansas City Monarchs, the Homestead Greys, the Pittsburgh Crawfords, and the phenomenal players like the legendary Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson, Cool Papa Bell, Monte Irvin, and Rube Foster, who helped create the first iteration of the Negro Leagues in the 1920s. Back then, I did not know that almost 60 years later I would direct a documentary about the rich legacy of the Negro Leagues.

My vision was simple. Find voices of those who played the game, surround them with historians and fans of the Negro Leagues, use as much archival footage and stills I could find and, to add drama, shoot period recreations and create animation that would add another level of cinematic texture to the film. Fortunately, I was able to find the voices of former Negro League players because Byron Motley (whose dad, Bob Motley, had been a Negro League Umpire) had interviewed and recorded many former players years ago. It was a treasure trove of wonderful voices and added immensely to the telling of the story. Also, fortunately many of the die-hard Negro League historians had access or knew where to find footage that I had never seen, which added enormously to visualizing the story.

As a filmmaker and director, I could not have been better served in having all the above elements to tell such a rich and powerful story. Sam Pollard – Director

(The1942 AA Marines)

Check Out The New Trailer!

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