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Oprah Winfrey helps ‘Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks’ come alive on HBO

By Meredith Blake Los Angeles Times

One day, circa 2000, Rebecca Skloot was riding in a car with Deborah Lacks, whose late mother, Henrietta, had posthumously and unwittingly contributed to some of the most important medical research of the 20th century.

At the time, Skloot was a scrappy but barely published young journalist, and it would take a decade for her to complete the nonfiction book “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.” But Lacks had a prescient vision:

“ ‘This book is going to come out and it’s going to be a best-seller. There’s going to be a movie. Oprah is going to star in it,’ ” Skloot recalls Lacks saying during that drive. “And I was there going, ‘Deborah, Deborah, whoa, whoa, that’s crazy. Let’s be realistic here.’ ”

Nearly two decades later, Lacks’ prediction – which Skloot had forgotten until she recently unearthed it on an old audiotape – has been realized. Not only did Skloot’s 2010 book become a runaway best-seller, but it has been adapted into a movie starring, yes, Oprah Winfrey.

Written and directed by George C. Wolfe and premiering Saturday on HBO, the film follows Skloot (Rose Byrne) and Deborah Lacks (Winfrey) on a journey to understand more about Henrietta, who died of cervical cancer at age 31 in 1951, leaving behind five small children and a legacy that would change modern medicine.

Unbeknown to Henrietta (played in flashbacks by Renee Elise Goldsberry), a doctor at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore removed cancer cells from her cervix. These cells were able to reproduce outside the body at astonishing rates, making them ideal for medical research. The mass-produced HeLa cells, as they became known, have contributed to major breakthroughs, including the polio vaccine and in-vitro fertilization – all thanks to a black woman who died in obscurity and whose family has never been compensated for her contributions to medicine.

In a call from her home in Santa Barbara, Winfrey recalls her initial impressions of Skloot’s book.

“Being a student of African American history, I was thrown by the idea that I’d never heard of Henrietta Lacks, and especially having lived in Baltimore, and traveled the streets she lived on and been a reporter in that town for eight years and never having heard her name – that’s what was fascinating to me,” Winfrey said.

Shortly after the book’s publication, Winfrey teamed with HBO and “Six Feet Under” producer Alan Ball to adapt the hotly contested property. “One of the defining characteristics of my personality is whenever I discover anything, whether it’s a great juicer, or as a kid a great candy bar, or as now a great story, I love to share it,” she said.

Skloot, who spent a decade reporting and writing the book and forging close relationships with the Lacks family, was understandably protective of the material. But she’d been impressed by HBO films such as “Temple Grandin,” about the autistic animal behavior expert, and “You Don’t Know Jack,” about euthanasia activist Dr. Jack Kevorkian – “movies that handled complex science ethics stories, where there’s a real gray area.”

The film has followed a lengthy gestation process, thanks in part of the challenge of adapting Skloot’s 400-page book – which deftly interweaves a painful family saga with complex science, racial history and medical ethics – into a concise screenplay.

Wolfe, a Tony-winning playwright and director whose theater credits include “The Normal Heart,” “Lucky Guy” and last year’s acclaimed musical “Shuffle Along,” made the decision to focus on Deborah’s quest to know more about the mother she lost as a baby.

Wolfe was particularly moved by the fact that Deborah had virtually no memories of her mother, though her cells were now “immortal” and had improved the lives of countless millions.

“Her desire to process this information, to gather pieces no matter how desperate, no matter how clueless, no matter how, sometimes, foolish it was, just to know – I found that heroic and thrilling,” Wolfe says during a break from editing in the frenzied final weeks before the film’s release. By design, the audience knows only as much about Henrietta as Deborah does.

As much as he revered Skloot’s writing, Wolfe was more interested in “embodying the world” than treating the book with kid gloves. “You honor the work by digging, you don’t honor the work by being passive to the process. You’ve got to get in there and wrestle. And if it’s a strong muscle, it can withstand your wrestling.”

Wolfe’s involvement also helped convince Winfrey, who hadn’t planned to star in the film but reconsidered, thanks to a recommendation from Audra McDonald. The “Shuffle Along” star urged Winfrey to work with Wolfe if she ever had the chance.

For the talk show doyenne and media tycoon, acting has been a successful if occasional side gig, with roles in films including “The Color Purple” and “Beloved” as well as a more recent recurring part in the OWN family drama “Greenleaf.” But performing feeds her in a way that’s different from, say, interviewing former first lady Michelle Obama.

“It’s really stimulating to probe the depths of yourself, searching for emotions that otherwise would go untouched or unexplored, particularly for me,” Winfrey said. Still, playing Deborah, a devoutly religious but troubled woman with a host of eccentricities – in one scene she douses a restaurant table in Lysol before sitting down – was a challenge.

“I have to go really, really, really deep to pull up rage and anger. Really. Really. Really deep,” she says, enunciating in a way that can only be described as Winfrey-esque. “I don’t live in that space.”

Winfrey relied on Skloot’s extensive audiotapes to help build the character, and discussed Deborah with members of the Skloot family, several of whom were enlisted as paid consultants on the film.

“I said, ‘Look, my job is to to make an offering of this story so that the world will know your mother and your grandmother in a way they did not before,’” Winfrey recalled telling them. “ ‘I’m not going to be your mother, and I’m not going to be able to re-create everything she was for you.’ ”

Nevertheless, at least one member of the family, Henrietta’s eldest son, Lawrence Lacks, is unhappy with the film, accusing HBO of exploiting his mother’s memory. Winfrey brushes off the criticism. “Overall, the family is pleased,” she says.

As for working with the Oprah Winfrey, Byrne confesses she was “as intrigued as anybody” but also impressed by her commitment. “She really conserved her energy. She was not the bubbly personality you see on TV, which I completely respect. It was a big job for her to bring that character to life.”

Byrne has a less showy role as Skloot, who was reluctant to write herself into the book. The fictionalized Skloot is an outsider acutely aware of how she, as a white journalist with much to gain by telling Henrietta’s story, might be viewed with suspicion by the family. Byrne focused on capturing Skloot’s spirit.

“Only someone with her tenacity and her wit and persistence could have accomplished this book,” she says.