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OWN's 'Cherish the Day' is a rare celebration of black love

LOS ANGELES (AP) - To separate filmmaker and TV producer Ava DuVernay's trenchant, history-driven projects, including 'œSelma'ť and 'œWhen They See Us,'ť from her new romantic drama series is to sell short the determined thoughtfulness that shapes all her work.

OWN's intimate, eight-episode 'œCherish the Day,'ť which tracks a couple's relationship over five years, is superficially a far cry from DuVernay's accounts of African American struggles for civil rights and against injustice or even her first OWN series, the sprawling family saga 'œQueen Sugar.'ť

But as DuVernay tells it, the love story (10 p.m. EST Tuesday) represents a bedrock truth.

'œI'm constantly thinking about the things that are important to me, and trying to pinpoint and navigate my place in the world as a black woman and culturally," she said. 'œAnd black love is a radical part of the survival of black people, more important than ... the stories that make it in the history books, because love is the driver of all those things."

As examples, she invokes the devotion of Emmett Till's mother, who brought the teenager's 1955 lynching to the forefront, and the black community's embrace of Martin Luther King Jr.

Love allows 'œpeople who are oppressed to survive in a world that doesn't really love them, or show love to them,'ť DuVernay said. 'œI'm always amazed by stories about the Holocaust ... the stories of whole families, fractured generations of people, who we know healed themselves through love.'ť

Her perspective makes the genesis of 'œCherish the Day,'ť which launches OWN's first anthology series, less improbable: The Emmy-winning, Oscar-nominated 'œ13th,'ť an examination of racial inequality in the American prison system. As the documentary concludes, Common's song 'œLetter to the Free'ť plays over a montage of smiling faces that DuVernay said represent 'œblack folks in everyday life, enjoying life.'ť

'œAll that was to say, even through this oppression and marginalization and this bias and this racism is a part of our lives here, we've loved through it and we built through it,'ť she said. 'œThat really was the first time I started to get the idea for this show.'ť

Hollywood, which long shied away from non-white romances, has started to make room for them with films including 'œCrazy Rich Asians'ť and the newly released 'œThe Photograph,'ť starring Issa Rae and Lakeith Stanfield. TV is more inclined to feature couples of color in multi-ethnic shows such as 'œThis Is Us," and routinely in sitcoms such as 'œblack-ish'ť or a dramedy like Rae's 'œInsecure'ť or Donald Glover's 'œAtlanta.'ť

Filling the void wasn't 'œtop of mind,'ť DuVernay said. But Alano Miller, who stars opposite Xosha Roquemore in 'œCherish the Day,'ť is glad she did.

Miller ("Underground," 'œJane the Virgin'ť) plays Evan Fisher, born into a Los Angeles family with means and making a name for himself in tech, opposite Roquemore's Gently James, from a less-settled background and with an adventurous streak. Award-winning screen legend Cicely Tyson ('œSounder,'ť 'œThe Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman'ť), plays Gently's mentor, a woman who's lived a celebrated life.

'œAs an actor, I'm looking at holes: where we're not being seen, or what is interesting in the way we can tell it,'ť said Miller, applying that to TV's overall lack of romances, not only ethnic ones. 'œI haven't seen anything in a long, long time that had to do with love in general," he said, aside from the rare bird like Amazon's 'ťModern Love."

Looking back, Miller was as much taken with the classic films of Cary Grant (including 1957's "An Affair to Remember," saluted by filmmaker Nora Ephron in 1993's 'œSleepless in Seattle'ť ) as he was with his own generation's movies, including 1997's 'œLove Jones'ť with Larenz Tate and Nia Long,

'œWho doesn't love romance?" Miller said. "Who doesn't want to have that heart-pounding (feeling), who doesn't want to talk about love and in such a joyous way, as opposed to the time that we live in, which is a bit dark ... and everyone's very sensitive.'ť

Roquemore was glad to tackle her first screen romance, which she thought might not be 'œin the cards'ť for her given that black female leads in love stories are usually light-skinned and because she'd become known for her comedic work, including in Mindy Kaling's 'œThe Mindy Project.'ť

Since she's had her own real-life romances (including with Stanfield, her former partner with whom she has a daughter), perhaps it was a 'œquestion of me not thinking big enough,'ť Roquemore said. Then came 'œCherish the Day.'ť

'œIt's so cool for it to happen,'ť she said. 'œAnd in terms of it being a show about black love, I think we need as many human iterations of black people in media as we can get. We're still trying to normalize the regular black experience, so if I can play a role in the process that does that, I'm honored.'ť

DuVernay said the series has the right home on the Oprah Winfrey-founded OWN, where it reaches black female viewers that she described as focused on family, relationships and spiritual well-being (although as with 'œQueen Sugar" and its second window on Hulu, 'œCherish the Day'ť will reach others as well).

'œWe have an audience that is dynamic and dedicated and underserved with things that look beautiful, writing that is meaningful, and that they've really responded to,'ť DuVernay said.

___

Lynn Elber can be reached at lelber@ap.org and on Twitter at http://twitter.com/lynnelber.

FILE - In this Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016, file photo, Alano Miller attends the premiere of "Loving" in New York. Miller stars with Xosha Roquemore in "Cherish the Day," OWN's first anthology series, created by filmmaker and TV producer Ava DuVernay. The series, airing 10 p.m. EST Tuesday, follows a Los Angeles couple's relationship over eight episodes that span five years. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, file) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Thursday, Jan. 16, 2020, file photo, Xosha Roquemore speaks at the OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network's "Cherish the Day" series panel during the Discovery Network TCA 2020 Winter Press Tour in Pasadena, Calif. The series, airing 10 p.m. EST Tuesday, follows a Los Angeles couple's relationship over eight episodes that span five years. Roquemore and Alano Miller star in the network's first anthology series, created by filmmaker and TV producer Ava DuVernay. (Photo by Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP) The Associated Press
FILE - In this Sunday, Sept. 15, 2019, file photo, Cicely Tyson arrives at night two of the Creative Arts Emmy Awards in Los Angeles. Tyson appears in "Cherish the Day," airing 10 p.m. EST Tuesday on OWN. The series follows a Los Angeles couple's relationship over eight episodes that span five years. Xosha Roquemore and Alano Miller star in the network's first anthology series, created by filmmaker and TV producer Ava DuVernay. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP, file) The Associated Press
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