‘Emancipation’: Why Will Smith ‘Avoided Slavery’ Throughout His Acting Career Until Antoine Fuqua’s Action Thriller

Acclaimed director Antoine Fuqua’s Emancipation with Will Smith might appear to be a story that has been told many times, but it is not. Starring Smith, whose Oscars slap resulted in a 10-year ban from the Academy Awards, Fuqua’s film shows slavery through a different, more powerful lens. And though Smith says he avoided slavery-focused projects throughout his career, the director’s vision made the actor change his mind.  

Will Smith says filming ‘Emancipation’ was ‘grueling’

Emancipation, Will Smith, and Antoine Fuqua
Will Smith in Antoine Fuqua’s ‘Emancipation’ | Apple TV+

The story that unfolds in Emancipation is that of a real-life escaped enslaved man, Gordon. The film is based on a historical photo taken of Gordon (known historically as “Whipped Peter”) in 1863, sitting with his back to the camera, his scars revealing the horrors of slavery. The photo (available via the Library of Congress) was taken in Baton Rouge just months after the Emancipation Proclamation and Gordon’s harrowing escape from the South.