How did you find the girls on which this project is based?
About four years ago, a friend saw a Twitter post honoring the anniversary of the girls from Americus being released from illegal captivity at the Leesburg Stockade. She sent it to me and suggested it was a story worth my investigation. I read it and became obsessed. I sent my entire office on the hunt to find the survivors. We were able to track down four of the seven women who are still with us. I visited Americus (in Southern Georgia) and knew I had to tell this story. I connected with Lulu Westbrook Griffin and Carol Barner Seay on a deep, spiritual level, and they agreed to allow me to license their life rights.
Tell me about the actresses you cast and why you decided to cast them.
I spent an inordinate amount of time in casting. With the exception of Gussie Lee, the character who believes she will be an R&B star, I wanted the actresses to look like ordinary girls. I also wanted them to be every hue of Blackness, girls who don’t usually get the close-up. I didn’t want polished, perfect “influencer” types. The best way to have an audience feel as if they’re part of the story is by presenting characters who they feel they just might know. Of course, they also had to be talented. I wanted every actress to be exceptional and look like she could be in my family, to remind us that ordinary people accomplish extraordinary things. This cast does not disappoint. Each actress is incredibly talented and as soon as I saw the right actor, I knew. In some cases, an actress auditioned for one role and when she left the room, I’d turn to Leah Daniels-Butler, my casting director, and say, that actress is actually this other character.