Radha Blank of ‘The Forty-Year-Old Version’ isn’t late
If Radha Blank had a tagline for her film, “The Forty-Year-Old Version,” it would be: “You don’t age out of your passion.”
Blank wrote, directed and stars in her debut film, a heavily autobiographical tale, shot in black-and-white and on 35mm, about a middle-aged playwright in Harlem struggling to fulfil her career’s earlier promise. Faced with unappealing options, like a Harriet Tubman musical put on by white producers, she turns to an old passion, hip-hop, and begins performing as RadhaMUSprime.
The film — laceratingly funny, relentlessly frank, wholly original — made its lauded premiere at the Sundance Film Festival where Blank won a directing prize and Netflix acquired it. It begins streaming Friday.
Blank, who has written for the Spike Lee series “She’s Gotta Have It” (on which she was also a producer) and “Empire,” first began the project as a web series that would have culminated in a mix tape. The death of her mother derailed the series, and Blank realized “The 40-Year-Old Version” needed a bigger canvas. Lena Waithe (“Master of None,” “Queen & Slim”) came aboard as a producer.