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In the Room With
Kimberly Hardin
Auditions were a requirement to find the four young icons at the center of âOne Night in Miamiâ By Elyse Roth
RAQUEL APARICIO
ILLUSTRATION: SPENCER ALEXANDER; NESTER: CHASE ANDERSON
AFTER DIRECTING EPISODES OF âINSECURE,â âSCANDAL,â âTHIS Is Us,â and more, itâs little surprise that Regina King would channel her Oscar-winning acting chops into a feature film directorial debut. âOne Night in Miamiâ is a fictionalized account of the night in 1964 when Cassius Clay, before he became Muhammad Ali, celebrated a title win with Malcolm X, Jim Brown, and Sam Cooke. The production tapped casting director Kimberly Hardin, whom King met at the beginning of her career, to find actors to play these young icons. To assemble the cast, which includes Kingsley Ben-Adir, Aldis Hodge, Leslie Odom Jr., and Eli Goree, Hardin searched for months and held several rounds of auditions to ensure the chemistry was strong enough to sustain the storyâs premise. And it workedâthe film was selected for premieres at the Venice International Film Festival and the Toronto International Film Festival this month. Speaking with Backstage, Hardin shares the challenges of populating a biopic. What was the casting process for âOne Night in Miamiâ? Like with most biopics, itâs more challenging, because youâre looking for good actors but also someone to bring to life the real person theyâre
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portraying. Youâre trying to encompass a lot of elements within the character. It took a while. I literally looked all over the world. I really wanted to try to find the perfect combination of these gentlemen.
What were auditions like? Every actor auditioned and read several times individually and in a chemistry read. This story takes place mostly within one set, just those four gentlemen, so theyâre extremely important. Each gentleman had a very strong voice and placement in the world. It was helping each actor feel comfortable in that time period, what was happening at the moment, and helping them perfect the way each character talked. Jim spoke a whole other way; Cassius had a certain physicality because heâs a boxer. Itâs not just about good actors. Are you physically alike? Can you do the dialect? Do you have the same mannerisms? Itâs a list of things I had to go down to get the right contenders.
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What made casting this film different for you? Matching the real people. When youâre watching a biopic, youâre going to be expecting to see those real people come to life. Again, it started with the look, but I love the camaraderie, too. All of the characters worked and helped and supported each other, which is what they wanted to do in real life. I think, on every single level, they really tried to mimic the aspect of what was happening in that time period on that night. The chunk of the story is the four men and how they bounce off of each otherâs energy, staying in character and learning what each actor had to do to help support the other ones to stay in those moments. I know all those things were important to Regina with the cast that we put together. We needed the actors to be supportive of each other. What makes actors memorable in an audition? Most casting directors will say itâs about being prepared. Know your character, know your scene, [do] your homework, because it tells us that youâre taking this seriously. Youâre not wasting our time and yours. Only a really serious actor can come in and play. Theyâre going to be professional and will have at least reviewed the material enough [that] theyâll know where to pop, what lines work. Someone whoâs not as trained and just winging it, theyâre trying to figure it out in a room with you, and that definitely wonât work.
Want more?
Read the full interview at backstage.com/magazine
09.03.20 BACKSTAGE





