Source: twitter / Twitter

Jessie Maple, Cinematographer, director and pioneer in the film industry, has died at the age of 76. 

Her death was confirmed by her family in a statement shared by the Black Film Center & Archive.

Jessie Maple was recognized as the first Black woman to write and produce a full-length film independently. 

She was also the first Black woman to be admitted into the International Photographers of Motion Picture & Television Union. 

Please read the media announcement that the family of Jessie Maple asked that we share. We extend our deepest condolences to the entire family. We’re committed and dedicated to honoring her legacy.
~ Black Film Center & Archive pic.twitter.com/TXLrnbRzdI

— BFC & A (@BlackFilmCenter) May 31, 2023

Maple had an extraordinary life. In the ’70s, she worked in a bacteriology and serology laboratory before taking on the entertainment industry. She eventually left science behind and headed to New York to write for the New York Courier. After attending Ossie Davis’ Third World Cinema through the National Education Television Training School, Maple was hired as an apprentice editor and worked on projects such as “Shaft’s Big Score!” and “The Super Cops.”

Maple was determined to become a camerawoman. After a long legal fight, she joined the Film Editor’s Union and the Cinematographer’s Union and worked as a news camerawoman for several years.

In 1981, Maple directed the basketball drama “Will,” which was the first independent film directed by a Black woman n the post-civil-rights era. Maple and her husband  Leroy Patton would go on to found LJ Productions, which screened films in Harlem, NY by independent and Black filmmakers.

The Black Film Center & Archive shared the family statement via Twitter with a caption reading, “We extend our deepest condolences to the entire family. We’re committed and dedicated to honoring her legacy.”

In the family statement, Maple is praised for her pursuit of social change within the entertainment spaces.

“Her films, books, and unapologetic post to highlight discrimination and injustices within the news and entertainment industries will remain with us, the family said in the statement.  “The world through Jessie’s lens offers views of humanity that are often overlooked due to race and post dynamics.”

Jessie Maple is survived by her husband Leroy Patten, their three daughters, her grandson, five sisters,  and a host of nieces and nephews.

RIP Jessie Maple, a pioneering filmmaker, writer, producer, editor and cinematographer. She was one of the first Black women to direct a narrative feature length film and is the first Black woman to join the International Photographers of Motion Picture & Television union. pic.twitter.com/K7IEW3CQ1R

— Sankofa TravelHer (@SankofaTravelHr) June 1, 2023

Let’s keep the Maple family in our prayers as they mourn the loss of a loved one, a true pioneer and trailblazer. She was a true inspiration to women all over the world. Rest well legend.

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