
Disney version of ‘Washington Black' roots tale in Nova Scotia, expands world of side characters
There are significant changes to the hero and his relationships, wholly invented scenes and entirely new characters inserted by showrunners and executive producers Selwyn Seyfu Hinds and Kimberly Ann Harrison.
Edugyan says she accepted early on that transforming her Giller Prize-winning saga into an eight-part streaming show would mean surrendering her hold on the story, noting she 'very much took a back seat' in the process.
'It's probably never a favourable thing to have the writer of the book kind of lurking in the background, looking over your shoulder, saying, 'Why have you done this and not that?'' Edugyan says in a recent video call from her home office in Victoria.
'I just kind of understood that this was somebody else's art.'
Like the eponymous book, the series recounts the fantastical life of a boy born into slavery on a Barbados sugar plantation in the 19th century, with Eddie Karanja as the young hero and Ernest Kingsley Jr. as an older Washington Black.
At age 11, Wash is taken under the wing of his master's younger abolitionist brother Titch, played by Tom Ellis, who uses the boy as ballast for an experimental flying machine but soon recognizes his aptitude for art and science. Amid this burgeoning friendship, Wash is disfigured in a trial run and then implicated in a crime, forcing him and Titch to flee the plantation.
Edugyan's tale is a first-person account by an 18-year-old Wash who looks back on a lifelong search for freedom and meaning that sends him to extreme corners of the world.
The Disney version is narrated by Sterling K. Brown's Medwin, a mere side character in the book who runs Wash's boarding house in Halifax.
Onscreen, Medwin is a mentor to Wash and gets his own backstory and love interest, all part of what Hinds explains as 'the journey of adaptation.'
As such, Halifax features more prominently in the Disney story, which filmed in and around the Atlantic capital, as well as in Mexico and Iceland to capture scenes set in Virginia, the Arctic, London and Morocco.
Hinds says Nova Scotia was home for about six months, with shooting locations including Peggy's Cove, Lunenburg, Uniacke Estate Museum Park in Mount Uniacke and the Fortress of Louisbourg National Historic Site in Cape Breton.
He says Halifax in particular 'really adopted us as a crew' as they learned the local history of Black settlements in Canada.
'There was a young man who used to cut my hair in Halifax and one day we were talking — he told me his family had been there, I think, 400 years. Which for an American immigrant like myself, who's first-generation American, this was just completely mind-blowing,' he says in joint a video call from Los Angeles with Harrison.
'A big part of what we're doing is trying to bake ourselves in the nooks and crannies and the history of the place. And I did as best as I could to let that infuse the actual storytelling itself.'
Among the biggest changes is the removal of Wash's facial scars, notes Edugyan, who became the first Black woman to win the Giller in 2011 for 'Half-Blood Blues' and only the third author to win twice when 'Washington Black' claimed the title in 2018.
In the Disney version, the scar is on Wash's chest, where it's hidden from view.
'That is quite a departure from the novel,' says Edugyan.
'That was a very deliberate choice on my part to have that be part of how Washington confronts the world — that he's not only an enslaved person but that he also carries with him this disfigurement, which gives him this sort of double estrangement.'
Edugyan describes the series as 'a kind of translation or interpretation of the novel' to satisfy a visual medium and the demands of episodic storytelling. Her jazz-infused 'Half-Blood Blues' was also optioned for the screen, by Toronto's Clement Virgo, which Edugyan says is still in the works.
Hinds says he regards the screen version of 'Washington Black' as 'the same house' but bigger, with an expanded world that adds a romantic rival for Wash and a deeper backstory for the white-passing love interest Tanna, born to a Black mother in the Solomon Islands.
'Because the TV medium just gives you room to explore things that Esi kind of laid out that were really great opportunities — really delving into Tanna's background or really seeing what the Solomon Islands meant (to Tanna),' he says.
'With any adaptation, or at least the ones that I've written, the first thing is to find the emotional DNA of the story, right? And once I realized that the story that Esi was telling about finding hope and finding agency and finding freedom, once you sort of lock into the emotional core of what the characters' journey is, everything else makes sense. Both in terms of what you keep in and what you leave out.'
Edugyan says she's slowly making her way through the series, deeming it 'really lush and gorgeous. And the acting is quite wonderful.'
'It's quite different from the novel,' Edugyan adds.
'Anybody who's familiar with the source work will be surprised. But I think it's its own piece of art and I'm looking forward to having people watch it and to hearing reactions.'
'Washington Black' premieres all eight episodes Wednesday on Disney Plus.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 22, 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
12 minutes ago
- USA Today
Francis Ford Coppola hospitalized in Italy for heart procedure
Francis Ford Coppola is "resting nicely" after being hospitalized in Italy. The 86-year-old Oscar-winning filmmaker met with a cardiologist who specializes in electrophysiology, which primarily treats arrhythmias of the heart, "for a scheduled update procedure" with his doctor of more than 30 years, a source close to Coppola told USA TODAY on Aug. 5. USA TODAY has reached out to Coppola's representatives for comment. In July, the "Megalopolis" director spoke during the Magna Græcia Film Festival in Soverato, southern Italy, according to social media posts by the festival. This story is developing.


San Francisco Chronicle
42 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
MC Hammer sued after allegedly falling behind on car payments
MC Hammer is once again facing financial trouble after allegedly failing to pay off a Land Rover he bought in 2023. JPMorgan Chase Bank is suing the Oakland-born rapper, claiming he still owes $76,732.79 on a $114,376.90 loan he took out to purchase the vehicle. According to the complaint, filed on July 31 in San Joaquin County Superior Court, Hammer agreed to 60 monthly payments of $2,433.97 beginning in May 2023. But the 'Too Legit to Quit' hitmaker, whose real name is Stanley Kirk Burrell, stopped making regular installments in May 2024. He reportedly last paid the bill on July 14. Though the bank said it has 'demanded possession' of the vehicle, the complaint claims the 'defendants have not surrendered' the car. MC Hammer, as he is legally referred to in the court documents, and U Can't Touch This LLC are listed as defendants. Hammer, who rose to fame in the late 1980s for his catchy hip-hop anthems and signature parachute pants, currently lives in Tracy. A Google Street View image of his property shows six vehicles in the driveway, including a light green Land Rover Defender. This isn't the first time that the 'U Can't Touch This' musician has experienced serious financial troubles. Hammer filed for bankruptcy in 1996, less than a decade after reaching the peak of his career, because his luxurious lifestyle sank him into roughly $13 million of debt. He was eventually forced to sell his Fremont mansion to relocate to a three-bedroom home in Tracy. The Grammy-winning artist has since made strides to reconstruct his public image and has become active in Christian ministry. He returned to his musical roots with a tour in 2019, his first major North American outing since 1991.

an hour ago
A former Rolling Stone says the Met has his stolen guitar. The museum disputes it
LONDON -- It's only rock 'n' roll, but it's messy. A guitar once played by two members of the Rolling Stones is at the center of a dispute between the band's former guitarist Mick Taylor and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The 1959 Gibson Les Paul was donated to the Met as part of what the New York museum calls 'a landmark gift of more than 500 of the finest guitars from the golden age of American guitar making.' The donor is Dirk Ziff, a billionaire investor and guitar collector. When the Met announced the gift in May, Taylor thought he recognized the guitar, with its distinctive 'starburst' finish, as an instrument he last saw in 1971, when the Stones were recording the album 'Exile on Main St.' at Keith Richards' rented villa in the south of France. In the haze of drugs and rock 'n' roll that pervaded the sessions, a number of instruments went missing, believed stolen. Now, Taylor and his team believe it has reappeared. The Met says provenance records show no evidence the guitar ever belonged to Taylor. 'This guitar has a long and well-documented history of ownership,' museum spokesperson Ann Bailis said. Taylor's partner and business manager, Marlies Damming, said the Met should make the guitar 'available for inspection.' 'An independent guitar expert should be able to ascertain the guitar's provenance one way or the other,' she said in a statement Tuesday to The Associated Press. While its ownership is contested, there's no disputing the instrument's starring role in rock history. It was owned in the early 1960s by Keith Richards, who played it during the Rolling Stones' first appearance on 'The Ed Sullivan Show' in 1964. The Met says that performance 'ignited interest in this legendary model.' The guitar – nicknamed the 'Keithburst' – was also played by guitar legends Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page. Taylor says he got it from Richards in 1967, two years before he joined the Stones, replacing original member Brian Jones. Jones died in 1969. Taylor left the band in 1974, reuniting with them for the Stones' 50th anniversary tour in 2012-2013. Jeff Allen, who was Taylor's manager and publicist for decades from the 1990s, said Taylor 'told me he got it as a present from Keith,' and also mentioned the theft. 'Mick did tell me that the guitar solo that he became quite famous for, on 'Can't You Hear Me Knocking,' was with the Les Paul that got stolen,' Allen said. The Met's records say the Les Paul was owned by Richards until 1971, when it was acquired by record producer and manager Adrian Miller, who died in 2006. The guitar has changed hands several times since then, and reappeared twice in public. It was put up for auction by Christie's in 2004, when it failed to sell. Ziff bought it in 2016, and loaned it to the Met in 2019 for an exhibition titled 'Play it Loud: Instruments of Rock & Roll.' It's unclear what will happen next. The Met, which plans to open a new gallery dedicated to its collection of American guitars, says it has not been contacted by Taylor or his representatives.