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Keenen Ivory Wayans In Search Of A 30-Ish Actress

Keenen Ivory Wayans In Search Of A 30-Ish Actress For New Film

 

CBS Films and Sony Pic­tures are team­ing to acquire “It Takes A Vil­lage,” a com­edy pitch that Kee­nen Ivory Wayans will write and direct about a 30-something white sin­gle career-obsessed woman who decides on a whim to adopt a child from a South Pacific island. But she comes home with the tribe’s chief and seven elders until she proves she’s mommy material.

Todd Gar­ner will pro­duce with Wayans and Rick Alvarez. It took two stu­dios to make the deal for “It Takes A Vil­lage.” The pact that UTA bro­kered for Wayans is mid 6-figures upfront, but con­tains aggres­sive progress to pro­duc­tion stip­u­la­tions: after Wayans turns in the script, the stu­dios either make it or the reps take it else­where. Wayans, who last directed the 2006 com­edy “Lit­tle Man,” hopes to make this his next film. CBS Films chief Amy Baer, who spent most of her career at Colum­bia, put the pact together with Sony’s Colum­bia co-president of pro­duc­tion Doug Bel­grad, who worked closely with Wayans on “White Chicks.”

The fam­ily theme makes the film a depar­ture for Wayans. From his rau­cous sketch show cre­ation “In Liv­ing Color” to his sub­se­quent fea­ture come­dies, family-friendly meant lin­ing the cast with his sib­lings. Here, Wayans sparked to an idea by Gar­ner (“The Zookeeper”), who recently became a father and was struck by the litany of manda­tory child-rearing accessories–from car seats to baby-wipe-warmers–and fan­ta­sized about a stripped-down ver­sion of par­ent­ing. That led to what Wayans saw as a timely pitch, given the pro­lif­er­a­tion of sin­gle women who’ve recently adopted babies from third-world countries.

A woman who works for a com­pany that mines nat­ural resources like dia­monds and cop­per heads to a South Pacific island to meet with the tribe in con­trol and when she gets there, she comes across a child with no par­ents, who won’t leave her side,” Wayans told me. “When she asks who will be the baby’s mother, she’s told the vil­lage will take care of the baby until it chooses one. When the baby climbs into her lap and puts its head on her chest, she has an epiphany moment and decides she wants to be its mother.”

Adop­tion requires the bless­ing of the chief who, with seven elders, takes up res­i­dence in the woman’s snooty gated com­mu­nity — where they become most pop­u­lar guests among their insu­lar neigh­bors. Wayans said the con­cept caught him at the right time, and not just because the project he planned to make — “White Chicks 2″ — fell apart at Columbia.

I’ve got five kids, been mar­ried, divorced, trav­eled, and if I’d tried this 10 years ago, I wouldn’t have the same per­spec­tive,” said Wayans, who has become a more devoted father than when he was chas­ing career suc­cess. “I’ve got a bet­ter view of what’s impor­tant, how you can get caught up in career and lost sight of what’s impor­tant. The dance of this movie is, you think these peo­ple are sim­ple, but there’s wis­dom in their sim­plic­ity and the way they decon­struct things to their sim­plest form. The child they’ve come to raise isn’t the baby, but rather the woman, as she pre­pares for the jour­ney of being a parent.”

Source: http://www.deadline.com

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