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Confirmation (film)

Confirmation is a 2016 American television political thriller film, directed by Rick Famuyiwa and written by Susannah Grant. It is about Clarence Thomas's Supreme Court nomination hearings, and the controversy that unfolded when Anita Hill alleged she was sexually harassed by Thomas. It stars Kerry Washington as Hill and Wendell Pierce as Clarence Thomas, with Erika Christensen, Jennifer Hudson, Greg Kinnear, Jeffrey Wright, Bill Irwin, and Eric Stonestreet in supporting roles. The film aired on HBO on April 16, 2016.[1]

This article is about the 2016 American TV film. For the 2016 Canadian film, see The Confirmation.

Confirmation

United States

English

Darren M. Demetre

Dirk Westervelt

110 minutes

HBO

April 16, 2016 (2016-04-16)

Plot[edit]

Anita Hill, a law professor at the University of Oklahoma, is contacted and questioned about Clarence Thomas. Hill, a former employee of Thomas, is prompted to speak about his workplace treatment. Anita Hill tells the Senate Judiciary Committee that, inter alia, Clarence Thomas had spoken to her about pornographic movies and actors such as Long Dong Silver. A psychologist tells a U.S. senator that Anita Hill has erotomania.


A hearing takes place at which Anita tells the Senate Judiciary Committee that, inter alia, Clarence Thomas sexually harassed her 10 years prior. From there, a slew of events unfolds as the Committee tries to determine who is telling the truth, with the world watching. The subpoena to Angela Wright, another accuser of Thomas, is withdrawn.

as Anita Hill

Kerry Washington

as Clarence Thomas

Wendell Pierce

as Joe Biden, U.S. Senator (D-DE)

Greg Kinnear

as Charles Ogletree

Jeffrey Wright

as Kenneth Duberstein, former White House Chief of Staff

Eric Stonestreet

Kristen Ariza as , White House Deputy Press Secretary.

Judy Smith

as John Danforth, U.S. Senator (R-MO)

Bill Irwin

as Carolyn Hart, aide to Senator Biden

Zoe Lister-Jones

as Ricki Seidman, aide to Senator Kennedy

Grace Gummer

as Orrin Hatch, U.S. Senator (R-UT)

Dylan Baker

as Ted Kennedy, U.S. Senator (D-MA)

Treat Williams

as Shirley Wiegand, friend of Anita Hill

Erika Christensen

as Ginni Thomas, Thomas' wife

Alison Wright

as Arlen Specter, U.S. Senator (R-PA)

Malcolm Gets

as Alan K. Simpson, U.S. Senator (R-WY)

Peter McRobbie

as Sonia Jarvis

Kimberly Elise

as Angela Wright

Jennifer Hudson

as Patrick Leahy, U.S. Senator (D-VT)

Tom Virtue

Jan Radcliff as , U.S. Representative (D-CO)

Pat Schroeder

Frank Hoyt Taylor as , U.S. Senator (R-SC)

Strom Thurmond

Matthew Hennessy as an aide to U.S. Senator Joseph I. Lieberman

[2]

Michael G Starr as , United States Senator from Alabama

Howell Thomas Heflin

Production[edit]

Casting[edit]

On March 12, 2015, it was announced that Kerry Washington would star as Anita Hill in an HBO television film.[3] Washington's role on ABC Network's hit television show Scandal was loosely based on Judy Smith, who appears as a character in the film. On April 28, Wendell Pierce was cast as Clarence Thomas.[4] On May 12, Eric Stonestreet joined as Kenneth Duberstein.[5] Greg Kinnear, Jennifer Hudson, and Jeffrey Wright were reported to have joined the cast as Joe Biden, Angela Wright, and Charles Ogletree, respectively, on May 29.[6] On June 5, Bill Irwin and Treat Williams were added, to respectively portray John Danforth and Ted Kennedy.[7] Later that same day, Erika Christensen, Cobie Smulders, Dylan Baker, and Grace Gummer were announced as cast as Shirley Wiegand, Biden aide Harriet Grant, Orrin Hatch, and Ricki Seidman, respectively.[8] On June 16, Kimberly Elise, Kristen Ariza, and Malcolm Gets joined the cast, as Sonia Jarvis, Judy Smith, and Arlen Specter, respectively.[9] On July 2, Daniel Sauli was cast as Mark Paoletta.[10] On July 9, it was reported that Smulders had exited the film due to breaking her leg; Zoe Lister-Jones replaced her in the Harriet Grant role (a composite of aides to Biden).[11][12]

Filming[edit]

Principal photography began in Atlanta, Georgia on June 14, 2015, and was completed on July 24.[13]


Actual news footage taped by CNN of United States Senate staff during the lead-up to the hearings was used, to give the film a more realistic tone.

Credits[edit]

During the film credits, the onscreen text states that as a result of Hill's accusation of sexual harassment, more women were elected to public office in 1992 than previous periods, official sexual harassment complaints doubled, and an important workplace discrimination law was passed (referring to the Civil Rights Act of 1991).[25]

Strange Justice

at IMDb

Confirmation