Oprah Winfrey’s ‘Black Cake’ is ‘so much pressure,’ showrunner says

Oprah Winfrey’s ‘Black Cake’ is ‘so much pressure,’ showrunner says



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Marissa Jo Cerar, the showrunner of Hulu’s Oprah Winfrey-produced series “Black Cake,” said that she felt “so much pressure” to make her collaborator happy. 

“She’s Oprah. She’s an idol of mine,” Cerar told The Post. 

“I used to write her letters when I was a little kid — something I’ve actually never told her. I wanted to make sure that she was happy and proud. This book [the show is based on] was on Barack Obama’s ‘Best books of Summer 2022’ list. There’s so much pressure, but there’s also so much love put into [the show].”

Based on a bestselling novel by Charmaine Wilkerson, “Black Cake” is a multi-generational saga that tells the sprawling tale of a family filled with secrets. 

The story begins 1960s, in the West Indies. Covey (Mia Isaac), a 17-year-runaway bride who is half-Jamaican and half-Chinese, sprints on a beach at night. 

Showrunner Marissa Jo Cerar.
FilmMagic
Showrunner Marissa Jo Cerar (left) with the book’s author, Charmaine Wilkerson (right).
HULU

In the present day, a gray-haired woman, Eleanor Bennett (Chipo Chung), sits contemplating her life on a beach in California. 

After Eleanor dies, her estranged adult children — ocean scientist Byron (Ashley Thomas) and artist Benny (Adrienne Warren) — go to attorney Charles Mitch (Glynn Turman) to go over their mother’s estate. 

To their surprise, it’s not a regular will reading. The lawyer gives them recordings of Eleanor telling her true life story, as she reveals that what her adult children thought they knew about their family’s origins was all wrong. 

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 Covey (Mia Isaac) as an unwilling bride in the ’60s.
HULU
 Eleanor (Chipo Chung) as an older woman in the present day, before her death.
HULU

“Black Cake” shifts between past and present, jumping around various locations and timelines — from Jamaica to the UK to California — as it traces Eleanor’s life as Covey and her adult kids lives after her death and reactions to her recorded revelations.

In the past, a teen Covey had a nice boyfriend, Gibbs (Ahmed Elhaj), but her alcoholic dad Lin (Simon Wan) set up her marriage to the local gangster, Little Man (Anthony Mark Barrow). At their wedding, Little Man is poisoned, so Covey fakes her death and flees. 

Siblings Benny (Adrienne Warren) and Byron (Ashley Thomas) struggle to process learning about their mom’s secrets.
HULU

“I loved the novel,” said Cerar, who has also worked on “The Handmaid’s Tale” and “13 Reasons Why.” 

“The power of female friendships moved me so much across generations. To see a cast of main characters who were diverse – half-black, half-Chinese, queer, a Chinese immigrant in Jamaica, a black ocean scientist in Orange County — to see this group of characters as the leads of the story about their family history was so exciting to me.

“And it’s a fun murder mystery, so that we could have something as juicy and premium as ‘Little Fires Everywhere,’ or ‘Big Little Lies.’”

Mia Isaac as Covey in the past timeline, as she starts a new life after fleeing her unwanted wedding.
HULU
Byron (Ashley Thomas) and his mom Eleanor (Chipo Chung), as an older woman in the present, shortly before her death.
HULU

The show’s title comes from a Caribbean dish that also draws influences from British cuisine, marrying different cultures, just like their family is a melting pot as the show explains. 

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“I have never baked it, but I have eaten it,” said Cerar. “I had some great black cake in Wales, and I had it in Jamaica. Before reading this book, I had never heard of it. It’s an acquired taste.

“Some people really don’t like it, but when it’s good, it’s really good.”



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