Spike Lee, orig. Shelton Jackson Lee, (born March 20, 1957, Atlanta, Ga., U.S.), U.S. film director and writer. He grew up in Brooklyn, N.Y., and earned a master’s degree in film at New York University. The comedy She’s Gotta Have It (1986) brought him attention, but it was Do the Right Thing (1989), a portrait of racial tensions in Brooklyn, that brought him widespread acclaim. Many of his films, which he often wrote or cowrote, focused on aspects of African American life, including School Daze (1988), Jungle Fever (1991), Crooklyn (1994), and He Got Game (1998). The epic Malcolm X (1992) and the documentaries 4 Little Girls (1997) and The Original Kings of Comedy (2000) showed Lee’s versatility as a director, as did the documentary miniseries When the Levees Broke (2006). Lee’s notable later films included Inside Man (2006), Chi-Raq (2015), BlacKkKlansman (2018, Academy Award for best adapted screenplay), and Da 5 Bloods (2020).
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