There's a scene in the new documentary about tennis stars Venus and
Serena Williams where Serena is on a treadmill after a U.S. Open match
ripping into her hitting partner. She's dressing him down for failing to
give his best on the practice court and keep her on par with opponents.
And
this is after a victory. It's a rare glimpse into the ultra-competitive
mindset of the world's current No. 1-ranked women's player and how she
continues to stay atop that perch. It also shows the kind of access
co-directors Michelle Major and Maiken Baird were permitted for their
film Venus and Serena: Icons, Rivals, Champions, Sisters, which opens
Wednesday in select theatres across Canada.
After three years of
attempting to convince the Williams sisters to agree to the project,
Major and Baird were finally given the green light by Venus to follow
them through the 2011 tennis season.
It turns out to be an
emotionally eventful year as Serena battles back from blood clot surgery
and plays in a U.S. Open final that will be remembered more for her
outburst at a chair umpire - similar to her 2009 U.S. Open meltdown at a
line judge - than Samantha Stosur's eventual victory. It proves to be
tough year for Venus also, as the older sister deals with the onset of
an autoimmune disease that has slowed her career ever since.
Major
says it wasn't strictly tennis accomplishments that drew her to the
Williamses, but a desire to tell the story of how they got to the game's
elite tier. "Both of us thought
it was a great American story and a great human story. We really didn't think of it as a tennis story, per se," she said.
"It
just happened to be this story of two great women and how they overcome
and become something great, despite all odds. The elements of the story
and the mythology surrounding how they got to that point was what
really interested us."
The film digs up archival footage of the
young sisters hitting balls with their father, Richard Williams, on the
very non-luxury public courts in downtown Los Angeles.
He later moved them to a tennis academy in West Palm Beach, kapton tape, where they live to this day, to work briefly with a coach named Rick Macci.
Macci
adds fuel to the common assumption that Richard Williams is a dictator
and control freak who oversees all aspects of Venus and Serena's lives.
Major
says this may have been the case in the past and he is certainly still
involved in their training. But Venus, 33, and Serena, 31, didn't need
his permission to get involved with the doc.
"Their father is a
daily part of their lives, but they made the decision to do the film,"
she said. Richard Williams is often credited for having played a major
role in developing his daughters' game, through tireless practise and
unconventional training methods, the film shines an intriguing light on
how much their mother, Oracene Price, factored in their success.
Price
is shown on the practice court at tournaments like Wimbledon, giving
her daughters calm suggestions and advice to counter-balance their
father's ornery bluster.
"(Oracene) was the one who instilled the
mental toughness in them and courage," Major said. "And she is
extremely protective as well, keeping them from a lot of things, and
also (instilling) a pride in who they were as black young women."
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