For the very first time in its 93-year history, the Academy Awards nominated a director with a visible disability. If that statement conjures both satisfaction and indignation, you’re not alone.
Disability isn’t the obstacle; it’s the deeply ingrained ableism of the industry that holds them back.
“Crip Camp,” a feature documentary about a summer camp for teenagers with disabilities who went on to redefine disability rights in the 1970s, was written and directed by Nicole Newnham and James LeBrecht. If the film wins the award for best documentary, LeBrecht would become the first person who uses a wheelchair to ever win an Oscar.
While LeBrecht sees his film’s nomination as a watershed moment for the disability rights movement, he’s also deeply aware of how many barriers the industry inadvertently poses for creators with disabilities.
“It’s just been deeply frustrating but more, like, sobering,” his co-director, Newnham, told MSNBC. “It makes me aware of how much further we have left to go.”
As LeBrecht pointed out, “We are 25 percent of the population, but representation on the screen is hovering around 1 percent.” For disabled creatives like him, disability isn’t the obstacle; it’s the deeply ingrained ableism of the industry that holds them back.
Disability has always been at the root of innovation. From the touchscreen technology on your iPad to the facial recognition software on your phone, disruptive technologies were first developed for people with disabilities before being enjoyed by everybody. Even the football huddle was invented by a deaf football player.
And every time a person with a disability has overcome all the challenges able-bodied culture has placed in front of them, they’ve made that industry better.
Disruptive technologies were first developed for people with disabilities before being enjoyed by everybody.
Take the fact that the Oscars set has always included stairs, for example. This not only poses a barrier for any presenter or nominee who uses crutches or a wheelchair; it’s also a well-documented hazard for women wearing towering high heels and floor-grazing gowns, as evidenced by Jennifer Lawrence’s iconic fall on her way up to the stage in 2013.
It’s not just the Oscars. Most award shows follow the same ableist standard. In 2019 when Ali Stroker won the Tony Award for best featured actress in a musical for her role in the “Oklahoma!” revival, she had to wait backstage because there was no ramp for her to access the stage in her wheelchair. When the show won the award for the best revival of a musical, she was prevented from joining the cast and crew onstage to accept her award because of this oversight.
The archetypal Oscars staircase is a symbol of ableism that needs to go.
“The stairs have been a tacit message to people with limited mobility that you don’t belong here,” LeBrecht said. “It’s painful.”
While he’s been told the stage will be accessible this year, he wants whatever changes were made to accommodate him to stick.
“I’m cautiously optimistic that this won’t be the only year that the stage sends a message of inclusion,” he said.
As he explained, it’s not just about making sure nominated artists can get their awards with pride and dignity; it’s also about sending a message to every person with a disability watching at home.
It’s also not just about a physical ramp for the audience to the Oscars stage; it’s about the symbolic one from aspiring disabled creators to the film industry.
While many diversity and inclusion programs or mentorship initiatives have been created as a result of racial and gender equality activism, disability hasn’t received the same kind of enthusiasm and resources as other diversity efforts. That’s why LeBrecht created FWD-Doc, a group for documentary filmmakers with disabilities that offers networking, resources and toolkits for filmmakers committed to accessibility.
Disability hasn’t received the same kind of enthusiasm and resources as other diversity efforts.
There’s also Eryn Brown, a talent manager at Management 360, who founded the 1in4 campaign, an intersectional advocacy organization led by disabled creatives currently working in Hollywood to increase employment and authentic representation of disabled people. Brown told MSNBC that it’s the first organization of its kind dedicated to long-term institutional shifts to increase employment and authentic representation of disabled people behind and in front of the camera.
“Twenty-five percent of the U.S. adult population has a visible or invisible disability,” Brown said. “And yet we are vastly under-represented on Hollywood’s screens and stages, as well as in offices, crews and sets.”
David Radcliff, the chair of the Disabled Writers Committee at the Writers Guild of America West, said the expectation for aspiring writers and producers to work their way to the top by first becoming an intern or production assistant is a classic example of the way ableism is baked into the culture.
As a young writer, Radcliff, who has cerebral palsy, would interview for these roles and get one rejection after the other, hearing the same response over and over again: that he “wasn’t the right fit” and that they had “to go with another candidate.” In an emerging writers program organized by Disney, he was expected to stand for hours in a ballroom to meet executives. Since he uses crutches, he couldn’t participate the way that his nondisabled peers could.








