Nia DaCosta
- Born:
- November 8, 1989, Brooklyn, New York, U.S. (age 35)
- Notable Works:
- “Candyman”
- “Little Woods”
Nia DaCosta (born November 8, 1989, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.) is a filmmaker who, at age 34, became the youngest director and the first African American woman to helm a Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) film, with the 2023 superhero sequel The Marvels. Her critically acclaimed feature film debut, the crime drama Little Woods (2018), won the Nora Ephron Award at the Tribeca Film Festival. In 2021 she collaborated with filmmaker Jordan Peele for a commercially and critically successful reboot of the slasher film Candyman.
Early life, education, and Little Woods
DaCosta grew up in New York City’s Harlem neighborhood and was raised by Charmaine DaCosta, a single mother, who had emigrated from Jamaica and was a singer with the American reggae group Worl-A-Girl. In a 2023 interview with Vanity Fair, DaCosta described how her mother exposed her to the performing arts and music from a young age: “That was really my upbringing—just full acceptance, full of art, and a mother who really was like, ‘The world is your oyster. Go explore it.’ ” A storyteller since childhood, DaCosta initially considered becoming an actress, but her mother encouraged her to pursue directing instead. As she immersed herself in the world of cinema, she found herself drawn to the films of the 1970s, recalling in a 2019 interview with Indie Wire:
I was so inspired by what I saw and by filmmakers like Scorsese, Lumet, Spielberg, and Coppola. They made me think I could do anything I wanted with film. So I would say that ’70s filmmaking in general was really impactful for me because I thought, these men were crazy, in a good way of course, because of the kind of films they were able to make. And so that’s kind of where it started for me.
DaCosta studied film and television at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, graduating in 2011. She went on to earn a master’s degree in writing for stage and broadcast media at London’s Royal Central School of Speech and Drama. DaCosta began her career as a production assistant and had the opportunity to work alongside filmmakers such as Martin Scorsese, Steve McQueen, and Steven Soderbergh. During that time she also worked on the screenplay for Little Woods, which would become her first feature film. A deep and thoughtful family drama about estranged sisters who turn to illicit means to pay their expenses after the death of their mother, Little Woods was chosen as one of 12 projects for the 2015 Sundance Screenwriters and Directors Labs. The low-budget indie film, starring Tessa Thompson and Lily James, was released in 2018 to widespread acclaim. DaCosta discussed with National Public Radio during a 2019 interview an important insight that she had gained while working on the film:
Something that you learn in film school is write what you know. I used to take that really literally.…But then I realized the better way of looking at that is write what you know emotionally. And emotionally, you connect with people who are completely unlike you and live in different places. And if you connect on that level with the story you’re telling, with the people whose stories you’re trying to tell, then you have a better shot at not condescending or lying, basically.
Candyman, The Marvels, and upcoming projects
For her second film, DaCosta teamed up with horror and comedy powerhouse Jordan Peele for a reboot of the 1992 supernatural horror film Candyman. DaCosta cowrote and directed the film, while Peele cowrote and coproduced, and it starred Yahya Abdul-Mateen II and Teyonah Parris. Like the original, Candyman centers on an urban legend about a ghoulish slasher in the Cabrini-Green community in Chicago. DaCosta and Peele used the remake to explore the “unfortunate, repetitive cycle in American history where Black men are brutalized and then become some archetype—the martyr, the saint, the sinner,” as she told Harper’s Bazaar in 2023. Candyman was well received by both audiences and critics, and DaCosta became the first African American woman to direct a film that opened at number one at the box office, where it grossed more than $22 million in its opening week.
In 2020 DaCosta, who is a fan of comic book culture, was contracted to direct Marvel Studios’ The Marvels, becoming the youngest ever person to direct an MCU film and the first African American woman to do so. To prepare for directing the film, DaCosta reread some of her favorite books from childhood, including the Sailor Moon manga series by Naoko Takeuchi and the Circle of Magic fantasy novel series by Tamora Pierce. The Marvels, which is the sequel to the blockbuster Captain Marvel (2019), centers on a trio of superhero women—Captain Marvel (Brie Larson), Monica Rambeau (Parris), and Ms. Marvel (Iman Vellani), the MCU’s first Muslim superhero headliner—as they navigate a strange intertwining of their superhuman powers and attempt to save the universe from the malevolent warrior Dar-Benn (Zawe Ashton). However, The Marvels was a commercial disappointment, grossing $206 million worldwide against a production budget of $274.8 million, making it the lowest-grossing MCU film to date.
After directing The Marvels, DaCosta set her sights on directing and writing an adaptation of the classic Henrik Ibsen play Hedda Gabler, set to star Tessa Thompson in the title role, and an adaptation of Ta-Nehisi Coates’s 2019 novel The Water Dancer.