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The Queen of Basketball Might’ve Found the Perfect Executive Producer in Shaquille O’Neal

The four-time NBA champ is lending his muscle to an Oscar contender.

Back in June, I told yโ€™all about the then-upcoming sports documentary The Queen of Basketball, which chronicles the life and times of one of basketballโ€™s unheralded heroines, Lusia โ€œLucyโ€ Harris. And if you have no godly idea who she is, you arenโ€™t aloneโ€”which is kind of the point of the film. But since Iโ€™m a kind and benevolent soul, I previously explained who she is as such:

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If you have no idea who Lusia โ€œLucyโ€ Harris is, youโ€™re not alone.

Thankfully, since we live in a day and age in which Google is free, a quick search will reveal that the 66-year-old was a basketball prodigy in a past life. She won three consecutive national championships while attending Delta State University, took home a gold medal after the โ€˜75 Pan Am Games, held it down for the U.S. National Team in the โ€˜76 Olympics, and also holds the unique distinction of being the first and only woman to be drafted by an NBA teamโ€”courtesy of the Utah Jazz.

In short, homegirl was the truth; as evidenced by her induction into both the Womenโ€™s Basketball Hall of Fame in 1999 and becoming one of the first women inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 1992.

That sounds like a perfect candidate for a dope-ass sports documentary to me.

Thankfully, itโ€™s here now (!!!!) and aside from winning the 2021 Criticโ€™s Choice Award for Best Short Documentary and other accolades, the Ben Proudfoot-directed film now has a brand spanking new executive producer who you might know: Four-time NBA champion Shaquille Oโ€™Neal.

โ€œLusia โ€˜Lucyโ€™ Harrisโ€™ heroism has gone unsung for way too long and I am particularly proud of my involvement in bringing her story to bear,โ€ Shaq said in a statement provided to The Root. โ€œA living legend and a pioneer in both menโ€™s and womenโ€™s basketball, her life is a significant example of fortitude that is sure to inspire.โ€

In a separate statement, Harris expressed her own excitement about the NBA legendโ€™s involvement in her project.

โ€œI am excited that Shaquille Oโ€™Neal decided to join as an executive producer for The Queen of Basketball,โ€ she said. โ€œShaq is one of my favorite basketball players and I have enjoyed following his career after the game. I truly appreciate having his support for this project.โ€

The last time I tapped yโ€™all on the shoulder and put yโ€™all up on a short film it won an Oscar. (No, really.) So hopefully, with a little help from Shaq, The Queen of Basketball will be able to do the same this upcoming awards season.

โ€œHelping unearth and celebrate Lucyโ€™s storied career over the past year-and-a-half has been a great joy of my career,โ€ Proudfoot said in a statement provided to The Root. โ€œShaq and his team reacted to the film with such generosity and support, we were blown away and just thrilled for Lucy. In a way, Shaq is stepping up to assist Lucy in having the career moment she never got. Itโ€™s a special moment of solidarity between two remarkable players.โ€

Seriously, go watch The Queen of Basketball and thank me later.

Straight From The Root

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