Melaw Nakehk'o
Melaw Nakehk'o is an actress, artist, traditional moose hide tanner, and co-founder of the First Nations organization Dene Nahjo. She is primarily known for her role as the kidnapped Arikara woman Powaqa in the 2015 film The Revenant.
Early life
[edit]Nakehko is Dehcho and Denesuline Dene, and was born in Fort Simpson in the Northwest Territories, Canada.[1]
Acting career
[edit]The Revenant was Nakehk'o's first film role.
She was at the grocery store with her two young sons one Saturday morning when there was an open casting call in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories. "People kept texting me and telling me I should go do this thing," she said. When the grocery store clerk also told her to try out for the role, she went to the casting call, arriving an hour before it was over. For her audition, Melaw had to improvise a scene with other actors about trading furs for a horse. "I didn’t have to read anything; it was all just presence and just being badass," she said.[2]
In a radio interview, Nakehk'o said she was impressed with film director Alejandro G. Iñárritu's ability to bring out her acting ability in the role of Powaqa, an Arikara woman who is kidnapped by French fur trappers, as well as with his accurate portrayal of indigenous people.[3] She has also said that the brutality with which her character is treated in the movie reflects violence against indigenous women that is still going on today.[4]
For the red carpet premiere of the movie in Hollywood, she received media attention when she wore a dress that was a collaboration between Metis artist Christi Belcourt and Rome-based house of Valentino.[5][6] "It was really important to be able to represent Indigenous designers at such a high level of fashion, because today there’s a lot of cultural appropriation with a lot of the huge fashion houses and people just being disrespectful wearing headdresses and Native American-inspired stuff," Nakehk'o stated.[7]
Cultural activities
[edit]Nakehk'o is a visual artist who paints, sews and beads, as well as a traditional moose hide tanner based out of Yellowknife, Northwest Territories. She has taught moosehide tanning at the Dechinta Bush University Center for Research and Learning. In 2012, she received a Minister's Cultural Award for "sharing the knowledge of her elders and for bringing a renewed interest to the art of moose hide tanning."[8][9]
She is a co-founder of Dene Nahjo, an organization that promotes leadership and social and environmental justice for indigenous people of the northern territories.[10][11]
References
[edit]- ^ Trail's End, CBC News, Melaw Nakehk'o Makes her Hollywood Debut in the Revenant, Dec 17, 2015
- ^ Meagan Wohlberg, "Melaw Nakehk'o on Filming the Revenant", The Edge, January 16, 2016
- ^ Johanna Luna, CBLK Radio, "One on One with Actor Melaw Nakehko Archived 2016-01-29 at the Wayback Machine", retrieved Jan 24, 2016
- ^ Alvin Manitopyes, "Not for the Faint-Hearted: The Revenant", Indian Country Today Media Network, January 21, 2016
- ^ "Melaw Nakehko Wears Culturally Appropriate Design to the Revenant Premiere", CBC News, December 18, 2015
- ^ Madelyn Chung, "Canadian Actress Makes Red Carpet Debut In Metis Design" The Huffington Post Canada, December 18, 2015
- ^ Meagan Wohlberg, "Melaw Nakehk'o on Filming the Revenant", The Edge, January 16, 2016
- ^ Miranda Scotland, "Quest for traditional knowledge Northern News Services. Oct 25, 2012
- ^ "Moosehide Camp Featuring Melaw Nakehk'o", Indian and Cowboy Media Network, June 17, 2015
- ^ Trail's End, CBC News, Melaw Nakehk'o Makes her Hollywood Debut in the Revenant, Dec 17, 2015
- ^ "Dene Nahjo’s Melaw Nakehk’o makes Hollywood red carpet debut". www.denenahjo.com
External links
[edit]- Living people
- Canadian film actresses
- Canadian women painters
- First Nations actresses
- First Nations artists
- 21st-century Canadian textile artists
- Artists from the Northwest Territories
- Indigenous fashion designers of the Americas
- 21st-century women textile artists
- Canadian fashion designers
- 21st-century Canadian women artists
- Dene people
- Canadian women fashion designers
- 21st-century Canadian actresses
- 21st-century Canadian painters
- 21st-century First Nations people
- 21st-century indigenous artists of the Americas
- 21st-century indigenous women of the Americas