It was during the time of the so-called revolution. Dr. King, Malcolm X. Michael Romer was affected by the Holocaust in Europe. I think he lived in England, but he had an understanding of what oppression is. "Nothing But A Man" is about oppression and how you oppress yourself after awhile, if you suffer oppression, how you pass it on and you become an oppressor. It was a brilliant film. He wrote it and directed it. He and Bob Young wrote it together and Bob was this camera man. They all brought something. Michael was the director. Bob Young was the camera man and Robert Rubin was the sound man, and they were dedicated, and he wasn't making a black film. He was doing a film in black face. He said, "This is my story." He just chose to put it in the setting of African Americans, but he knew all about it. He taught me that I was a wonderful actress. Michael Romer. That film lives because it's the truth about things. He teaches school at Yale University. He's a lot like I am. Michael is not motivated by being -- I mean, he's somebody on his own. Nobody ever heard his name before. Michael Romer is a genius. Mm-hmm.