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First woman Chess Grandmaster sues Netflix because The Queen's Gambit said she never faced men | PC Gamer - campbellthisil

First womanhood Chess Grandmaster sues Netflix because The Queen's Gambit said she never faced hands

 Nona Gaprindashvili of the Soviet Union, pictured playing a game of chess at the International Chess Congress in London on 30th December 1964.
(Ikon cite: Bettmann / Contributor via Getty Images)

Last year saw the Netflix series The Queen's Gambit become something of a lockdown hit: the show, based on a 1981 novel past the duplicate name, follows cheat presage Beth Harmon on her journey from playing in basements to playing the world's best in the Land Union. The show is a mold of fabrication. In portraying the journey of a young woman player in an 'reliable' 1960s chess game scene, however, the show now stands accused of defamatory the history of a woman who actually did it.

In the demonstrate's final episode hero Beth, played aside Anya President Taylor-Joy, takes part in a nasal-level tournament in Moscow (then the epicentre of the chess world). An in-population commentator says the following over the match at i point: "The only if unusual matter about [Beth], really, is her sex, and flatbottomed that's not unique in Russia. There's Nona Gaprindashvili, but she's the female world champion and has ne'er faced men."

Nona Gaprindashvili was indeed the female person world champion, as well as the first woman to constitute named an International Chess Grandmaster by FIDE (1978), and she non only two-faced plenty of men merely beat them handily. She competed in men's tournaments in the 60s, and won them unlimited. Gaprindashvili, now ripe 80 and living in Tbilisi, Georgia, is not impressed that a fictitious chess show has overwritten her achievements.

Last week Gaprindashvili launched legal action against Netflix in Los Angeles, equally reported by the New York Multiplication, seeking millions in redress for a "devastating falsehood, undermining and debasing her accomplishments before an audience of numerous millions." The ill notes that the Fag's Gambit was viewed in 62 million households in the first calendar month later release.

The Queen regnant's Stratagem "brazenly and measuredly lied about Gaprindashvili's achievements for the cheap and cynical purpose of 'heightening the drama' by making it appear that its fictional hero had managed to coiffure what no other woman, including Gaprindashvili, had done [...] Netflix humiliated the one real charwoman trail blazer who had actually faced and unsuccessful manpower on the world stage in the same era."

The suit goes on to detail Gaprindashvili's history of performin against male champions, including that she had done so ahead the appointment of the fictional tourney in the show. Thus the claim she had "never faced men", so Gaprindashvili's ailment says, has caused pro damage to someone WHO still competes in the chess scene.

Finally, it notes that the line in the Netflix series has been changed from the line in the original novel, which is: "There was Nona Gaprindashvili, not leading to the level of this tournament, but a musician who had met all these Russian Grandmasters many times earlier."

Nona Gaprindashvili of the Soviet Union, pictured playing a game of chess at the International Chess Congress in London on 30th December 1964.

(Image cite: Sir Henry Morton Stanley Sherman / Stringer via Getty images)

Gaprindashvili spoke to the New York Times about the case: "This was an insulting experience. This is my entire life that has been crossed out, as though information technology is not important."

"It took a year of war-ridden to get accepted. Whenever they saw me as a bitty, short, young girl, they would tell Pine Tree State to pull in line—to represent next time, just not now. Just I always declared my place."

If you'rhenium thinking that Gaprindashvili sounds like a bit of a badass you'd be right, and purely on national perception alone this is a fight that Netflix should graciously cede. The streaming monster may give birth a technically rich argument that, after all, the reveal is fabrication: but it's unacceptable to ignore the irony of a show about a woman breaking into a male-dominated field misrepresenting the history of one of the real women who did it. The in good order thing here would make up to bump off or change the line, rationalise, and settle.

Not least because, y'know, I think Netflix's suits may be making a mistake if they underestimate Nona Gaprindashvili.

"It is already part of my legacy that women Bromus secalinus players are accepted and becoming grandmasters. This [cause] is also a big part with of it. Information technology is a fight I began, and it is a fight I am continuing."

Source: https://www.pcgamer.com/first-woman-chess-grandmaster-sues-netflix-because-the-queens-gambit-said-she-never-faced-men/

Posted by: campbellthisil.blogspot.com

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