Communiqué
The nature of inheritance and the hurt and protection entangled within familial bonds in “The Taste of Mango” on POV – April 28 at 10pm
< < Back to‘POV’ Presents Three Generations of Women As They Untangle the Painful Knots of Their Past in:
“The Taste of Mango”
Monday, April 28 at 10:00 pm
POV, the multi-Emmy® and Peabody award-winning documentary series, explores generational trauma in director Chloe Abrahams’ feature debut, The Taste of Mango. The documentary produced by Abrahams and Elliott Whitton, is an enveloping, hypnotic, urgently personal meditation on family, memory, identity, violence, and love. The film traverses the precarious family dynamic between three extraordinary women: the director’s mother, Rozana; her grandmother, Jean; and the director herself. Their stories, by turns difficult and jubilant, testify to the entangled and ever-changing nature of inheritance and how we both hurt and protect the ones we love.

Executive produced by Academy Award®-nominated producers Diane Quon and Kellen Quinn, along with Martha Gregory, Hannah Bush Bailey, Robina Riccitiello and Bill Way The Taste of Mango will make its national broadcast premiere on POV Monday, April 28, 2025 at 10pm on PBS. It will then be available to stream until June 27, 2025 at pbs.org, and the PBS App. Now in its 37th season, POV continues to mark its place as America’s longest-running non-fiction series.
The short film, The Cleaning Lady, directed by Ericka de Alexander, will accompany The Taste of Mango premiere. The story is about Marisol Reina, a loving mother of three who crossed the Mexico-U.S. border over a decade ago to provide a better life for her family. The film captures Marisol’s return to Mexico as she hopes to reconnect with the family she had to leave behind.
Director Chloe Abrahams utilizes abstract imagery and extreme close-ups in The Taste of Mango as she probes raw questions her mother and grandmother have long brushed aside regarding their traumatic pasts. Growing up in Sri Lanka, Jean was in love with Rozana’s father, “the only man who loved and protected her.” But that love match ended tragically when he died aged 27. Eventually, she married another man, providing young Rozana with a stepfather. This is a man who Chloe’s grandmother Jean is reluctant to discuss, despite remaining his partner four decades later.

Growing up in the UK, Chloe had always sensed pain within Rozana, and she’d heard fragments about Jean’s tumultuous marriage back in Sri Lanka. Now, as a young adult, Chloe spends time with both Rozana and Jean, in London and Colombo, Sri Lanka, listening to and recording their stories. What emerges is a delicately layered, personal and collective portrait of coping with physical and sexual violence, the strength of family bonds across time and distance, the damage of grief and estrangement, and the possibilities of hope, joy, healing, and reconciliation.
In The Taste of Mango, Chloe draws on her experience as a portrait painter and video artist, to tell her story in a unique singular and assured cinematic language. Incorporating raw camcorder footage, she toggles toward metaphor, dwelling suggestively on textures, and pushing close-ups further than technology or physical autonomy can bear. Her voice-overs – in direct address to her mother – dialogue with a haunting soundtrack, alternating between Suren Seneviratne’s dreamlike score and 1970s American country songs.
“Making this film began as an impulse and a desire to mend the relationship between my mother and grandmother,” said Chloe Abrahams, director of The Taste of Mango. “Over the course of five years, it became clear that it was a necessary process to heal deep wounds in myself, too. POV has a track record of showcasing artful, character-driven documentaries, and I have long admired the curation of this series. It’s an honor to share this film, a real labor of love, with POV audiences across the US.”
“Chloe Abrahams’ story of generational trauma for the women in her family is unflinching, but also very tender,” said Erika Dilday, Executive Director American Documentary and Executive Producer POV and America ReFramed. “The Taste of Mango has been described as hypnotic, but I would call it lyrical. There is a respect and magical handling of an incredibly complex subject. I’m excited for audiences to see and engage with the film.”