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 Northup was a free-born “colored citizen,” a part-time musician and laborer who lived in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., with his wife and two children in 1841, when a pair of white men he didn’t know invited him to New York City and then to Washington, to play the violin with their traveling circus. The nation’s capital was a dangerous place for free black people at the time. The “slave catchers” who hunted runaways in the city and sent them back to the slave markets and plantations of the Deep South were not above abducting free people, and that’s what happened to Solomon Northup. As difficult as this is to imagine, it appears that’s what his circus employers had in mind all along. They got him drunk – possibly slipping him the 19th-century equivalent of a date-rape drug – and sold him to a Washington slave trader named James Birch (Christopher Berry in the film), perhaps under the premise that Solomon was really a fugitive slave from Georgia.