Trevante Rhodes
doesn’t have much time to make an impression in the new film Moonlight.
Along with child actors Alex Hibbert and Ashton Sanders, he’s one of three
players embodying lead character Chiron at different stages of his life, and he
doesn’t even appear until the final act. By then, Rhodes’s peers have done most
of the legwork in giving shape to Chiron, a lonely Miami boy who’s quietly —
and very slowly — coming to grips with being gay. But Rhodes doesn’t need a
whole lot of time to tear your heart in half, and Moonlight’s
finest scene rests on his sculpted shoulders. As a grown Chiron who’s adopted
hypermasculinity for survival, the jacked Rhodes makes an achingly vulnerable
confession to his childhood crush, Kevin (André Holland), who loo ks on in the same way the audience does —
as if he just watched a brick house implode.
“One way I
connected with Chiron is that, like him, I didn’t grow up with a father,” says
Rhodes. “I think his lack of a male influence increased his need for love. But
I’m also a hopeless romantic. I believe you find that one person who you’re
supposed to be with, and I felt Chiron found that person early on.”
When Rhodes’s
parents split, he was 4 and still living in his native New Orleans. At 10, he
moved with his mother to Dallas, where a skill — but not a passion — for track
and field would win him an athletic scholarship to the University of Texas at
Austin. “Even then, I despised running,” says the 26-year-old, who these days
prefers boxing. “But it was a means to pay for school.” According to Rhodes,
his fit body was also his ticket into the industry. College sparked the actor’s
interest in theater, but he was simply taking it as an elective while pursuing
a degree in “petroleum land management.” And then he wound up topless in front
of the right person.
“In my last
year of college, I was jogging on campus with my shirt off,” Rhodes says. “A
casting director saw me, waved me down, and said, ‘You have to be in my movie.’
That was the start.”
The movie in
question, a Nicolas Cage vehicle, didn’t work out for Rhodes, but he did soon
land a part in the 2014 short film Open Windows with Elijah
Wood, followed by a stint on the Fox seriesGang Related, a gig on
the yet-to-be-released HBO show Westworld, and a recurring
role on Tyler Perry’s OWN comedy If Loving You Is Wrong. But
none of that would compare to Moonlight, which opened Rhodes up to
the world of gay playwright Tarell McCraney, whose semi-autobiographical work In
Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue was adapted for the screen by
writer-director Barry Jenkins (Medicine for Melancholy).
“It was the
best thing I’d ever read,” says Rhodes, who initially read for the role of
Kevin before Jenkins offered him the lead. “I don't know how or why I got the
opportunity to read it, but I was determined to book [the project].”
Rhodes is
straight, but his close relationships with gay men and adjacencies to queer
environments helped him sympathize with Chiron and connect with Moonlight’s
emotional texture. One of Rhodes’s first friends in Dallas came out two years
ago, and the pair remain best friends. “I knew what he went through, and I knew
how hard it was for him to find himself,” Rhodes says. “We all have our
insecurities.” A frequenter of clubs of all sorts, Rhodes says he was at West
Hollywood’s gay hot spot the Abbey on the night before Orlando’s Pulse
nightclub shooting. (Some believe the Abbey was a target of James Howell, the
armed man who was nabbed by police while allegedly en route to Los Angeles
Pride.)
“Our country is
shit right now,” Rhodes says, pointedly. “Being a black person in America right
now is shit, being a homosexual in America right now is shit, and being a black
homosexual is the bottom for certain people. That’s why I’m so excited for
people to see Moonlight. I don’t feel like there’s a solution for
our problems, but this movie might change people. That’s why you do it — because
you feel like you’re doing something that matters. This is someone’s story.”
Indeed, Moonlight feels
like a movie of the moment. For all the effortless ebbs and flows of its
nuanced progression, it offers forthright, unapologetic depictions of blackness
and queerness, at a time when the visibility of both is vital. It features an
all-black cast, takes place in an unequivocally black world (specifically, a
small pocket of Miami at the height of the War on Drugs), and portrays Chiron’s
experience with gay sex as healthy and formative (rarely has a movie made such
elegant yet unabashed acknowledgments of ejaculation). It’s meaningful, too,
that, barring a final shot, Rhodes is the last version of Chiron we see. He’s
ostensibly strong yet terribly fragile, and, as Rhodes can attest, there’s a
timeliness to that.
“I was in
Virginia filming a movie recently, and while walking down the street, I was
being followed by a police car,” the actor says. “I was just walking to the
gym. I knew I was being followed, I looked back, and they made eye contact.
They didn’t pretend to not be following me. I turned back and continued to
walk. Being in that situation was the most frightening thing in the world to
me.”
True to his
self-described romanticism, Rhodes speaks often of love. It doesn’t sound corny
or “Kumbaya”-esque — it seems like a desperate plea on repeat. “Is there no way
to make anything better?” he asks. “The only thing people need to do is love
one another — for who they are and who they love.” However fleeting, there are
rapturous moments in Moonlight that make you believe it could
be that simple.
Thanks for the review. I'll have to check this out. Naked hugs!
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