How many young
actors, let alone young black actors, would choose a gay movie
as their first real introduction to the world? Regardless of one’s orientation,
Hollywood, for all its left-leaning bloviation, is still homophobic — and
pretty racist. Once upon a time, not so long ago, playing gay was a shortcut to
either obscurity or an Oscar, depending on how well you died at the end of the
film.
But Moonlight is
not just any gay movie. And Trevante Rhodes is not just any young actor. He is
a black man in 2017. And he is completely at home in his skin, obsidian dark
and carrying the weight of America’s sins; in his sexuality — straight, if it
matters, and it somehow always does; and within his body, powerful,
gladiatorial, that of a college and lifelong athlete. It was this body — both
his comfort in it, and its discomfiting presence — that earned him his breakout
role as the adult version of Moonlight’s central character,
Chiron.
This body had
to convey the story of a man who has built an armor of musculature around the
painfully shy little boy who was bullied mercilessly for a reason he couldn’t
quite understand — and who was still visible in the 27-year-old’s soulful eyes.
Rhodes recognized the opportunity he had in Moonlight, the
opportunity to do something that had never — or at most, rarely — been done
before.
“It’s uncharted
territory,” he says with what seems like an innate giddiness, not the joy of
someone experiencing the first heady rush of fame. “The fact that it was done,
and the fact that it was done so well — that’s just an added benefit of being
able to tell a truthful story, a truthful story that hasn’t been seen in the
way that it’s now been seen. Hopefully I’ll continue to do great work, but to
do great work that’s never been done? That’s like, we invented fire — the world
benefits from that. And I think the world will benefit from the film if they
see it. Not just the black community, or the gay community, or the black gay
community, but, fuck, the world.”
Rhodes was
taken with Moonlight’s script and how deeply it delved into
Chiron’s life, likening the character’s progression to a flower, suddenly
besieged by snow, only to emerge intact, gorgeous as ever, come spring. “It was
just the most beautiful thing I’ve ever read,” he says. And in taking on the
role, Rhodes saw a chance to grow as an actor and a person, to experience
things he’d never experienced before and to learn the film’s greatest lesson
(should it have a lesson at all): empathy.
“It’s an
incredible work of art, and it’s about a very, very marginalized group of
people,” he says. “I’ve had moments with many people who come up to me, red in
the face, crying, tearing up because this is their story. They’ve never seen
themselves put into a narrative on screen. How am I going to feel that again? I
don’t think you can. At the core of it all, you just want to do something that
makes someone else feel OK.”
i. An
Experiment in What Life Could look Like
When The
Birth of a Nation debuted at the Sundance Film Festival last January,
it felt like the Great Black Hope. The film industry, stinging from the
backlash of #OscarsSoWhite, was eager to embrace Nate Parker’s opus about Nat
Turner and his bloody slave rebellion of 1831. Too eager. It
sold for a record $17.5 million. Talk of trophy gold was early and fervent.
Then came the rape allegations from Parker’s past; his insufficient, cavalier
public response to them; lukewarm reviews of the film; and tepid box-office
returns. Subsequently, The Birth of a Nation was stillborn.
But while Parker’s film slowly imploded, a smaller, quieter Great Black Hope
emerged — and it was queer and stunning and said what so many little black
queer boys have waited to hear their entire lives, for generations: I
am here, I am human, I exist.
Depictions of
black queer men in film have been few and far between: Jason Holliday in Portrait
of Jason (1967); Lindy in Car Wash (1976); Hollywood
in Mannequin (1987); Marlon Riggs’s Tongues Untied (1989);
Isaac Julien’s Looking for Langston (1989); of course, Paris
Is Burning (1990); Rodney Evans’s Brother to Brother (2004)
and The Happy Sad (2013); and Patrik-Ian Polk’s The
Skinny (2012). It’s been 50 years since Shirley Clarke’s cinema verité
documentary introduced the world to Jason Holliday, the spiritual ancestor of Moonlight’s
Chiron. Portrait of Jason was the first time a film considered
the black homosexual in America. Upon its premiere, Ingmar Bergman called it
“the most extraordinary film I’ve seen in my life,” but it was largely
forgotten until the release of a restored print on DVD in 2013; in 2015 it was
added to the National Film Registry. Then in 2016, Paris Is Burning was
afforded the same honor for being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically
significant.”
These two films
about queer people of color have been deemed important by the Library of
Congress and given official acknowledgement by the government and, by
extension, America. Still, both were directed by white women, far removed from
the worlds they were depicting. This disconnect, no doubt, helped bridge the
gap between their disparate worlds of subject and audience — asking the
question, “Who is the intended audience?” — but also led to familiar criticisms
of cultural appropriation and exploitation. It was as if these stories were
only valid when refracted through a white lens. But 50 years after Portrait
of Jason, black people have taken control of their own narratives in
an unprecedented wave of creative liberation.
Playwright
Tarell Alvin McCraney wrote In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue, on
which Moonlight is based, in the summer of 2003, in the midst
of graduating from Chicago’s DePaul University and losing his mother to
AIDS-related complications. At a crossroads, McCraney was filled with questions
— about himself, about life, about going out into the world — that he could not
turn to his mother to answer. Neither a traditional stage or screen play, In
Moonlight served as a “circular map” for McCraney, a way to locate
himself, socially and historically.
“I was very
afraid of what my life would look like,” he says. “I was very lonely. I still
feel very alone most of the time and so I tried to figure out and put down as
much of the memory that I could. I think it was an experiment in what life
could look like.”
With his
circular map, McCraney explored unconventional ways of healing, wrought from
his childhood experiences — he estimates about two thirds of Moonlight,
the finished film, is autobiographical, containing characters based on real
people in his life. He gives an example of telling a story to his writing class
about “Juan” (played in the film by Mahershala Ali) teaching him how to ride a
bike.
“They kind of
looked at me odd, like, ‘Oh, why would he do that? Why would a drug dealer
teach you how to ride a bike?’ ” McCraney recalls. “As if he had no care, as if
his only preoccupation was the doing of this thing that is deemed harmful and
illegal. But those two things existed at once.”
In McCraney’s
world, drug dealers are father figures, kids play soccer with balled-up
newspapers, and homosexuality is best left unsaid, unacknowledged, and
unexplored. Moonlight director Barry Jenkins grew up in this
same world, the world of the Liberty Square projects in Miami, around the same
time as McCraney. They both had mothers plagued by drug addiction. And yet
Jenkins was unsure he was the right person to take on Moonlight.
ii. Who Is You?
“I felt that
there was a lot of responsibility in the fact that we don’t see movies that are
centered on the coming-of-age of a young gay black man,” says Jenkins. “Because
there are so few of those depictions, the ones that do exist take on added
importance.”
Though this
responsibility weighed heavily on him, Jenkins was particularly hesitant
because he hadn’t directed anything since his 2008 debut feature film, Medicine
for Melancholy. And on top of that, he wasn’t gay. When he first read
McCraney’s In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue, through Miami’s
Borscht art collective, Jenkins didn’t really know what to make of it, but upon
the urging of a friend to read it again, he was struck by Chiron’s relationship
with his mother, which mirrored his own.
In Moonlight,
Naomie Harris plays a composite of both Jenkins’s and McCraney’s mothers. She
is at times monstrous and unrelenting; other times she is childlike or maternal
or tender. But her demons always bubble not too far under the surface. Her
scenes are some of the finest and most visceral in Moonlight, but
they were especially hard for Jenkins to film.
“When you’re
watching an actor who’s gifted go to these places — getting you closer to these
themes you have embedded in your memory — it’s very difficult to just be
creating art,” he says. “Like, no, no, no — I’m feeling shit.”
It was only
after speaking with McCraney over the course of several months that Jenkins
reached a point where he felt that he could both preserve and respect the
playwright’s voice — and feel free to fully develop the character of Chiron.
Jenkins took McCraney’s circular map and made it more linear, dividing it into
three distinct acts, portraying Chiron at three different stages of life. He
also added the final encounter between Chiron and Kevin, which McCraney had not
included in his original piece.
“This is one
thing I haven’t gotten to talk to Tarell about: Who the fuck is Kevin? Who is
his real Kevin?” says Jenkins. “I feel like, in writing the piece, he didn’t
include that story because either, I don’t know, he felt like he had gone far
enough delving into his personal relationship to Kevin, or they never got that
moment in his actual life.”
Jenkins felt
that reuniting the two was an effective way to fuse his voice with McCraney’s,
and to pose the central question of the film: Who is you? “Not who are you,”
Jenkins clarifies. “Who is you?” The phrasing is important,
because “Who is you?” keeps it 100, as it were. It appeals to Chiron’s truest
self. And it’s not a simple question. Case in point: Jenkins, McCraney, and
Rhodes — the three men closest to Chiron — all had radically different answers
to my central question of the film: What happened to Chiron
and Kevin after the final scene, in which Kevin cradles the adult Chiron in his
arms, before Jenkins cuts to a flashback of a young Chiron on a moonlit shore,
the ocean stretched out in front of him? Says Rhodes, “They’re like 90 years
old right now walking hand in hand in the park.”
If he believes
in their love story, McCraney is more skeptical. “Nah, of course Trevante said
that. He’s pure joy,” he says. “He’s full of peace and love.”
He adds, “I’m
like, I know the characters had to talk about Kevin punching Chiron in the
face. At some point. But I have no idea.” Instead of imagining a
happily-ever-after, McCraney is pleased that Jenkins ended the film the way he
did, leaving Kevin’s and Chiron’s fates to the audience, and to the characters
themselves. “Isn’t it great that they have some authority over their own lives
and their own narratives from this point on?”
But perhaps
Jenkins has the most satisfying answer: “Chiron struggles with the idea that
he’s unworthy of love, and he’s been in that place for a very long time,” the
director says. “I think for him to get to that admission that he makes in the
kitchen at the end — that Kevin is the only man who has ever touched him — it
takes a lot. I mean, it takes a lot. It takes maybe 99 percent
of him. So I don’t know where he goes from there. I’ve been in that place, and
what usually happens is, you gotta build yourself back up. I don’t know if
Kevin is going to be there to build him up as a lover, but I’m quite sure he’ll
be there to build him up as a friend. He’s not there to possess him. I don’t
know if those characters ever possess each other fully.”
iii. You Have a
Right to Be Here
There’s
something life-affirming in seeing a stage of beautiful black faces and
beautiful black bodies, dressed to the nines, being praised and honored, simply
for being themselves. But behind those smiles is the shared truth that this is
no small feat. Moonlight has racked up a staggering number of
awards since the start of the awards season: Accolades have poured in from the
National Board of Review, New York Film Critics Circle, Los Angeles Film
Critics Association, Gotham, Satellite, Independent Spirit, Broadcast Film
Critics Association, and British Independent Film. In January, it won Best
Picture (Drama) at the Golden Globes. As we go to press, inevitable Oscar
nominations are around the corner. But for the men behind Moonlight,
the awards matter only if they inspire people to go see this little movie that
could.
“All I have to
say is, please,” Jenkins said at the Globes, clutching his trophy in his right
hand, “tell a friend, tell a friend, tell a friend. Much love.”
For a moment,
it seemed possible that Jenkins wouldn’t get to speak, as one of the producers,
a white woman, took the mic first — but she understood this was not her story
to tell or her award to accept. Barry Jenkins belonged there. Trevante Rhodes
belonged there. Tarell McCraney, though absent as he often is from these
ceremonies, belonged there. This story, this coming-of-age tale of a young
black gay man, belonged there — in film, in Hollywood, in America.
James Baldwin
said, “When you try to stand up and look the world in the face like you have a
right to be here, you have attacked the entire power structure of the Western
world.”
And that’s
really the crux of it. Black people, queer people, Latino people, Muslim
people, the so-called Other — for eight years, these people all stood up and
dared to claim a piece of the American pie because they had someone in the
White House who said they could, that they should, and that he supported their
right to do so. It was inevitable, then, that with the power structure under
attack, the silent majority would react to ensure its own survival. But once
you stand up, it’s impossible to sit back down again.
Twenty years
ago — five years ago — Moonlight’s success would have been
unimaginable. But there is a poetry in the fact that it came at the tail end of
something else that, until it happened, also seemed unimaginable. “We were
launched into the Obama era with no notion of what to expect, if only because a
black presidency had seemed such a dubious proposition,” Ta-Nehisi Coates wrote
in December in “My President Was Black,” his comprehensive Obama history.
“There was no preparation, because it would have meant preparing for the
impossible.”
As impossible
as Barack Obama’s road to the White House had seemed, eight years of having a
black man as commander in chief was emboldening. In 2016, the final year of his
presidency, the year that gave us Trump as a rebuttal to that boldness, we saw
Beyoncé exalt Black Pride at the Super Bowl, the biggest stage on the planet;
we saw her sister Solange crystallize the anguish of police brutality and
systemic racism with her acclaimed album A Seat at the Table; we
saw Paul Beatty win the Man Booker Prize (the first American, black or
otherwise, to nab the prestigious Brit literary award — just a year after gay
black writer Marlon James did); we saw #BlackGirlMagic in full, medal-snatching
force at the Rio Olympics; we saw Donald Glover’s Atlanta and
Issa Rae’s Insecure and Ava DuVernay’s 13th and Queen
Sugar add further glimmer to television’s golden age; and we saw Moonlight hailed
as a masterpiece, lauded the best film of the year by a chorus of gushing
critics.
What we
witnessed was a thrilling renaissance of black culture and black identity. So
there was no need for one Great Black Hope when, as evinced by this impressive
proliferation of art and achievement, hope has already been sewn into the
nation through Obama’s presidency. This renaissance will continue because it
has to. Art flourishes in the harshest of climates, like the flower in
Trevante’s analogy; this most beautiful thing will survive the winter ushered
in on Election Night last November because art thrives not in spite of, but
because of, the cold. Just as we will thrive and create and continue to hope
because we — the Other — have stood up and declared our presence. And it’s too
late to sit back down again.
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