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Tag: American Fiction

  • Why an Oscar Nomination Was On Sterling K. Brown’s Vision Board

    Why an Oscar Nomination Was On Sterling K. Brown’s Vision Board

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    An Academy Award nomination wasn’t on Sterling K. Brown’s bingo card for 2024.

    In fact, when he heard the news, albeit a bit delayed, on Jan. 23, his response, he tells THR, was, “Well, I’ll be damned.”

    Winning an Oscar, however, was always a dream of the actor’s and part of a long-term goal of one day becoming an EGOT. That desire grew out of his winning three Primetime Emmy Awards, first in 2016 for outstanding supporting actor in a limited series or movie for his portrayal of Christopher Darden in American Crime Story: The People v. O.J. Simpson, again in 2017 for outstanding lead actor in a drama series for his role as Randall Pearson in This Is Us, and, most recently, in 2021 for outstanding narrator for Lincoln: Divided We Stand.

    “After getting a few Emmys or whatnot, you realize, all right, that’s a quarter of the way to the EGOT, let’s see if we can figure out ways to get the other ones,” he says in the conversation below. “But I didn’t think that it was going to necessarily be from this role or this film.”

    Brown is up for best supporting actor for his role in American Fiction, Cord Jefferson’s adaptation of Percival Everett’s 2001 novel Erasure. He plays opposite Jeffrey Wright’s studious Thelonious “Monk” Ellison, starring as his brother Cliff, a plastic surgeon coping with grief and his newly embraced sexuality somewhat disruptively after divorcing his ex-wife whom he dismissively refers to as his “beard.”

    The film, which uses the literary world to make a statement about the entertainment industry’s embrace of stereotypical portrayals of Black life in the media as a whole, received a total of five Academy Award nominations, including best picture, best adapted screenplay, best score, and best actor for Wright.

    “I think what Cord did with this script and with this film is absolutely wonderful in terms of expanding the collective consciousness and imagination of what Black life on screen can be,” says Brown, who recently predicted he’ll lose the Oscar to Robert Downey, Jr. who’s nominated for his role in Oppenheimer.

    “I was just happy to be a part of it and see the film be recognized and to see Jeffrey be recognized,” he added. “I didn’t think that it was going to be my turn, but I would love to one day, if I’m blessed enough, be considered amongst the people who get the EGOT. I would not be upset.”

    Brown talks with THR about his Oscar nomination and what American Fiction’s critical acclaim could mean for Black storytelling moving forward.

    Where were you when you got the Oscar news?

    I was at home. I was asleep and my phone had died, and I fell asleep on my kids’ floor. So I woke up in the middle of the night, got to my bed, charged the phone, and then went to go get breakfast ready for them and get them ready for school. When I came back to my phone after it had charged, I realized that I had 126 missing messages and all of them said, “Congratulations,” “Congratulations,” “Congratulations.” So that’s where I was.

    It’s funny because I was at a Super Bowl party with one of my wife’s best friends and she asked my wife, “How was this morning?” and my wife said, “I think he’s in shock. He’s acting like nothing happened.” And it was funny to hear how my wife saw it because it wasn’t like nothing happened, it was just, I got to get these kids to school and then after they were fed and they were in school, I was just returning messages throughout the rest of the day. When you receive that kind of love, you want to know that it’s been received in the spirit in which it was intended.

    AMERICAN FICTION, Sterling K. Brown, 2023.

    Claire Folger/MGM/Courtesy Everett Collection

    Did you purposely tap out of the news cycle that day knowing the nominations were coming out?

    The nominations are read at 5:30 in the morning Pacific Standard Time; I’m asleep. That’s daddy’s sleep time. If I don’t get sleep, kids don’t get to school. My wife [actress Ryan Michelle Bathe] does not set an alarm in the morning. She will sleep until 10 a.m. on her day. So Brown is the morning dude and 6:45, 7 o’clock is normally when I get up. So it wasn’t that I was tapped out, but, honest to goodness, I was legitimately surprised because I don’t think it was anything that I personally was anticipating. I was happy to have received the attention that I had received up to that point. I knew that I was on a lot of people’s lists, but maybe falling just outside of the top five or what have you. So when it happened, I was like, “Well, I’ll be damned.”

    Was an Oscar nomination or winning an Academy Award on your actor vision board?

    I would say so. After getting a few Emmys or whatnot, you realize, all right, that’s a quarter of the way to the EGOT, let’s see if we can figure out ways to get the other ones. But I didn’t think that it was going to necessarily be from this role or this film. I’m fully aware that it is a marathon and not a sprint. I’m here for the long haul. And so the fact that the nomination came with this project is very pleasing because I think the project is awesome. I think what Cord did with this script and with this film is absolutely wonderful in terms of expanding the collective consciousness and imagination of what Black life on screen can be. I was just happy to be a part of it and see the film be recognized and to see Jeffrey be recognized. I didn’t think that it was going to be my turn, but I would love to one day, if I’m blessed enough, be considered amongst the people who get the EGOT. I would not be upset.

    Do you plan to go to the ceremony with a speech prepared?

    It’ll be very much in the moment, which most of my speeches are. There may be some bullet points or what have you, but it’s really just Brown coming off the dome. You know, just set a cypher up for your boy and see what kind of freestyle we can make. But — and I don’t mean for this to sound cliché — the honor is in the nomination. Gosling and De Niro and Ruffalo and Downey Jr.; the company that I get a chance to be amongst is really, really wonderful. I’m just happy to be there.

    I imagine your phone has been ringing off the hook since the nomination. Are you feeling overwhelmed at all this award season?

    I’ll be honest with you, it is at times a bit overwhelming, especially when it comes to clothes and gear and all the different things. There’s the Oscars, and Film Independent Spirit Awards, the SAG Awards, NAACP Image Awards. You can’t just go back and get your same suit every time, you gotta come with a fit that’s got a little bit drip to it. There’s also the unspoken truth that your wife wants to look just as good as you do. So there are conversations that are had. Strategies that are employed. The wife is not playing around. We have to make sure that everybody in the house is feeling good about how they look.

    You told THR at the top of the year,I don’t ever make the mistake of equating critical and popular success with each other.” Do you still feel that way in light of the Oscar nominations American Fiction has received and how do you feel about its performance at the box office?

    I feel like the nominations gave us a really nice bump in terms of the way in which it went into the consciousness. I think we had probably one of our best box office weekends after we received five nominations for an Academy Award so I’m really thankful for that. I’m really thankful that investors get some sort of return on their investment with regards to this project because that incentivizes people to do it again. If it was just a “prestige film” and not popular, then that’s not as easy to get a green light a second time around, especially when it comes to us. So, yeah, I feel the same way, but I feel like we’re doing all right.

    What’s next after award season?

    Well, before award season is even over, we start production on a new TV show with Dan Fogelman called Paradise City at the end of the month. We’ll air sometime later on in the year, but I’m really excited for that. My wife and I recorded our first podcast together entitled We Don’t Always Agree, which is more appropriate than you know, and hopefully sometime in March that’ll be coming to wherever you can observe podcasts. And I do have a movie, Atlas, with Jennifer Lopez and Simu Liu, Mark Strong, and a few other people dropping on Netflix. It’s a sci-fi, sort of AI-premised film, which is really cool. A lot of green screen, a lot of action, some funky things happen, so I’m looking forward to that. Right now is just one of those wonderful moments where you get a chance to take meetings with the industry and see who’s interested in doing things with you and if there are any other new doors that are open to you with this nomination that may have been closed to you in the past. It’s an exciting time of discovery for your boy.

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    Degen Pener

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  • Sterling K. Brown Predicts He’ll Lose the Oscar to Robert Downey Jr.: “He’s Incredibly Deserving”

    Sterling K. Brown Predicts He’ll Lose the Oscar to Robert Downey Jr.: “He’s Incredibly Deserving”

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    Sterling K. Brown said he isn’t expecting to take home an Oscar this year, but he’s “totally fine” with it.

    The actor, who is up for best supporting actor for his role in American Fiction, recently joked during an appearance on The Graham Norton Show, “There’s no losing yet — it’ll happen in its own due time.”

    Brown proceeded to say that “Colman [Domingo] will probably win,” adding, “I know that I’m not going to win.” Domingo was also a guest on the BBC show, as well as scored a best leading actor Oscar nomination for Rustin.

    Though Graham Norton and the other guests pushed back, telling Brown that he still has a good chance at winning, the This Is Us actor admitted he’s “totally fine” if he doesn’t take home the trophy.

    Robert Downey Jr. is going to win, and he’s incredibly deserving,” Brown said of the Oppenheimer star and his fellow nominee. “He’s an incredible actor. You should give him love. And the fact that I get a chance to be nominated along with him and Mr. [Robert] De Niro and Ryan Gosling and [Mark] Ruffalo, I’m just happy to be in the room.”

    Norton went on to tease Brown on his perspective should he end up winning the Academy Award. “On the night, this will all be very humble,” the host quipped. “’I can’t believe I won!’”

    Brown told The Hollywood Reporter last month that he thought the Cord Jefferson-directed movie, adapted from Percival Everett’s 2001 novel Erasure, “was one of the best scripts I’d ever read.”

    “It was able to make fun of an industry and also challenge it to say there are ways in which you could be better,” he said of American Fiction. “You are narrow in terms of Black life that you are willing to portray for mass consumption. I’m going to tell you that, and at the same time, I’m going to give you an idea of other stories that would be viable for mass consumption.”

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    Carly Thomas

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  • 'American Fiction' Director Cord Jefferson Addresses How Black Artists Are Pushed Into 'Revolving Door Of Trauma And Misery' When Creating

    'American Fiction' Director Cord Jefferson Addresses How Black Artists Are Pushed Into 'Revolving Door Of Trauma And Misery' When Creating

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    We’re finishing the fourth quarter super strong when it comes to entertainment, particularly films.

    Source: Variety / Getty

    AMERICAN FICTION, Cord Jefferson’s hilarious directorial debut, arrives in theaters everywhere Friday, December 22nd, and our Sr. Content Director Janeé Bolden had a chance to chat with him about the film — which confronts our culture’s obsession with reducing people to outrageous stereotypes.

    Jeffrey Wright stars as Monk, a frustrated novelist who’s fed up with the establishment profiting from “Black” entertainment that relies on tired and offensive tropes. To prove his point, Monk uses a pen name to write an outlandish “Black” book of his own, a book that propels him to the heart of hypocrisy and the madness he claims to disdain.

    We were fortunate to catch an early virtual Q&A with Cord Jefferson, who based the film on the novel Erasure by Percival Everett. After hearing Jefferson speak about how Everett’s novel resonated with him, one of our first questions to Jefferson, who has worked as a writer for successful TV shows like The Good Place, Watchmen, Master Of None, and Survivor’s Remorse, was about his own experiences in Hollywood.

    “I’ve had a couple of instances in which executives will read scripts of mine and say in so many words, ‘We want you to make this character blacker,’” Jefferson told BOSSIP. “And I always respond to that with just like, ‘OK,’ because it’s never directly to me, it’s always through like emissaries and I always say, ‘Go back to them and ask them what Blacker means. Ask them what they mean by Blacker.’ Of course they never answer that question because they know that if they were trying to answer that question they would sound ridiculous and they make fools of themselves, even more so than they already have.”

    American Fiction assets

    Source: Amazon MGM Studios / Amazon MGM Studios

    Jefferson also shared stories with us that he heard from colleagues, including a particularly dark one that included a racial slur.

    “I had a friend who was working on a TV show once, and the showrunner turned to her in front of the entire all white staff,” Jefferson shared. “She’s a Black woman and the rest of the staff was white, and the showrunner turned to her on her first day on the job and said, ‘What do you think Blackie?’ In front of the entire staff. This is like 10 years ago. This was not 1952, this is like 2014 or 2015.”

    Jefferson also acknowledged that these experiences aren’t isolated to writing for film and television. He recalled how his days as a journalist often meant constantly being assigned to cover Black trauma.

    “Before I started working in TV and film, I was working in journalism and journalism was very much like, ‘Would you write about Mike Brown getting killed?’ ‘Would you write about Trayvon Martin getting killed?’ ‘Would you write about Breonna Taylor getting killed?’ Will you write about this racist thing that somebody said about President Obama?’” Jefferson told BOSSIP. “Constantly. This revolving door of trauma and misery and it’s like, is this all that we have to offer with our work as writers?”

    These experiences reflect those of so many Black professionals, simply trying to make a living while pursuing their dreams. The bigger issue, Jefferson says, is that people outside of the culture often fail to recognize that they also have a part to play in confronting Black trauma.

    “When they come to black people all the time and say like, ‘This is what you need to do,’ suggests that racism and the problems that come from racism are a Black issue,” Jefferson continued. “This is a two way street. Racism is just as much a white issue as it is a Black issue. Why are you not coming to white people and asking them to write about Mike Brown and Trayvon Martin, you know? They have a part to play in all of this too, it literally is a national issue. and treating it as if only Black people can talk about this is wrong. The cop that killed him was white right? So isn’t that just as applicable to white people’s lives as it is to our life? Why aren’t white people defined by these incidents the way that you try to define Black people by these incidents? That was a frustrating aspect of working in journalism, and I thought that I would get away from it when I started working in entertainment, because it’s fictional stories right? But still people are coming to me like, ‘Well why don’t you write about slaves?’”

    American Fiction assets

    Source: Amazon MGM Studios / Amazon MGM Studios

    As you can imagine, American Fiction is every bit as thought-provoking as the questions Jefferson is asking. The film’s complexity also stretches beyond race, into class because Monk and his family reflect the very real fragility that many members of the Black upper middle class face.

    “Black people have, for any number of reasons by design, not been able to achieve generational wealth in this country,” Jefferson responds when asked about the precarious nature of Monk and his family’s status. “That has been elusive for the vast majority of black people in this country. The thing that I wanted to portray was that essentially like there was one breadwinner. The father was successful, he had sort of like built up a successful practice, but you see how precarious things are once he’s gone… Fortunately they made enough to educate their children but also their children are going through it now too. See how quickly a divorce can totally alter your financial future? That is the problem with the difference between just general affluence and like real wealth. That precarity is very real.”

    Jefferson even shared how his own financial security might have been in jeopardy had the WGA strike lasted longer this year.

    “I’ve made a lot of money in my TV career and then I bought a house,” Jefferson shared. “I’ve earned far more money than anybody in my family ever has, but then we went on strike. I had an overall deal, which is how I really made all my money, and there is a real significant chance that I was going to lose my overall deal [had the strike lasted] and if that were to happen it would have all gone away. Not necessarily immediately, but if they said ‘Your overall deal’s gone, you’re not getting paid after this,’ I would have been scrambling to figure out how I was going to keep my house, which is the first real thing that I’ve ever owned.”

    American Fiction assets

    Source: Amazon MGM Studios / Amazon MGM Studios

    Ironically, our conversation with Jefferson happened when the SAG-AFTRA strike was still in full swing, so we were unable to speak with his incredible cast, which, in addition to Jeffrey Wright, also includes Erica Alexander, Leslie Uggams, Tracee Ellis Ross, Issa Rae and Sterling K. Brown — who is quite the scene stealer as Monk’s gay brother, newly uncloseted and completely unhinged.

    “Erika Alexander was such a huge part of my childhood,” Jefferson told BOSSIP. “I watched Living Single all the time. We went out to dinner a couple weeks ago and she was telling me something that I’d never heard before, which is that there were studies that showed that there was a spike in Black female lawyers when that show was on the air, because of the Maxine Shaw effect. Then all of a sudden it’s like Erika Alexander is not in movies anymore she’s not in TV shows anymore. This is a woman that is so, so, so talented, that is so, so, so beloved and had a huge impact on me when I was a kid. I loved giving her like a bigger role. I loved giving her the romantic lead in the film.”

    American Fiction assets

    Source: Amazon MGM Studios / Amazon MGM Studios

    “I love that Leslie Uggams is 81 and still going,” Jefferson continued. “I love seeing her in there. I love Sterling K. Brown. I think that Sterling K. Brown has obviously gotten a bunch of television accolades, but I don’t think anybody has seen him like this before. This is a total departure for him. Tracee Ellis Ross, people think of her as ‘Oh she’s a sitcom actor.’ No, Tracee Ellis Ross has range… I just really want these people here because because they’re tremendous in the movie and I wish that they were at the forefront receiving these accolades because too frequently Black actors aren’t given that opportunity.”

    1. “Jeffrey is amazing,” Jefferson added. “The second time I ever saw Jeffrey Wright act was Basquiat it was the first time I ever saw him in the lead in anything because before that I saw him in Angels in America, not on Broadway but in the Mike Nichols adaptation of HBO and then I saw him as a lead in Basquiat and then I didn’t see him as a lead in anything ever after that, and it was like ‘Why?’ This guy’s amazing. Everybody agrees that he’s an amazing actor. Everybody agrees he’s one of the most talented actors in America, why is he not in the lead more often? Why is he never given that opportunity? I just love these people. I think they’re amazing. They were all amazing to work with and I want them to be receiving these flowers because they deserve them.”

    We’re in total agreement. Go see American Fiction in theaters everywhere December 22!

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    Janeé Bolden

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  • ‘American Fiction’ Star Erika Alexander on Breaking Into the Awards Race and Reconsidering a ‘Living Single’ Revival

    ‘American Fiction’ Star Erika Alexander on Breaking Into the Awards Race and Reconsidering a ‘Living Single’ Revival

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    Erika Alexander got her start as a teen on “The Cosby Show” before assuming the breakout role of attorney Maxine Shaw on “Living Single.” But it’s her latest performance in “American Fiction,” a satire that critiques our culture’s obsession with stereotypes, that’s put her in a conversation she’s never been in before — that of awards season contender.

    Alexander plays Coraline, the love interest of Jeffrey Wright’s Thelonious “Monk” Ellison, a cantankerous author who challenges the industry’s perceptions of “Black entertainment.” On Dec. 5, just hours before sitting down with Variety, Alexander learned she’d been nominated in the supporting category at the Independent Spirit Awards; she attended last year’s ceremony as a guest.

    “I got dropped off on the highway and walked, scooting around the Porta-Potties,” she says, laughing brightly to keep her emotions about the moment at bay. They seep in anyway.

    Though Alexander has delivered standout performances in “Wu-Tang: An American Saga,” “Black Lightning,” “Run the World,” “Get Out” and expanded her impact as a writer, producer, director and activist — in August, a street in her Winslow, Arizona, hometown was christened “Erika Alexander Way” — this recognition represents a career high.

    “It’s lovely to be talked about like this,” she adds, reaching for a tissue to dab her eyes. “I’ve been in the business 40 years, and yet, never talked about in spaces like this. I think about that with great gratitude. I trained my whole life for this moment.”

    How did “American Fiction” come to you?

    I got a call that Cord Jefferson was interested in me playing the part in his new film. He’s an accomplished writer — I knew of his work in “Watchmen,” so I had a certain expectation that it was going to be good. He explained his vision and my part in it. When someone tells you that he’s imagined you in that space and invites you to play, with no audition — like “I know who you are, and I know what you’re capable of” — you say yes.

    Cord has said that he was interested in you because you’re a legend, and he wondered why you hadn’t gotten more of these big-screen opportunities after “Living Single.” What does it mean to hear him speak of you that way?

    It’s a beautiful thing. But it also is something that’s frustrating because someone has assessed me as a risk. Doesn’t have anything to do with talent; “deserves” got nothing to do with it. Not past work. Someone said it’s not worth the risk. It won’t sell; it’s not palatable. I’m not the only one being assessed like that. And that can be very hurtful. It’s powerful when someone invests in you. I’ve been one of the lucky ones — believe it or not — if I’ve managed to last 40 years. That’s grace.

    What interested you about Coraline?

    Coraline is the quiet storm. Every time Monk — played so beautifully by Jeffrey Wright — turns around, there’s a whole different weather system that he’s in, and he won’t be able to keep the silo around him that is his comfort zone.

    She was attracted to him before she met him. He’s had an impact on her and attracted the possibility of a new relationship that could be healthy for him. But what I love about her is that he may be discontented, but she isn’t. She’s not allowing him to change the weather system around her. We’re looking at a mature relationship and a conversation around what it is to find a partner. Black women have been told over and over again we want too much, and yet these characters are walking through the Everglades licking ice cream cones, trying it out.

    “American Fiction” won the people’s choice award at TIFF, as well as audience awards at the Middleburg and Mill Valley film festivals, and has now surged to the top of critics list. Why do you think this film is resonating the way it is?

    Cord wrote a script that was a beautifully articulated adaptation of the novel “Erasure” by Percival Everett. He was made for the moment. Then he had the stroke of genius to put us all together. People might think, “They’re all very independent strong players, will they work together?” He understood that people who were used to being hammers in leading positions would know, when they came together as an ensemble, how not to overdo it. That is experience. Every one of us knew how to play our part and how to also rise above any one space, because we’ve been having to do it our whole careers — stand out in small places. And Jeffrey Wright is no joke; he’s the Death Star that attracted us all.

    Erika Alexander and Jeffrey Wright in “American Fiction.”
    MGM

    Tell me about working with this cast: Tracee Ellis Ross, Sterling K. Brown, Leslie Uggams, Issa Rae, John Ortiz, Keith David, Adam Brody, the list just goes on.

    I got to share a dressing room with the great Leslie Uggams and hear her stories. I’ve sat at the foot of the greats — Cicely Tyson, Gloria Foster, Phylicia Rashad, Whoopi Goldberg — and listened, didn’t say a word. What will inform me in my next role will be having worked in proximity to Leslie Uggams, because she showed me a model of the future. I say I’m the “Ghost of Christmas Future” to young people; she’s mine, and wow, the view from there is great!

    What did you take away from those conversations?

    What those stories told me is that [this career] is not only survivable, but she still has so much joy. She had her own TV show on CBS [“The Leslie Uggams Show,” aired in 1969 and was the second variety show to feature an African American performer] and was not being asked to do things. She had done well over time because she shifted to voiceover; she had to adapt and she was so happy to have it. There wasn’t any hollowness, like “Oh they don’t want me.”

    As you speak of the greats, your production company Color Farm Media is making a documentary about Diahann Carroll, with Venus and Serena Williams as executive producers. How did that project come together?

    Diahann Carroll, one of the first and best to ever do it, has never had a documentary about her — not unlike John Lewis. (Alexander and her Color Farm Media co-founder Ben Arnon produced the Emmy and NAACP Image Award-winning documentary “John Lewis: Good Trouble” in 2020.) So, we partnered with her daughter Suzanne Kay and Susanne Rostock, who will direct.

    Suzanne Kay found a hidden diary that her mother had left for her, and the things she couldn’t talk about are in this diary. There are love letters from Sidney Poitier to her and there’s footage in the basement from parties at her home and you realize how big of a movie star she is. We’re glad that the Williams sisters come on, too. They understand what it is to be “the first” and have their family go through that. We’re looking forward to a great film about her, but also to start a tsunami, a wave of storytelling around these great masters who have not had their day.

    How do you evaluate the impact of roles that you’ve played? Maxine Shaw has been credited with inspiring many young Black women to become lawyers, including Stacey Abrams. What is that like?

    It’s why we need to think about value. We needed Yvette Lee Bowser to create that show, to create that character based on something she wanted to be, and then cast me to bring my flair to it. I had the hairstyle because I worked with Whoopi Goldberg [on 1990’s “The Long Walk Home”] and was inspired by “Jumpin’ Jack Flash.” I worked with Phylicia Rashad, who played the lawyer on “The Cosby Show,” and then the great Cicely Tyson, who has strengthen ungodly. These people poured into me and I would use those experiences to inform Maxine Shaw.

    Erika Alexander, Queen Latifah, Kim Fields and Kim Coles on “Living Single”
    ©20thCentFox/Courtesy Everett Collection

    And there’s young Stacey Abrams, looking at her natural hair and her dark skin, saying “Hmm.” She had it in her the entire time, but Maxine’s a model, a template. It tells her that she does exist and that it’s important that she exists, and then she goes on to help save our world. That’s a one to one [comparison], all in the same generation. It’s unreal. And all I can say is thank you.

    I think about all the Wakanda kids, the Letitia Wrights, who see themselves in STEM [because of the “Black Panther” movies]. So it’s very important that I can last for the journey. Think about it: how many times did Harriet Tubman come back for us? I haven’t earned the right to be tired. The right to stop. We won’t earn it in our lifetimes. It’s just our turn to run the baton.

    “Living Single” just celebrated its 30th anniversary. What is the latest on a revival?

    I was the person who was most on the fence about that. I’m very associated with that character — more than the others, frankly. I put on that wig and it becomes a thing. I wanted to transcend it, to expand and grow. I thought, “Would I be even able to do it?” Now I’m rethinking it because I realize I can transcend anything. I can resurrect that character within me because it’s never been outside of me. I can grow inside of it as long as the audience is willing for it to grow. So, we’ll see.

    What do you want to do next?

    I would like to be the female “Pink Panther” — to use my physical comedy chops and play a new type of detective that’s fallible, and yet finds the answer anyway. I would love to do movies like Joan Crawford and Bette Davis, where they a certain age and use that to tell these great film noir stories. Maybe I’ll do sketch comedy, why not?

    I’ve done a lot to make sure that none of this time where it felt like I “wasn’t working” is wasted. I became larger than the scope of my opportunity. That didn’t mean that I didn’t want to be the actress that I thought I could be, but I would like to make sure that I make good on some of the promises of having a gift that I don’t think was leveraged in a full capacity — yet.

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    Angelique Jackson

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  • Video: ‘American Fiction’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘American Fiction’ | Anatomy of a Scene

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    new video loaded: ‘American Fiction’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    transcript

    transcript

    ‘American Fiction’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    The screenwriter and director Cord Jefferson narrates a sequence from “American Fiction,” starring Jeffrey Wright.

    “My name is Cord Jefferson and I’m the writer and director of the film ‘American Fiction.’ The scene is our lead character, Monk, played by Jeffrey Wright, is sort of frustrated by the lack of imagination that people have when it comes to the stories that people are allowed to tell about Black life. And so in this fit of rage when one of his books is not selling and he’s sort of seeing the ways in which culture latches on to these kind reductive views of Blackness, he’s decided to write his own version of that hyper-stereotypical Black story. Also in the scene is Keith David as Willy the Wonker and Okieriete Onaodowan as Van Go in the scene that is manifesting before Monk’s eyes as he writes it in the Word document.” “Don’t shoot me partner. Come on now.” “So this film is adapted from Percival Everett’s novel ‘Erasure’ which was published in 2001. So this scene is not in the novel. If you’ve read ‘Erasure’, you’ll know that the entirety of ‘My Pafology,’ this sort of prank book that Monk writes is published within the novel ‘Erasure.’ I knew that that’s not very cinematic I didn’t want to show the character of Monk just sort of sitting there pounding at his keyboard furiously and I think that we’ve all seen that enough. And I don’t think it gets at the gravity of what the character is writing particularly in this instance, when you really needed to understand what it was that he was putting down onto those pages.” “Look at my face. Look at my midnight Black comple — no, that’s not right.” “What did you want to say? You can say it better than that. Right, come on. What do you want? Think about it, Van Go. Look at my face. Look at my cold Black skin and then look at your own. Look at my Black eyes and look at your own. Look at my big Black lips and look at your own. I’s your daddy whether you like it or not?” “Shut up!” “So I did intend this scene to be funny and I think that the characters play it that way. The thing that became interesting as we were shooting the scene is that Ok and Keith David are such great actors that you have this inclination to take them seriously because they’re such wonderful performers. And so I think that I wanted it to be comedic but I never had a desire to make that comedy obvious.” “I think now will come some sort of dumb melodramatic sob story where you highlight your broken interiority. Something like, I don’t know — I hates this man. I hates my mama and I hates myself.” “Yeah, the intention was to be funny but without saying like oh, this needs to be played super broad. Ultimately, I wanted it to be a little restrained and I think that, in fact, that makes the scene better.” “And I see eyes that don’t care what happens tomorrow.”

    Recent episodes in Anatomy of a Scene

    Film directors walk viewers through one scene of their movies, showing the magic, motives and the mistakes from behind the camera.

    Film directors walk viewers through one scene of their movies, showing the magic, motives and the mistakes from behind the camera.

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    Mekado Murphy

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  • Producers of ‘American Fiction,’ ‘Maestro,’ ‘Origin’ and More Oscar Contenders Talk the Toughest Tasks Behind the Scenes of Their Films

    Producers of ‘American Fiction,’ ‘Maestro,’ ‘Origin’ and More Oscar Contenders Talk the Toughest Tasks Behind the Scenes of Their Films

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    Erika Alexander and Jeffrey Wright in Orion/Amazon MGM Studios’ American Fiction.

    Claire Folger/MGM/Courtesy Everett Collection

    Producer Jermaine Johnson worked primarily as a literary manager for clients like first-time movie writer-director Cord Jefferson (whom he’s represented for close to a decade) before the pair collaborated on Jefferson’s darkly comic adaptation of the novel Erasure by Percival Everett, which Jefferson wrote on spec with Johnson’s encouragement. 

    Naturally, first-time filmmaking meant an inherent learning curve. “Day one was a tough day because Cord didn’t really feel qualified to tell Jeffrey Wright how to act,” Johnson recalls. “He did not feel like he was the guy for the job.” That meant adding pep talks to Johnson’s job description. “The conversation was, ‘Hey, man, Jeffrey wants to be directed. Actors want to collaborate and get in the clay with you,’ ” he says. “Next thing, he’s just in there, between takes, talking to Jeffrey, playing around with it. And they established a rapport, from day two on.”

    Shooting constraints prompted production to relocate from New York to the Boston area, where Jefferson would be able to film the scenes at Monk’s (Wright) family beach house in the Massachusetts coastal town of Scituate. “You start to crunch the numbers and think about what it takes to shoot in New York,” Johnson says. “Once we landed on Boston, it was a very quick yes.”

    Northeastern weather, however, proved one of the main production challenges. “I learned what it takes to light a beach at night. That is an extremely difficult task,” Johnson says of a scene in which Leslie Uggams, as Monk’s aging mother, wanders away from her home. Rigging lights amid 20-mile-an-hour winds proved nearly impossible. But for the 80-year-old actress, the wind was no problem. “We’ve got Leslie the legend out in this weather, and she is such a professional that she did as many takes as we needed,” Johnson says, adding that Uggams was “just the brightest light there.”

    Dominic Sessa, Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Paul Giamatti in Focus Features’ The Holdovers.

    From left: Dominic Sessa, Da’Vine Joy Randolph and Paul Giamatti in Focus Features’ The Holdovers.

    Seacia Pavao/Focus Features

    An Oscar winner for Rain Man, Mark Johnson wasn’t cowed by Alexander Payne’s rigorous commitment to getting his story right. But The Holdovers, set in a New England boarding school over Christmas break, proved a particular exercise in patience. “With Alexander, the script is understandably the most important part of moviemaking,” Johnson says. “He spent a lot of time [giving first-time feature writer David Hemingson feedback] on it.” One of the main developmental changes was expanding the character of grieving chef Mary, played by Da’Vine Joy Randolph. “I really do believe her performance is the heart of the movie,” he adds.

    Finding financing for a story on this scale — an intimate, humanist dramedy centered on Mary along with Paul Giamatti’s weathered teacher Paul Hunham and troubled schoolboy Angus (newcomer Dominic Sessa) — also proved a challenge: “It’s not a big, bombastic subject. Paul Giamatti has such great respect, but is he a big box office name? No,” says Johnson. But midscale films about life are “the movies that so many of us really enjoy,” he says. “These movies are harder and harder to put together. Movies that I’ve made from the very beginning, like Diner or even, quite frankly, Rain Man, I wonder how we would go about putting them together today?”

    Another challenge was location: The preppy Barton Academy where most of the movie takes place is actually a composite of multiple New England schools — though all that snow is, remarkably, very real (about “85 percent” of it, anyway). “I’ve had people come up to me after screenings saying, ‘Oh, I went to that school,’ ” says Johnson. “Well, no, they didn’t, because that school didn’t exist.”

    Harris Dickinson, Zac Efron, Stanley Simons and Jeremy Allen White in A24’s The Iron Claw.

    From left: Harris Dickinson, Zac Efron, Stanley Simons and Jeremy Allen White in A24’s The Iron Claw.

    Eric Chakeen/A24

    Writer-director-producer Sean Durkin had been obsessed with his drama’s subject matter — the Von Erich wrestling family — since an early age, having read about them in magazines and watched old tapes of their matches. When he began writing the script, he was very conscious of the constraints he would need to adhere to. “When I started out, I really did all the line producing myself,” says Durkin, whose films include Martha Marcy May Marlene (2011) and The Nest (2020). “I’ve never been able to separate financials. I’m so envious of writers who can just not worry about it. I’m very conscious of how to craft a world and to be aware of the type of budget [for] the film I’m making.”

    Most of the film takes place in the wrestling arena known as the Sportatorium or on the Von Erichs’ Texas ranch, and simulating those spots proved surprisingly difficult. Preparing to shoot in Louisiana, the scouting team had their work cut out for them. “We really covered the entire state to find the right feel for the ranch,” Durkin says. After landing in the Baton Rouge area, finding a warehouse that could house a wrestling stadium was equally tough. Production designer James Price “was going into every single building that could work size-wise, but it’d be the wrong shape inside, or the wrong texture.” The solution was found in a furniture showroom. “It was just a bunch of fake living rooms. We had to convince the place to let us clear out everything, knock down all the walls.”

    Zac Efron and the cast worked intensely to transform physically to play the Von Erichs, though Durkin didn’t require it. “I wanted them to feel comfortable getting to whatever shape they felt was best for the character,” he says. But for the wrestling, authenticity was key. “They had to learn how to wrestle all the way through from top to bottom, and do multiple takes,” he says, noting that he filmed matches live in front of an audience. “We got really lucky with the Baton Rouge crowd, because they were really into wrestling. It was really quite beautiful, that energy between the background [performers] and the actors.”

    Kristie Macosko Krieger, Maestro

    Bradley Cooper in Netflix’s Maestro.

    Bradley Cooper in Netflix’s Maestro.

    Jason McDonald/Netflix

    Kristie Macosko Krieger was originally planning to produce a Leonard Bernstein biopic directed by her longtime collaborator, Steven Spielberg, with Bradley Cooper signed on to star as the famed conductor and composer. When Spielberg made the decision to step away from the director’s chair, Cooper offered his own name as a replacement, and asked Spielberg and Krieger to watch an early cut of his directorial debut, A Star Is Born

    Krieger recalls, “Twenty minutes into the film, Spielberg got up and walked over to Bradley and said, ‘You’re directing this fucking movie.’ ”

    Cooper had a clear vision of the details he wanted to bring to Maestro, and he would not budge on any of them. “He was like, ‘We’re absolutely going to go over many time periods,’ ” Krieger says. (The film spans from the 1940s through the 1980s.) Cooper also worked with prosthetics designer Kazu Hiro for three and a half years to transform his face into Bernstein’s. “He wouldn’t stop until he got it right,” Krieger says.

    The film was shot on location in New York’s Carnegie Hall and Central Park, in England’s Ely Cathedral and at Massachusetts’ Tanglewood Estate. Some desired locations, however, were impossible to get. “We could not shoot in the Dakota apartment [on Central Park West],” she says. “Bradley wanted to re-create that to almost exactly what it looked like. He enlisted Kevin Thompson, our production designer, to build the entire Dakota set.”

    Cooper also insisted they shoot with live orchestras, which meant that the film could not shoot during the height of COVID and had to be postponed. “But again, he wasn’t compromising,” says Krieger. “He was like, ‘It will look better, it will be better, it will be the movie that I want to make.’ He made all of us better as department heads in figuring out this film, so none of us were settling, either.”

    Florence Pugh and Cillian Murphy in Universal’s Oppenheimer.

    Florence Pugh and Cillian Murphy in Universal’s Oppenheimer.

    Courtesy of Universal Pictures

    Emma Thomas has worked as a producer for her husband, Christopher Nolan, “on pretty much all of his films, ever,” as she puts it. “When I first read Chris’ script, I thought it was the best he’d ever written. It was very clear that he was approaching the story with a large scope in mind, as a blockbuster.”

    But despite Nolan’s pedigree and Oppenheimer’s seemingly endless scale, the biggest production challenge was working on a minimal budget. “It’s about very difficult and weighty subjects,” Thomas explains. “I wasn’t daunted by the things he was proposing shooting, but I knew that the only responsible way to make a film this challenging, that was inevitably going to be R-rated and three hours long, was to make it for a reasonable amount of money. And a reasonable amount of money was probably going to be about half of what anyone else would do it for.”

    Proposing a budget cut in half to department heads meant each sector of the crew had to find creative ways to consolidate resources. “Our production designer, Ruth De Jong, got really smart about ways in which she could build things, with a very targeted eye, building only what was necessary for the shots,” says Thomas. “Our DP, Hoyte van Hoytema, said, ‘There are things that I can do to go faster: to only have one camera, to do as much handheld as possible.’ Our actors were all on set all the time, ready to go as soon as the camera was ready. Those are things that added up to us being able to finish the film on this incredibly punishing schedule.”

    Building Los Alamos, the site of the atomic bomb’s creation, meant battling freezing temperatures in the mesas of New Mexico. “The weather was so cold, it was impossible to dig into the ground because it was frozen,” says Thomas. “We had snowstorms and windstorms. And that was just when we were building the town. Once we got the shoot there, we had another great big windstorm, and we weren’t even sure that the tents were going to stand.” But the production ultimately used the weather to its advantage. “It looks amazing on film — that shot of Cillian when he walks up to the Trinity Tower, and climbs up it, that’s real wind.”

    Paul Garnes, Origin

    Jon Bernthal and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor in Neon’s Origin.

    Jon Bernthal and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor in Neon’s Origin.

    Courtesy Array Filmworks

    Paul Garnes had worked as a producer with writer-director Ava DuVernay in the past, but it had been some time since the pair had operated outside the studio system. “In the early days, we were at Netflix,” he says. “[Origin] got caught up in the industry slowdown. Ava made the really bold choice to go out and make this independently.” 

    That decision made things more exhilarating and terrifying, Garnes says. “In every production, there’s some executive that you can call and say, ‘Hey, this is happening, what do we do?’ We didn’t have that. It was just me and Ava. We could really only depend on each other.”

    The film spans centuries and continents, with scenes in Berlin at the height of World War II, aboard slave ships in the 1600s and in the streets of contemporary India. The decision to finance independently meant working with local governments to shoot in as many historical locations as possible. “We weren’t going to build a bunch of sets on soundstages,” Garnes says. “Outside of the slave ship sequence, because obviously slave ships don’t exist, we shot everything else pretty much on location.”

    That made for some awkward asks. “Could we shoot a Nazi rally in downtown Berlin, in the place where that book burning in the Bebelplatz really happened?” says Garnes. “We didn’t know at the time, but they had never let anyone film there.” Filming also took place at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe. “It’s a sensitive place. You don’t want to cause any stress or damage or anything to a place people visit in very solemn moments.”

    As a home base, production landed on Savannah, Georgia, where they were able to re-create a concentration camp. Bringing in those extras meant “Ava [taking] very careful time to get the background talent to understand what they were doing, who they were,” says Garnes. A sequence portraying the murder of Trayvon Martin was also filmed in that area, as well as scenes set in cotton fields in the 1930s South. 

    This story first appeared in the Dec. 7 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

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    Kimberly Nordyke

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