Moonlight

What We Missed In The Moonlight: Chiron’s Journey and the Unchecked School-To-Prison Pipeline For Black Queer Students

Instead, it was a post that read “They’re having a best gay movie off” and it featured two films - Call Me By Your Name and Red, White & Royal Blue. Individuals, particularly Black queer men like myself, were stunned as the film Moonlight, which won an Oscar, was glaringly absent from the discussion (a topic for another day).

What We Missed In The Moonlight: Chiron’s Journey and the Unchecked School-To-Prison Pipeline For Black Queer Students

The Tarell Alvin McCraney Interview: Academy Award-Winner Reflects On The Fifth Anniversary Of ‘Moonlight’

To say that 2016 was a whirlwind for Academy-Award-winning screenwriter Tarell Alvin McCraney would be an understatement. Five years after the film release of “Moonlight,” based on McCraney’s play “In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue,” and four years since taking home the top prize of Best Picture during an unprecedented live television mix-up—McCraney’s ascension from Liberty City, Florida, to Chair of Playwriting at The David Geffen Yale School of Drama, to creating the OWN series David Makes Man—now in its second season — has made the MacArthur “Genius” Grant recipient a creative force of stage and screen. In his first interview with The Reckoning, McCraney opens up about his queer identity, collaborating with director Barry Jenkins to create a masterpiece, being awkward and reveling in going unnoticed on the street, and reactions to the last 20 minutes of “Moonlight,” and why much of it, for him, was troubling.

The Tarell Alvin McCraney Interview: Academy Award-Winner Reflects On The Fifth Anniversary Of ‘Moonlight’