Toronto Star

MOONLIGHTI­NG

Artist Janelle Monae describes how she connected to her first on-screen role,

- TRE’VELL ANDERSON LOS ANGELES TIMES

“I’ve never looked at myself as a musician or singer,” said Janelle Monae, although her six Grammy nomination­s since her 2010 debut album The ArchAndroi­d might suggest otherwise.

Instead, she self-identifies as a raconteur expressing narratives often ignored or unknown to others. Some might say that’s why she’s been labelled a visionary, for her Afro-futuristic, sci-fi-flavoured musical catalogue that is as R&B as it is art rock as it is funky soul.

Following the creation of her own record label, Wondaland Records, with her latest venture into Hollywood as an actress, a role in Barry Jenkins’ Moonlight, Monae’s looking to transpose her unique sensibilit­ies to film.

“I’ve always looked at myself as a storytelle­r, an artist-storytelle­r who wants to tell unique, untold, universal stories in unforgetta­ble ways,” she said. “I have been excited about doing that with music, and I’m excited to do that with film.”

Monae, 30, stars in Moonlight as Teresa, the girlfriend of Juan (played by Mahershala Ali), a Miami drug dealer who comforts a young boy named Chiron fleeing from schoolyard bullies in the city’s rough Liberty City neighbourh­ood.

The pair become the kid’s surrogate parents as he grapples with his gay identity in a world that says he shouldn’t be gay at all. This is why the role was perfect for her Hollywood debut, Monae said.

And, as a graduate of the American Music and Dramatics Academy and former community actor, it was a return, of sorts, to her roots.

Ahead of the film’s release, she spoke about her Moonlight role, being an ally for the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and queer community and her hopes for the flick.

What was your initial response to the Moonlight script?

I had been sent a lot of scripts by my agent and they were just not right. When Moonlight came, I was completely blown away. I had a strong visceral reaction to it — I cried, like two to three times. I was just so proud and happy that finally we were going to have a film about the young, poor, black, gay male experience. I had never seen or read the story of

Moonlight anywhere else. The nuances that it has about all of the characters, I had not seen. Finally, I thought, we were going to be looked at as not monolithic or one-dimensiona­l but complex, complete human beings.

Why did you gravitate toward the role of Teresa?

Being an ally to the LGBTQ community, I felt like the role was perfect because that is exactly who Teresa represents to Chiron as he is coming into his sexual identity and trying to make a decision on if he’s going to accept himself for who he sees himself for being or if he’s going to continue to hide. Because his mother, played by the incredible Naomie Harris, cannot be there emotionall­y to give him the support he needs, I’m a nurturer to him, a listener, and that was the main thing that I wanted to make sure I was doing, giving an example for those who don’t quite know how to support someone finding their sexual identity.

Did you create a backstory for your character?

When I read the script, I felt like I had crossed paths with each character. I had people in my family just like Juan, a drug dealer but mentor in the community; like Paula, who are still struggling with drug addiction. I had and still have little boys in my family who are struggling with their sexual identity, just like Chiron, and I had a Teresa, a young aunt or older female cousin who was just there to help comfort us in times of emotional instabilit­y as we’re trying to figure out life and figure out what it means to be a woman or to be gay or what it means to be young, black, wild and free in America. I knew that Teresa was a mentor, and I pulled from certain women in my life who had been mentors for me and used that as ammunition to fire off on some of her personalit­y traits.

What about Moonlight makes it the best film for your acting debut?

Because it’s so much bigger than me. I know and I hope and pray that some young boy struggling with his sexual identity or some girl struggling with her sexual identity will watch it — and maybe when they came in felt alone, but when they leave they feel less alone. They feel like they see themselves, like their story is highlighte­d and they’re not an outcast or “the other” anymore.

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 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Janelle Monae, who was at TIFF, says she has always considered herself as an artist-storytelle­r who wants to tell unique stories in unforgetta­ble ways.
CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Janelle Monae, who was at TIFF, says she has always considered herself as an artist-storytelle­r who wants to tell unique stories in unforgetta­ble ways.
 ??  ?? Monae plays Teresa, the girlfriend of a Miami drug dealer who befriends a bullied young boy.
Monae plays Teresa, the girlfriend of a Miami drug dealer who befriends a bullied young boy.

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