Orlando Sentinel

Jenkins draws on own life in ‘Moonlight’

- By Rebecca Keegan rebecca.keegan@latimes.com

Since Labor Day weekend, Barry Jenkins has screened his new film, “Moonlight,” to enthusiast­ic audiences at seven prestigiou­s festivals, collected near unanimous praise from critics for its tender portrait of black masculinit­y and closed a deal to adapt one of the hottest novels of the year, Colson Whitehead’s “The Undergroun­d Railroad,” for television. Jenkins has not, however, shown his movie to his mom, who inspired some of its most unflinchin­gly honest scenes.

“It’s not a question of when I’m ready to show it to her, it’s a question of when my mom is ready to watch it,” said Jenkins, 36.

Jenkins adapted “Moonlight,” which is scheduled to open in Orlando on Friday, from a never-produced story by the black, gay playwright Tarell Alvin McCraney, “In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue.” The film follows a boy named Chiron, played at different ages by Alex Hibbert, Ashton Sanders and Trevante Rhodes, whose sensitivit­y, sexuality and dark skin have left him especially vulnerable in the sunlit streets of 1980s Miami. With Chiron’s single mother, Paula (Naomie Harris), consumed by a drug addiction, the boy finds acceptance and stability in an unlikely place, the home of his mother’s drug dealer, Juan (Mahershala Ali), and his girlfriend, Teresa (Janelle Monae). He finds intimacy, and all the confusion that accompanie­s it, in a confident friend, Kevin, played at different ages by Jaden Piner, Jharrel Jerome and Andre Holland.

Audiences and critics are responding to the vulnerabil­ity and authentici­ty on screen in “Moonlight,” which shows a world rarely seen on the big screen and which is an amalgam of Jenkins’ and McCraney’s biographie­s. Both men grew up in Miami’s Liberty Square neighborho­od at the same time, and both had mothers who grappled with drug addiction. Jenkins’ mother survived; McCraney’s did not. McCraney is gay; Jenkins is straight.

Jenkins shot the movie on the same city blocks where he lived as a child; one location was an apartment balcony he jumped off to retrieve an old girlfriend’s shoe.

His path from Liberty Square to the Telluride Film Festival, where “Moonlight” premiered in September, included a crucial stop at Florida State University, where he studied film with “Moonlight” producer Adele Romanski and cinematogr­apher James Laxton, Romanski’s husband. At film school in 2003, Jenkins made a short film, “My Josephine,” about a couple of Arab immigrants who ran a laundromat where they washed American flags for free.

Jenkins won over critics with his first feature, the 2008 independen­t romance “Medicine for Melancholy,” and attracted the attention of Plan B Entertainm­ent, the production company behind “12 Years a Slave,” “Selma” and “The Big Short.”

It took Jenkins a long time to land his second film, however. In that period, he started a commercial production company and wrote an adaptation of a James Baldwin novel he didn’t have the rights to (“If Beale Street Could Talk”). In January 2013, Romanski intervened. “I said, ‘Barry, you’re gonna make another movie.’ It’s shocking to me, but I guess I was the first to say, ‘I’m going to force you to make something.’ ” Romanski and Jenkins started a routine of video-chatting twice a month about his projects, and Jenkins began work on McCraney’s play, which he learned about through Miami’s Borscht arts collective.

Jenkins assembled his supporting cast in trips to middle schools and community centers. Harris shot her scenes in three short days on a break from promoting “Spectre,” the latest James Bond film.

“I had reservatio­ns about taking on this role because I’ve always wanted to represent black women in a positive light,” Harris said. “I’ve never wanted to play a stereotype. I’ve always said I will never play a crack addict. But the script deeply touched me. I was in conflict. Barry said, ‘I don’t want you to play a stereotype, but the reality is this is my story. That’s who my mother was, so what do I do?’ ”

It was Jenkins’ openness that won over Harris and many others, Romanski said.

“Barry is a person people love to love,” she added. “He makes people comfortabl­e.”

On set, that meant winning over his own childhood neighborho­od, where he hadn’t lived since before college.

“I had to re-prove my bona fides,” Jenkins said. “It’s like, ‘Who the hell is this guy?’ We’re shooting in the roughest neighborho­od in Miami. I get there, and the guys were basically like, ‘No disrespect, Mr. Jenkins, but it shouldn’t be like that.’ They were helping me write.”

In many ways, “Moonlight” is about the families we find, not necessaril­y the ones we’re born to, an experience Jenkins seems to be having with his collaborat­ors. In between festival hopping, he directed an episode of Justin Simien’s Netflix show “Dear White People” and has another project in the works with Romanski.

Of his suddenly busy schedule, Jenkins said, “When you go eight years doing nothing, you make time.”

 ?? JAY L. CLENDENIN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Barry Jenkins’ new film is adapted from a story by playwright Tarell Alvin McCraney.
JAY L. CLENDENIN/LOS ANGELES TIMES Barry Jenkins’ new film is adapted from a story by playwright Tarell Alvin McCraney.

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