Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Mahershala Ali defends ‘Green Book’: ‘It’s a legitimate offering’

- By Jake Coyle

NEW YORK — Mahershala Ali’s life changed in more ways than one the week of the 2017 Oscars. Four days before he won best supporting actor for his performanc­e in “Moonlight,” his wife, AmatusSami Karim, gave birth to their first child.

“When I won, all I could think about was: I just want to get home,” Mr. Ali says, grinning.

It wasn’t just his soulful, tender performanc­e as a drug dealer in Barry Jenkins’ “Moonlight” that illuminate­d Mr. Ali to audiences. It was his incredible poise through awards season, where he became the first Muslim actor to win an Oscar. At the Screen Actors Guild Awards, during the outcry over President Donald Trump’s ban on travel from several mostly Muslim countries, he eloquently spoke about “Moonlight” and acceptance: “We see what happens when you persecute people. They fold into themselves.”

It was clear enough: Here was no flash-in-the-pan. Here was a journeyman actor of uncommon grace and dignity. And Mr. Ali’s phone started ringing.

“It changed the trajectory of my career,” Mr. Ali, 44, said in a recent interview over tea in midtown Manhattan. “It gives you permission in some way to not dream bigger but dream deeper. Like: What type of work do you really want to do?”

He still harbors larger aspiration­s, like playing boxer Jack Johnson, but this fall has provided some of the answer. Mr. Ali stars in Peter Farrelly’s road-trip drama “Green Book” and headlines the upcoming third season of HBO’s “True Detective.” And “Green Book,” now in theaters, has again catapulted him to the top of the supporting-actor contenders. Many believe he’s in line for another Oscar.

But this time, the road has been rockier. “Green Book,” brisk and modest, has won raves from some critics and many audiences as a feel-good story about the real-life friendship that developed when the refined concert pianist Don Shirley (Mr. Ali) hired a racist Bronx bouncer, Tony Lip (Viggo Mortensen), to drive him on a 1962 tour of the Deep South. But the film has been criticized by some as an outdated, sentimenta­lized kind of movie, one that trades on racial tropes, perpetuate­s the “white

savior” cliche and isn’t deserving of its namesake (a travel-survival guide for African-Americans in the Jim Crow South).

Mr. Ali grants “Green Book” is a portrait of race in America unlike one by Mr. Jenkins or Amma Asante or Ava DuVernay. But he believes the film’s uplifting approach has value.

“It’s approached in a way that’s perhaps more palatable than some of those other projects. But I think it’s a legitimate offering. Don Shirley is really complex considerin­g it’s 1962. He’s the one in power in that car. He doesn’t have to go on that trip. I think embodied in him is somebody that we haven’t seen. That alone makes the story worthy of being told,” says Mr. Ali. “Anytime, whether it’s white writers or black writers, I can play a character with dimensiona­lity, that’s attractive to me.”

“Green Book” was hailed as an irresistib­le crowdpleas­er and a major Oscar contender after its September premiere at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, where it won the festival’s audience award . (And every film in the past decade to win that prize has ended up a best picture nominee.) But the $23 million film has struggled to take off at the box office, earning $8.3 million in two weeks. Universal Pictures still has high hopes. Audiences gave it an A-plus CinemaScor­e, and the National Board of Review on Tuesday named it the year’s best film.

Still, along the way, Mr. Ali has heard the complaints about “Green Book.” He disagrees.

“A couple of times I’ve seen ‘white savior’ comments, and I don’t think that’s true. Or the ‘reverse “Driving Miss Daisy”’ thing, I don’t agree with,” he says. “If you were to call this film a ‘reverse “Driving Miss Daisy,”’ then you would have to reverse the history of slavery and colonialis­m. It would have to be all black presidents and all white slaves.”

Yet the debates over “Green Book” have put Mr. Ali in a plainly awkward position, particular­ly when Mr. Mortensen used the Nword at a Q&A for the film while discussing the slur’s prevalence in 1962. Mr. Mortensen quickly apologized, saying he had no right, in any context to use the word. Mr. Ali issued a statement, too, in support of Mr. Mortensen while firmly noting the word’s wrongness.

“It was challengin­g, especially being the lone black presence in the film and feeling responsibl­e to address that publicly,” says Mr. Ali. “There’s a difference between racist and lacking awareness. And I think he lacked awareness in that moment of the inappropri­ateness of the word, even within an intellectu­al context like that. There’s a mini explosion that happens whenever a non-black person says that in a public setting.”

“But I love him,” Mr. Ali adds. “And we’ve talked about it more. He’s a great dude, and he’s going to continue to be a great dude.”

Mr. Ali first got to know Mr. Mortensen on the awards circuit two years ago, when Mr. Mortensen was nominated for “Captain Fantastic.” The film rests on their relationsh­ip; that it works so well is a testament to their chemistry together. When cast, Mr. Mortensen’s first question to Mr. Farrelly was who was going to play Shirley.

“When Pete said Mahershala Ali, I said, ‘Well you can’t do better than that,’” Mr. Mortensen said by phone. “He’s very sensitive and extremely intelligen­t and thoughtful and has a real awareness of himself in any space. He’s at ease with himself. My sense of him is that he’s meticulous as an artist. There was a dynamic there based on each of us trying to help the other guy doing the best possible job that he could. It was beautiful.”

Mr. Farrelly, best known for his broader comedies with his brother Bobby (“There’s Something About Mary”), also defended his film.

“I’m getting some crap from people saying it’s a rosy picture of race, but, you know, it’s just a rosy picture of that relationsh­ip, not all race relationsh­ips,” said Mr. Farrelly. “And it’s the truth of what happened to these two men. And that is the thing that really drew me to the project. I’m a hopeful guy. I know we’re in a dark period right now in race relations, but I am hopeful.”

Mr. Ali has his own kind of optimism for “Green Book” and its place in a larger conversati­on.

“The disease of racism and bigotry and discrimina­tion — there are myriad of ways to tackle that,” Mr. Ali says. “And you need all of them.”

 ?? Victoria Will/Invision/AP ?? With his performanc­e in “Green Book,” actor Mahershala Ali may be in line for his second Academy Award.
Victoria Will/Invision/AP With his performanc­e in “Green Book,” actor Mahershala Ali may be in line for his second Academy Award.

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