Current:Home > ScamsWith 'American Fiction,' Jeffrey Wright aims to 'electrify' conversation on race, identity -WealthRoots Academy
With 'American Fiction,' Jeffrey Wright aims to 'electrify' conversation on race, identity
TrendPulse Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-09 03:28:55
Jeffrey Wright is earning awards-season kudos for his grumpy role in the acclaimed satire “American Fiction,” playing what he lovingly calls an “equal-opportunity misanthrope.” Even his kids are doling out positive reviews.
“My daughter saw the movie and said, ‘There's a lot of your humor in there.’ I'm afraid to say it kind of came natural,” says Wright, 58, with a laugh.
Writer/director Cord Jefferson’s heartfelt and hilarious look at race, culture and identity centers on middle-aged academic Thelonious “Monk” Ellison (Wright), who spitefully writes a novel filled with Black stereotypes as a joke and, much to his chagrin, it becomes his biggest career success. At the same time, Monk reconnects with estranged family members, including his doctor sister Lisa (Tracee Ellis Ross) and gay brother Cliff (Sterling K. Brown), when mom Agnes (Leslie Uggams) begins to struggle with dementia.
In addition to a lead actor Golden Globe nomination for Wright, “American Fiction” (in select theaters now, nationwide Friday) is also up for best comedy at Sunday’s ceremony. Those nods (and the potential for a best-picture Oscar nomination) follow a string of audience prizes during last fall’s film festival season and being named one of 2023’s top 10 films by the American Film Institute.
“I didn't want it to feel like an art-house thing that was only for a specific segment of people,” says Jefferson, who makes his directorial debut after a stint as a TV writer (“Watchmen,” “The Good Place”). “I wanted it to be a crowd-pleaser.”
'American Fiction' review:Provocative satire unleashes a deliciously wry Jeffrey Wright
Jeffrey Wright wants 'American Fiction' to 'electrify' race conversation
The film is an adaptation of Percival Everett’s 2001 novel “Erasure,” which came on Jefferson’s radar in 2020 at “a very, very low point.” A streaming drama he was working on about his time at the website Gawker was scrapped, and he had experienced the “limited perspective” of what people thought Black writers could do in journalism as well as in film and TV. “American Fiction” became his answer to this reductive view of Black stories in Hollywood, which often have civil rights or slave narratives and tales of trauma at the center.
“Especially in a country where we have people actively trying to ban books and rewrite history when it comes to racism and slavery, those movies are important,” Jefferson says. “My only contention has always been, why are we making these movies to the exclusion of almost everything else?”
Wright was drawn to its social commentary right from the first scene, where Monk riles up his mostly white literature students with a racial slur on the class whiteboard.
“We don't talk about race and identity and all of that stuff well in America,” the actor says. “We're afraid of it. We shy away from it. We get angry or we're traumatized by it. And at the end of the day, we haven't solved anything because we can't have productive conversations about it. So, I was pleased to find this film was an opportunity to maybe elevate the dialogue or at least electrify the conversation in a way that might be useful.”
What was the best movie of 2023?From 'Barbie' to 'American Fiction,' these are our top 10
Family ties bind Cord Jefferson's ‘American Fiction’ narrative
As much as Wright appreciates the movie’s even-handed criticism (“The film throws darts at everyone, including its lead”), the heart and soul of it is the “almost simple universality” of the Ellison clan. “It's a family that's at times insane, loving, maddening and, despite itself, together, and that sounds kind of like anyone's family,” Wright says. “It just happens to be populated by Black folks.”
Jefferson pulled from his own life for the script: Like Monk, he has two siblings with whom he has a “push-and-pull relationship,” and depending on the day, he might feel a little more Monk or Cliff. “Both these guys (are) going through a lot of pain and agony and fear that if they're honest and open, people aren't going to like what they see," Jefferson says. "There's a lot of me in those specific characters.”
Cliff hid his homosexuality from his late father, and Jefferson empathized with that decision: He would lie about smoking cigarettes to his mom, and she didn’t know his body was covered in tattoos until six months before she died of cancer in 2016. “I really felt awful that she didn't fully know who I was and she never was going to now,” Jefferson says.
Wright’s mother also died of cancer, a year before he read Jefferson’s script. Monk's predicament amid an unraveling family resonated with the actor, who had been a caretaker for his mom and now is for his 94-year-old aunt.
“I understood the pressures that brings upon a person and the sacrifices both personal and professional. It plucks some close strings for me,” Wright says. “When my son saw the movie a couple of weeks ago, he said, ‘I really identified with a lot of the challenges that Monk's facing in terms of the world's perception of him.’
"And then he said, ’It's also a beautiful homage to Grandma.’ I said to him, ‘You got it, man.’ ”
veryGood! (4333)
Related
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Texas man who killed woman in 2000 addresses victim's family moments before execution: I sincerely apologize for all of it
- How AI can fuel financial scams online, according to industry experts
- Jason and Travis Kelce Poke Fun at Their Documentary’s Success Amid “Taylor Swift Drama”
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- What is the Gaza Strip? Here's how big it is and who lives there.
- How Val Chmerkovskiy Feels About Being in Throuple With Wife Jenna Johnson and Tyson Beckford
- 3,000-plus illegally dumped tires found in dredging of river used as regatta rowing race course
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Why It is absolutely not too late for Florida's coral reefs
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Man who found bag of cash, claimed finders-keepers, pays back town, criminal charge dropped
- Moving on: Behind Nathan Eovaldi gem, Rangers sweep Orioles to reach first ALCS since 2011
- 3 witchy books for fall that offer fright and delight
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Australian-Chinese journalist detained for 3 years in China returns to Australia
- How to talk to children about the violence in Israel and Gaza
- Human remains, other evidence recovered from Titan submersible wreckage
Recommendation
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
Wildlife Photographer of the Year winners show the beauty — and precarity — of nature
Get That Vitamix Blender You've Wanted on Amazon October Prime Day 2023
Huge rocket motors arrive at Los Angeles museum for space shuttle Endeavour display
Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell says he's out of money, can't pay lawyers in defamation case
Dillon Brooks ejected from first preseason game with Rockets after hitting opponent in groin
To run or not to run? New California senator faces tough decision on whether to enter 2024 campaign