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    Thursday, April 18, 2024

    Holland travels from 'Moonlight' on screen to August Wilson play on Broadway

    Andre Holland, shown at the 2016 Costume Designers Guild Awards in Beverly Hills, starred in "Moonlight" and is now on Broadway in August Wilson's “Jitney." (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)

    There was someone important missing when the cast and creators of the film "Moonlight" joyfully crowded a Los Angeles-area stage last month to accept the Golden Globe for best film drama.

    That was rising star Andre Holland, and he had a very good reason to skip the party: He was across the country, working his current job — the August Wilson play "Jitney" on Broadway.

    "At intermission, I remember looking glancing down at my phone, and there were all these messages from people saying, 'Oh, my God! Are you there?' 'What's going on?' 'Who's going to win?' But I didn't look at any of it until after the show," he said.

    Holland, who has starred in the films "Selma" and "42" and the Cinemax series "The Knick" opposite Clive Owen, isn't the kind of actor who skips work, even for a trophy. He's very selective and determined to keep growing.

    "Time is something that's very important to me," he said. "There's a limited amount of it, and I don't want to spend it — the little bit that I have — doing things that I don't believe in."

    One of the things he definitely believes in is Wilson, a man he considers "one of the finest playwrights that has ever lived." Holland made his Broadway debut in 2009 in Wilson's "Joe Turner's Come and Gone" and returns this winter playing a young man in a cab company trying to make a better life.

    Co-star John Douglas Thompson, who plays a father figure to Holland's character, said the attention the younger actor has gotten on film for "Moonlight" and onstage in "Jitney" is richly deserved.

    "It's hard to find young actors who can do both with such charisma, such professionalism, such brilliant acting skills," said Thompson. "I think it's a great moment for audiences to come and see this young man and to get a good breadth of his talent."

    Film fans have already gotten a glimpse of that in "Moonlight," Barry Jenkins' acclaimed portrait of a young black man growing up in Miami. Though Holland only appears in the final third of the film, he turns in a performance full of humanity — sorrow, love, curiosity and kindness all wash over his face.

    Holland credits playwright Tarell McCraney with creating such a well-drawn character and hopes the success of "Moonlight" can inspire more powerful looks at all corners of our society. "In its best form, I think if this movie continues to be a success, I hope it'll provide that platform for other people to get their stories out there," he said.

    Holland, who grew up in a small town outside Birmingham, Alabama, got an undergraduate degree from Florida State University and a master's at New York University. He credits his parents, who both toiled in factory jobs, for believing in his gift.

    It was his mother who took him to see Wilson's "The Piano Lesson" at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival. "It was the first time that I had seen black characters onstage who were living an experience that was full and epic but also was recognizable to me," he said. "It was the first time I remember seeing myself in the work and seeing a path for myself."

    In one of those weird twists, Holland has found himself this award season with his "Moonlight" battling a film adaptation of Wilson's "Fences." He adores "Fences" — he even used one of its monologues to get into drama school — as much as he loves his film.

    "I was rooting for them and still am rooting for them while also rooting for 'Moonlight,'" he said, laughing. "I hope people who saw and enjoyed 'Fences' will come and see 'Jitney' as well. They're complementary pieces."

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