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| Anthony Mackie (top right) portrays Perry, a young gay man, and
Roger Robinson plays Bruce Nugent, an elderly gay man, in Rodney
Evans’ award-winning film ‘Brother to Brother.’
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Name: Rodney Evans
Age: 33
Occupation: Filmmaker
Residence: Brooklyn, N.Y.
Relationship status: Single
Education: Bachelor’s degree in modern culture and media/film
production from Brown University in Providence, R.I.; master’s degree from
the California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, Calif.
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HOME > ENTERTAINMENT > FEATURE
By: RHONDA SMITH COMMENTS
IT TOOK FILMMAKER Rodney Evans six years to make “Brother to Brother,”
an award-winning feature about the evolution of a friendship between two black
gay men in New York City — one just beginning to discover who he is, the
other reaching the end of his journey.
Evans, a native of New York City, touches on everything in the film from black
gay life during the Harlem Renaissance to interracial dating, which today can
still be thorny terrain to traverse. At the film’s core is the universal
quest to be understood and, perhaps, accepted.
Evans is scheduled to be in Washington, D.C., Jan. 28-29 for the opening of
“Brother to Brother” at the E Street Cinema, 11th and E streets,
NW. Though the film was screened here last October at Reel Affirmations, D.C.’s
annual gay and lesbian film festival, the latest presentation is part of the
film’s national release in cities across the country.
During a recent chat with the Blade, Evans cited several influences on his
work.
The first is Jim McKay, a producer and director whose credits include “Room,”
a film scheduled to be released in 2005, and “Brother to Brother.”
Another inspiration is Mike Nichols, who directed “Closer,” “The
Graduate,” as well as the television version of “Angels in America.”
Evans also said he is inspired by Marlon Riggs,the late director of “Black
Is … Black Ain’t” and “Tongues Untied,” both of
which are films that explore aspects of black gay life. Riggs, who was gay,
died in 1994.
Documentary filmmaker Isaac Julien, the gay director of “Baltimore”
in 2003 and “Baadasssss Cinema” in 2002, also influences Evans’
work, in addition to gay director Todd Haynes, whose hits include “Far
From Heaven” and “Poison.”
The gay filmmaker also cited Oscar Micheaux, the first African American to
produce a feature film — “The Homesteader,” in 1919 —
as a role model.
“He definitely influenced the visual aesthetic of the period scenes in
‘Brother to Brother,’” Evans said.
The central focus of the film
is really this relationship between Bruce Nugent [a gay writer during the Harlem
Renaissance] in his elderly years and this young black painter thrown out of
his house for being gay, and how they connect and transform each other. The
heart of the film is the evolution of their friendship. I hope the audience
is incredibly moved by the transformative power of that relationship and the
ways they affect each other.
People tend to believe the film is a
bit more autobiographical than it actually is. I did have a harsh and difficult
time coming out in my own family. Some of the experiences led me to think about
what it was like if that experience had been more extreme — if I had really
been put out of the house, how I would survive and learn the ability to connect
with other individuals. Although that was not my experience, it led me to thinking
about what that experience would be like and to talk to people who actually
had that experience. Also, I’m an artist. So I can empathize with that
struggle between maintaining your personal vision and having to survive financially.
Those are things Perry’s struggling with. But a lot of the aspects of
Perry’s life are fiction. A lot had to do with the collaboration between
me and [actor] Anthony Mackie, who had a strong take on who the character was
and how he wanted to embody that character.
I define myself as African American.
Both of my parents are from Jamaica. My father’s African American and
my mom is half Chinese and half German and grew up in Jamaica.
The film was inspired, partially, by
an earlier short film I did called ‘Close to Home.’ It deals with
me coming out to my family and the disintegration of a relationship that was
falling apart. ...
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