As an admirer of American actor André Holland, I was happy to learn that his latest film received high praise earlier this month at the prestigious Sundance Film Festival.
Titled Exhibiting Forgiveness, the film has been described as a “powerful story of an artist forced to reconnect with his abusive father.” It’s also being lauded as the “striking debut” of artist-turned-filmmaker Titus Kaphar.
Following is an excerpt from David Canfield’s Vanity Fair review of Exhibiting Forgiveness, a film which Canfield contends serves as André Holland’s “acting master class.”
Titus Kaphar is used to a person taking in his art for, on average, about 27 seconds. The decorated contemporary painter has his work displayed in museums around the world, typically hung on gleaming white walls for passersby to stop, take a look, form an opinion, and move on. “Maybe they’re disinterested, maybe there’s something that was distracting them, whatever – the reality is, they don’t know where the work comes from,” Kaphar says. “They don’t know what the work is rooted in.”
He’s been thinking about this especially as he prepares to unveil his first feature film, Exhibiting Forgiveness (bowing at Sundance on Sunday), a memoiristic drama which provides that very context. “Being able to engage with the viewer over a two-hour period is not something that, as a painter, I get,” he says. “Film allows us to talk about before and after.”
One senses over the course of Exhibiting Forgiveness, an emotionally exhilarating debut layered with striking visuals, that Kaphar is a quick study. He had no conception of how to make a narrative feature coming into this. The movie originated as a sort of private documentary project, drawn from Kaphar’s difficult upbringing and his actual, recorded conversation with his father after 15 years of estrangement. He wanted to explain where he came from to his sons, to reveal himself to them through his art. Those conversations reignited memories. The memories led to writing. The writing inspired new paintings. And the paintings ultimately informed the final film, a fictionalized – if still profoundly personal – story of a successful artist named Tarrell (André Holland) who, upon a return visit to his hometown, is forced to confront the father, La’Ron (John Earl Jelks), who failed him as a child. In turn, he faces down his own artistic identity.
“Not every single moment in this film comes from life, but every single moment in this film is filled with truth,” Kaphar says. “Fiction really gave me the freedom to tell a lot of truth.”
A lot of that truth comes from Holland, who gives a career-best performance in the kind of showcase role he’s long deserved. Best known for lauded supporting turns in The Knick and Moonlight, he brings an astounding vulnerability to Tarrell, a result of his close collaboration with Kaphar. He’s matched by two Oscar nominees at the top of their game in a warm Andra Day as his musician wife, Aisha, and a ferocious Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor as his conflicted mother, Joyce [pictured above with Holland’s character Tarrell]. But Holland is never more riveting than when opposite theater veteran Jelks, embodying a recovering addict struggling to grasp the havoc he’s wrecked. One particularly intimate scene, which Kaphar says is near-verbatim to an actual encounter in his life, overwhelmed the director as he watched his star in action.
“André’s delivery was so extraordinary, it broke my heart – these are things that I have experienced,” Kaphar says. “Watching him deliver those lines hit me so hard that I had to leave the set for half an hour, because I could not stop crying.”
Holland and Kaphar first connected through a mutual friend, Moonlight’s Oscar-winning scribe Tarell Alvin McCraney. The director always knew this was the guy for his movie. After receiving the script, Holland was immediately on board, and went up to New Haven, Connecticut, to spend time with Kaphar in his art studio. “We fell for each other as artists,” Holland says. “He had seen some of my work and was excited to see me take on something that was a bit larger in scope, and that was challenging in different ways – which is also something that I’ve wanted for some time too. It was a gift to me to get a chance to do it.” Kaphar gave his actor total access; he didn’t hold back in revealing the deepest personal inspirations, even those not seen in the film, that drove a singular exploration of childhood trauma.
“It touched that thing in me that made me go, ‘Yep, I want to be a part of this,’” Holland says. “I don’t want to forget that feeling. I got it when Moonlight came along, and I got it with this project.”
. . . Holland still remembers what was going through his head the first time he visited Kaphar’s studio, after reading a draft of Exhibiting Forgiveness. “I was gobsmacked by just the scale, the detail, the beauty of the work – and then was terrified thinking about, How in the world am I meant to replicate any version of that?” he says. On day one, Kaphar tasked Holland with mixing paints. He demonstrated how to hold brushes. He showed him how to make marks on canvas. Holland’s fears around replicating the work of a renowned artist were matched by his dedicated approach to the craft. He’s the kind of actor that won’t, can’t fake it. He needed to be a full-time student, and went step by step. “We were learning all the way up until the last day,” Holland says.
Kaphar hasn’t shown many people that documentary he was working on that initially led to Exhibiting Forgiveness, that opened the artistic dialogue about his reunion with his father. But he did show it to Holland, the beginning of a long, active, intensely intimate collaboration that you sense, in conversation, remains ongoing. “Derek Cianfrance, my producer and mentor on this film, said to me, ‘One of the most important things that you can do as a director is choose people you trust, and let them be great’ – that’s primarily what I did,” Kaphar says. “What did I feel comfortable with? Almost nothing. None of this is familiar. But there were so many times where I was on set, watching André engage with other members of the cast and completely forgetting to yell cut, because he’s that enrapturing.” Based on Holland’s performance, there’s a director with good instincts.
– David Canfield
Excerpted from “André Holland Leads an Acting Master Class
in the Wrenching Drama Exhibiting Forgiveness”
Vanity Fair
January 19, 2024
Excerpted from “André Holland Leads an Acting Master Class
in the Wrenching Drama Exhibiting Forgiveness”
Vanity Fair
January 19, 2024
Above: André Holland, from left, Titus Kaphar and John Earl Jelks attend the premiere of “Exhibiting Forgiveness” at the Eccles Theatre during the Sundance Film Festival on Saturday, January 20, 2024, in Park City, Utah. (Photo: Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)
Above: The cast of Exhibiting Forgiveness with the film’s director Titus Kaphar. From left: John Earl Jelks, Andra Day, Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor, Titus Kaphar, and André Holland.
Related Off-site Links:
Exhibiting Forgiveness: Sundance 2024 Film Review – Matthew Pyne (Utah Stories, January 25, 2024).
Exhibiting Forgiveness Electrifies Sundance with Packed and Powerful Premiere – Dominic Patten (Deadline, January 20, 2024).
André Holland Devastates in a Heartbreaking Portrait of Reconciling Generational Family Pain and Healing – Rodrigo Perez (The Playlist, January 20, 2024).
Exhibiting Forgiveness Review: André Holland Powers Moving Father-Son Drama – Benjamin Lee (The Guardian, January 21, 2024).
Exhibiting Forgiveness: A Powerful Portrait of an Artist Haunted by the Past – Ross McIndoe (Slant, January 25, 2024).
In Exhibiting Forgiveness, André Holland Crafts a Work of Art – Therese Lacson (Collider, January 28, 2024).
André Holland Shines in Artist Titus Kaphar’s Sensitive Debut – Lovia Gyarkye (The Hollywood Reporter, January 20, 2024).
Exhibiting Forgiveness Review: André Holland Brings Passion to This Raw Family Drama – William Bibbiani (The Wrap, January 20, 2024).
André Holland Grapples with Breaking the Cycle in Delicate Debut Feature – Jourdain Searles (IndieWire, January 20, 2024).
Visual Artist Titus Kaphar Makes a Personal Film Debut with Exhibiting Forgiveness – Lindsey Bahr (The San Diego Union-Tribune, January 23, 2024).
Exhibiting Forgiveness Should Be 2024's First Awards Contender After Sundance Standing Ovation – Trey Mangum (Blavity, January 22, 2024).
Shirley First Look: Regina King In Netflix’s Shirley Chisholm Biopic with Terrence Howard, André Holland and More – Trey Mangum (Blavity via Yahoo! News, January 9, 2024).
André Holland and Gemma Chan to Topline Helmer Duke Johnson’s The Actor – Matt Grobar (Deadline, April 4, 2023).
High Fyling Bird Is One of the Best Netflix Films You’re Not Watching – Dominic Griffin (Baltimore Beat, February 21, 2023).
Tiffany Boone Joins André Holland in Apple’s Huey P. Newton Series Big Cigar – Joe Otterson (Variety, June 15, 2022).
22 Photos That Prove Moonlight’s Andre Holland Deserves Your Gaze – Nancy Einhart (Pop Sugar, February 25, 2017).
André Holland Talks The Knick, Research for the Role, Racism of the Era, Selma, and More – Christina Radish (Collider, October 17, 2014).
For more of André Holland at The Wild Reed, see:
• The Latest on the Return of Dr. Algernon Edwards
• André Holland: “There Are So Many Stories in Our Community That Are Yet to Be Told”
• Vulnerability Is Power
• Stephen A. Russell on Moonlight
Opening image: André Holland at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival. (Photo: Jeff Vespa)
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