Los Angeles Times

Q&A: A grateful Tarell Alvin McCraney thanks grandmothers in 'Head of Passes'

Eight months after winning the Oscar for adapted screenplay with director Barry Jenkins for "Moonlight," Tarell Alvin McCraney might be expected to be leading a different life. After all, most outside of the theater world had not known the MacArthur fellow before he took the Academy Awards stage.

But life's actually pretty much the same, McCraney said.

"It's still equally as busy as it was before," he said. "My priorities didn't shift, and so the work around those priorities is still largely never done."

Those priorities include completing summer programming for a Miami community center and staging of his play "Wig Out!" in Washington, D.C. And as rehearsals kicked off in Los Angeles for his play "Head of Passes," which opened at the Mark Taper Forum on Sunday, OWN announced that he'd be creating a TV series for Oprah Winfrey's network.

Oh, and in July he began his stint as chair of the Yale School of Drama's playwriting department.

During "Head of Passes" rehearsals, The Times spoke with McCraney, 36,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times6 min readAmerican Government
Young Voters Don't Give Biden Credit For Passing The Biggest Climate Bill In History
President Joe Biden spent his Earth Day in a national forest this year with an explicit pitch to young people: a climate jobs corps intended to excite Gen Z the way John F. Kennedy's Peace Corps inspired their grandparents. Biden took a selfie with R
Los Angeles Times3 min readAmerican Government
LZ Granderson: Trump's Racist 'Welfare' Dog Whistle Is Nonsense Just Like Reagan's
Donald Trump took his dog whistle down to Florida last weekend, where he reportedly told a room full of donors: "When you are Democrat, you start off essentially at 40% because you have civil service, you have the unions and you have welfare." He the
Los Angeles Times6 min read
A Tale Of Two Downtowns In LA: As Offices Languish, Apartments Thrive
By many measures, downtown Los Angeles’ newest apartment tower is over the top with such gilded flourishes as stone tiles from Spain lining the elevator cabs and hand-troweled Italian plaster on interior walls. Hummingbirds have somehow found the fru

Related Books & Audiobooks