In Defense Of Ryan Murphy’s James Baldwin.

Robert Lashley
4 min readFeb 23, 2024

Yeah, Capote’s Baldwin was a magical negro that existed in the Author’s decaying mind. Which made Murphy’s capping their encounter as a dream sequence…pretty much work?

For those wondering if James Baldwin actually dished with Truman Capote about his society friends or million dollar ball, Sedat and Angela Pekay have a documentary for you. Between 1966 and 1973, the gifted Turkish photographer ( and his brilliant editor wife) struck up a deep friendship with the literary icon reeling from some of the biggest traumas of his life. Medgar Evers wasn’t just a civil rights comrade but a genuine Progressive/non-homophobic friend who was gunned down in the back by Byron De la Beckwith in 1963. The seventh street baptist church was the hub of the area Baldwin and Bayard Rustin had been trained to canvas until it became the place where four black girls were murdered by a fire bomb. The final straw was the murder of Malcolm X, who had made it a point to strike up a closer friendship with Baldwin after he was excommunicated from the Nation of Islam.

You can see the effect of a safe place, friendship, and space to rest on Baldwin in James Baldwin, From Another Place. In his other documentaries of the time, (Baldwin’s N*gger, Meeting The Man) he is…

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Robert Lashley
Robert Lashley

Written by Robert Lashley

Writer. Author. Former Jack Straw and Artist Trust Fellow. The baddest ghetto nerd on the planet.

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