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For One Night
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For One Night
Promotional image
Written byDenetria Harris-Lawrence
Directed byErnest Dickerson
StarringRaven-Symoné
Aisha Tyler
Jason Lewis
Sam Jones III
Daina Gozan
Music byPatrice Rushen
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
EditorStephen Lovejoy
Original release
ReleaseFebruary 6, 2006 (2006-02-06)

For One Night is a 2006 American made-for-TV drama film directed by Ernest Dickerson, written by Denetria Harris-Lawrence, and starring Raven-Symoné as Brianna McCallister and Aisha Tyler as Desiree Howard. The film's premise is based on the true story of Gerica McCrary, who made headlines in 2002 by getting Taylor County High School in her hometown of Butler, Georgia, to integrate the prom after thirty-one years of segregation.

Plot

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Inspired by the true story of an African American teenager who shook up a small town where high school proms had been racially segregated for decades. Amid the protests of the community and with the help of a newspaper reporter who returns to her hometown to cover the story, the two women are able to reverse decades of racist tradition and make history, at least for one night.

Cast

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  • Raven-Symone as Brianna McCallister
  • Aisha Tyler as Desiree Howard
  • Sam Jones III as Brandon Williams
  • Gary Grubbs as Mr. Thornton
  • William Ragsdale as Earl Randall
  • Jason Lewis as Mark Manning
  • Harold Sylvester as Mr. Howard
  • Donna Duplantier as Aunt Marlene
  • Joan Pringle as Mrs. Edna Howard
  • Rhoda Griffis as Ginny Stephens
  • Daina Gozan as Sela Moody
  • Mills Allison as Ely Hardy
  • Carolina Jahna as Carla Thornton
  • James Aaron Smith as Myron Dawson (credited as James Aaron)
  • Louis Herthum as Sheriff Taylor
  • Katie Seeley as Kelly Reynolds (credited as Katie Seely)
  • Azure Parsons as Lily Dubois (credited as Azure Dawn)
  • Adam Powell as Paul Beaudine
  • Mary Beth Kratky as Shannon Williams
  • Yvette Ganier as Juanita Dawson
  • Larry Gamell Jr. as Daryl Dawson (credited as Lawrence C. Gamell Jr.)
  • Mark Krasnoff as Ronald Macon
  • Andrea Ragsdale as Phyllis March
  • Harold Evans as Reverend Warren Richards
  • Adella Gautier as Mildred Lyttle
  • Brandi Gerard as Sally (credited as Brandi Coleman)
  • Chris Richardson as J.C. (credited as Christopher Brian Richardson)
  • Gary Desroche as Mr. Teppa (uncredited)
  • Lauren E. Michon as Heather #2 (uncredited)

Production

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For One Night is based on events that occurred in Taylor County, Georgia in 2002. It was filmed in the summer of 2005 in Jefferson, Louisiana shortly before Hurricane Katrina.

Cast

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Soundtrack

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The end of the movie (prom scene) features Raven-Symoné's song "Gravity".[1]

Awards

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Releases

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  • The film was released on iTunes. On July 31, 2012, the film was released in a package of 4 Lifetime movies on DVD titled 'Surviving High School'.[2] In September 2012 it got its own DVD release through A&E Entertainment.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
is a 2006 American made-for-television drama film directed by Ernest R. Dickerson, written by Denetria Harris-Lawrence, and starring as Brianna McCallister, a high school student challenging at her . The story, inspired by the real-life efforts of Gerica McCrary in , Georgia, in 2002 to end the town's tradition of separate proms for white and students, portrays community backlash and the push for integration amid longstanding social divisions. Premiering on Lifetime, the film highlights tensions in rural Southern schools where such separations persisted as private customs rather than legal mandates, drawing national attention to lingering racial practices. While praised for addressing an under-discussed issue, it has been critiqued for melodramatic elements that overshadow the factual basis, earning a 6.4/10 rating on from user reviews.

Background and Development

Real-Life Inspiration

The Lifetime For One Night draws its central premise from the 2002 events at Taylor County High School in Butler, Georgia, where longstanding informal segregation of senior proms persisted despite official school desegregation decades earlier. Students had traditionally organized two separate private proms—one attended predominantly by white students and another by students—funded through unofficial channels to circumvent integration mandates. This practice reflected residual social divisions in the rural community, where the student body was roughly evenly split by race, and interracial dating remained stigmatized. The catalyst was Gerica McCrary, a senior at the school, who publicly challenged the dual-prom tradition after facing resistance to her desire for an integrated event, particularly amid her relationship with a white classmate. In early , McCrary gathered support from peers and advocated before the local school board, highlighting how the separate events perpetuated division and violated the spirit of equal protection under law. Her efforts drew national media attention, including coverage from outlets like and , exposing the anomaly of segregation in a post-civil rights era public school. Community backlash included threats and parental opposition, underscoring entrenched racial tensions, yet McCrary's persistence pressured officials to act. By March 2002, the Taylor County school board unanimously voted to prohibit the funding or sanctioning of racially segregated , mandating that any senior event be inclusive or face district penalties. Students subsequently organized a single integrated on April 27, 2002, attended by over 200 participants from both racial groups, marking the first such unified event in the school's recent history. While the film dramatizes personal relationships and conflicts, the core inspiration—youth-led resistance to informal segregation yielding policy change—mirrors these verifiable facts, though real-world accounts note less interpersonal romance and more focus on systemic advocacy. This incident was not isolated; similar private prom segregations occurred in other Southern schools around the same period, revealing gaps in federal desegregation enforcement.

Pre-Production and Writing

The teleplay for For One Night was written by Denetria Harris-Lawrence, adapting the 2002 real-life campaign led by Gerica McCrary, a student at Taylor County High School in , Georgia, to end the school's decades-long practice of holding separate proms for white and students despite formal school desegregation since the . Harris-Lawrence's script fictionalized elements, renaming McCrary as McCallister and emphasizing personal and community conflicts over racial traditions, while centering the narrative on the protagonist's determination to attend an integrated prom. Lifetime Television initiated development on the project by early 2005, listing it as a telefilm in production updates from February 7 and April 15 of that year, ahead of its eventual premiere. focused on assembling a cast suitable for a socially themed drama, with selected for the lead role of Brianna, marking her shift from comedic television roles to a dramatic lead highlighting themes of . Supporting roles were filled by actors including as a mentor figure, Jason Lewis as a white student ally, and , to portray interpersonal dynamics amid community resistance. Ernest Dickerson was attached as director during this phase, leveraging his prior work on films addressing racial and urban issues, such as Juice (1992) and Bones (2001), to guide the film's tone toward realistic depictions of Southern social tensions without overt sensationalism. Production oversight fell under Lifetime's original movie slate, emphasizing inspirational stories drawn from contemporary events, with principal photography following script finalization later in 2005.

Plot Summary

For One Night depicts events in a small Southern town in , where high school traditions include racially segregated proms despite the schools having been desegregated decades earlier. The story focuses on Brianna McCallister, an African American senior at Taylor County High School, who enters into a romantic relationship with her white classmate, Marcus. Determined to attend prom together, initiates a campaign to integrate the event, partnering with local newspaper reporter Desiree Harper to raise awareness through media coverage. She encounters significant opposition from parents and community members committed to preserving separate proms for white and black students, who proceed to organize private alternatives. Brianna rallies support among her peers, with a student vote approving an integrated sponsored by the . Her persistence highlights ongoing racial divisions and ultimately culminates in the first unified , attended by most juniors and seniors, marking a symbolic breakthrough in local customs.

Cast and Characters

stars as McCallister, a determined high school senior in a small Southern who initiates a campaign to end the tradition of racially segregated proms after both the and student groups seek the same DJ. plays Desiree Howard, an Atlanta-based journalist who covers the story and allies with to challenge local resistance. portrays Brandon Williams, Brianna's supportive boyfriend and fellow student who joins her advocacy efforts.
ActorCharacterRole Description
Gary GrubbsMr. ThorntonThe school principal who initially opposes integration but faces mounting pressure.
Jason LewisMark ManningA white student involved in prom planning dynamics.
William RagsdaleEarl RandallA local figure representing community opposition.
Supporting roles include students, parents, and town officials navigating the ensuing social tensions, with the ensemble emphasizing interpersonal conflicts over the integration push.

Production Process

Filming and Locations

Principal photography for For One Night commenced in the summer of 2005 and lasted approximately two weeks. The production was primarily shot in Jefferson, a suburb of New Orleans, and surrounding areas in . These locations served to represent the rural Georgia town depicted in the film, despite the story's basis in events from . No specific interior or exterior sites, such as schools or venues for scenes, have been publicly detailed beyond the general New Orleans vicinity. The choice of aligned with state incentives for at the time, though direct evidence of credits influencing this project remains unconfirmed in available records.

Soundtrack and Music

The original score for For One Night was composed by , a jazz pianist, R&B singer, and known for her work and film projects. Rushen's contributions provided the underlying musical framework, emphasizing emotional tension and thematic elements of racial reconciliation central to the film's narrative about segregated proms in . Her score integrated subtle orchestral and contemporary elements to underscore scenes of conflict and resolution without overpowering the dialogue-driven drama. No commercial was released, limiting public access to the full score beyond the film's broadcast. The film prominently features the song "," performed by lead actress , during the climactic integrated prom sequence. Written by , , and , and produced by Poyser, the track lyrically promotes themes of and , aligning with the story's message of overcoming division: "Let's put away our fears just for one night / Acceptance is the way, it's in both you and me." Released as a promotional single tied to the movie, "" was not included on any of Raven-Symoné's major studio albums but served as an original piece tailored to the production. No additional licensed songs or extensive needle-drop tracks are credited, keeping the musical focus on Rushen's score and this custom end-title performance.

Themes and Analysis

Racial Integration and Social Tensions

The film For One Night portrays as a contentious battle against entrenched social customs in a rural Southern high school during the mid-1970s, a period when public schools had been legally desegregated for over a decade but extracurricular events like proms remained segregated by tradition. In the story, Taylor County High School maintains two separate proms—one for white students and one for students—organized informally by parent committees to evade formal integration mandates, reflecting persistent segregation despite the 1971 nationwide school desegregation enforced by federal courts. Protagonist Brianna McCallister, a senior aspiring to attend prom with her white boyfriend, challenges this practice, highlighting how interracial relationships exposed underlying racial hierarchies and provoked resistance from school administrators reluctant to override community norms. Social tensions escalate through interpersonal and communal conflicts, including familial opposition—Brianna's father, a civil , weighs activism against personal safety—and peer taunts that underscore mutual distrust between racial groups. White parents and students view the push for a unified as an assault on cultural preservation, leading to heated board meetings and veiled threats, while members the risks of forcing integration amid fears of backlash. The depicts these frictions as rooted in post-civil inertia, where legal victories had not eroded informal barriers, resulting in isolated acts of overshadowed by broader . Although inspired by Gerica McCrary's 2002 campaign at the real Taylor County High School in Butler, Georgia—which succeeded in prompting partial integration without the film's dramatized violence—the movie relocates events to the and amplifies perils like anonymous threats and a student's death to emphasize unresolved racial animosities. This artistic choice underscores causal realism in integration efforts: voluntary social mixing lagged behind institutional changes due to entrenched preferences and fears on , with small-town dynamics amplifying resistance absent in urban settings. Critics noted the film's exaggeration, as the actual incident involved negotiation over confrontation, yet it accurately captures how such traditions symbolized incomplete desegregation even into the .

Portrayals of Agency and Resistance

The film portrays the agency of black students, particularly protagonist Brianna McCallister (played by ), through her proactive challenge to the longstanding of separate proms at her high . As a high-achieving senior and candidate, Brianna initiates petitions and confronts school administrators, including , to demand a unified event, reflecting a deliberate exercise of personal initiative amid post-desegregation inertia. This depiction emphasizes individual resolve over collective movement, with Brianna's bubbly yet assertive demeanor underscoring how ordinary teens could disrupt norms through direct advocacy rather than external intervention. Cross-racial alliances further illustrate agency, as collaborates with white football player Tommy (Jason Lewis), who defies to support integration, co-organizing logistics and facing personal repercussions. Their romance adds a layer of voluntary , portraying agency as emerging from interpersonal relationships rather than imposed , though the film simplifies dynamics for dramatic effect. Supporting characters, such as friends and family, contribute through encouragement and participation, but the narrative centers 's as the catalyst, aligning with the real-life inspiration of Gerica McCrary's 2002 efforts in Georgia, albeit amplified for tension. Resistance is depicted primarily as institutional and communal entrenchment, with the maintaining dual proms due to parental preferences and unspoken racial persisting decades after legal desegregation. The principal embodies bureaucratic inertia, citing logistical excuses to preserve separation, while white parents voice overt opposition rooted in tradition and discomfort with change. To heighten stakes, the film introduces escalated threats, including implied and tactics, which reviewers note as dramatizations beyond the real events' more subdued social pushback. Black community members also show mild resistance, preferring familiar segregated events, portraying opposition as bidirectional and habit-driven rather than solely ideological, though this nuance is subordinated to the protagonists' triumph. Overall, these portrayals frame agency as youthful, defiance against a resistant social fabric sustained by apathy and custom, culminating in the successful integrated on May 17, 2002, in the story's timeline. The narrative prioritizes inspirational resolve, but critics observe that the added —such as romantic subplots and crises—serves emotional appeal over precise replication of the actual low-key negotiations in .

Release and Distribution

Initial Broadcast

"For One Night" premiered as a Lifetime Original Movie on the Lifetime Television cable network on February 6, 2006, airing at 9:00 p.m. ET/PT. The broadcast was announced by Lifetime in a , 2006, press release, which described the film as depicting a high school senior's campaign to end racially segregated proms in her Southern town. Directed by Ernest R. Dickerson and written by Denitria Harris-Lawrence, the 89-minute drama starred as Brianna McCallister, a challenging the tradition of separate proms for white and students. The initial airing targeted Lifetime's core demographic of women viewers, fitting the network's focus on dramatic stories of personal and social struggle. As a made-for-television production, this constituted the film's worldwide debut, with no prior theatrical release. Promotional materials highlighted the story's roots in actual events from a Georgia high school, underscoring themes of racial division persisting into modern times. The broadcast occurred amid Lifetime's 2006 lineup of original movies addressing social issues, though specific viewership figures for the premiere were not publicly detailed in contemporary reports.

Home Media and Subsequent Releases

The film was released on DVD by A&E Home Video in 2012, distributed as a single-disc edition containing the 88-minute feature. This release, marketed under Lifetime's branding, included the original broadcast version without additional special features such as commentary tracks or deleted scenes, consistent with standard packaging for made-for-TV movies of the era. Digital distribution followed, with availability for rental or purchase on platforms including Amazon Prime Video and Apple TV, where it is offered in standard definition. Free ad-supported streaming emerged later on services like Tubi, Pluto TV, and The Roku Channel, reflecting broader shifts toward accessible on-demand viewing for older television films. No Blu-ray edition or 4K remaster has been issued, limiting physical media options to the 2012 DVD. Subsequent re-releases have been minimal, primarily through digital aggregators rather than new physical formats, as the title's niche appeal—centered on themes of school desegregation—has not prompted major studio investments in updated editions. Availability on includes user-uploaded full versions, though these lack official licensing and may vary in quality. As of 2025, streaming options remain the primary access method for contemporary audiences, with no reported international DVD variants beyond the U.S. edition.

Reception and Impact

Critical Response

For One Night received mixed reviews from critics, who praised its handling of racial integration themes but criticized its dramatic excesses and inconsistencies. The film aired on Lifetime on February 6, 2006, and was described in the Los Angeles Times as "an inconsistent but overall engaging TV movie" that sensitively explores nuance and human behavior in small-town traditions. Reviewers noted strong performances from supporting actors, including Mills Allison and Daina Gozan, as well as the local Louisiana cast, particularly in scenes depicting ordinary interactions that build tension effectively. However, the same review highlighted flaws such as awkward contrivances, overly preachy speeches, and clichéd portrayals of the industry, positioning the film between standard Lifetime fare and more ambitious efforts. Directed by Ernest R. Dickerson and written by Denitria Harris-Lawrence, the adaptation relocated the true 2002 Georgia events to 1970s and incorporated romantic subplots, which some viewed as diluting historical accuracy for . Coverage was limited, reflecting the modest profile of Lifetime original movies, with no major reviews appearing in outlets like Variety or .

Audience Reactions

Audience reception to For One Night was generally positive but tempered by critiques of its dramatic execution, with an IMDb user rating of 6.4 out of 10 based on 492 reviews. Viewers frequently commended the film's exploration of in a small-town high school setting, highlighting its basis in real events from 1970s Georgia where unofficial proms persisted along racial lines until challenged by . Many appreciated the emotional resonance of protagonist Brianna McCallister's (Raven-Symoné) election as prom queen and the ensuing community backlash, describing it as a "powerful message" that illuminated persistent social divides. On Rotten Tomatoes, the audience score stands at 64%, reflecting a similar mix of approval for the thematic focus on integration and resistance against outdated traditions, though sample sizes remain modest. often centered on the performances, particularly Symoné's portrayal of agency amid tension, and the film's role in sparking discussions on historical in . However, detractors noted the narrative's reliance on Lifetime-style , with complaints of "poorly plotted" sequences, "unbelievable and inconsistent characters," and a tendency to prioritize emotional appeals over nuanced historical depth. Some viewers expressed frustration that the story simplified complex racial dynamics for broader appeal, trading substantive analysis for "emotional punch" and missing opportunities to delve into America's multifaceted racial history. Despite these limitations, the movie resonated with audiences interested in civil rights narratives, contributing to its enduring availability on streaming platforms where it garners steady, if not enthusiastic, viewership.

Awards and Nominations

For One Night received one notable award nomination. At the 38th in 2007, was nominated for Outstanding Actress in a Television Movie, Mini-Series or Dramatic Special for her portrayal of Desiree Howard, the school's principal. The award went to for her performance in Tsunami: The Aftermath. No other major awards or nominations were accorded to the film or its cast.

Cultural Legacy and Debates

"For One Night" has maintained a modest cultural legacy as a Lifetime that dramatizes individual efforts toward in Southern high schools, loosely drawing from real-life events such as the resistance to desegregated proms in . The production ranks among higher-rated Lifetime originals by user scores, reflecting appreciation for its focus on personal agency amid social tensions, though its broader influence appears confined to discussions of civil rights-themed media rather than sparking widespread societal reflection. Debates surrounding the film center on its historical portrayal and dramatic liberties. Critics noted that while the core conflict—community pushback against an integrated prom—mirrors documented cases of segregation persisting into the late , the narrative amplifies interpersonal drama in a manner typical of Lifetime's format, potentially overshadowing nuanced causal factors in racial resistance, such as entrenched local customs over overt legal mandates. Some analyses argue it undervalues the complexity of America's racial divisions by prioritizing sentimental resolution, thus missing opportunities to explore deeper institutional barriers to integration. Cast member emphasized the film's intent to underscore enduring needs for embracing equality, attributing any perceived gaps to the constraints of television storytelling rather than deliberate simplification. Viewer responses vary, with praise for its message on contemporary relevance contrasting critiques of inconsistent character motivations and outdated racial tropes.

References

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