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For One Night
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| For One Night | |
|---|---|
Promotional image | |
| Written by | Denetria Harris-Lawrence |
| Directed by | Ernest Dickerson |
| Starring | Raven-Symoné Aisha Tyler Jason Lewis Sam Jones III Daina Gozan |
| Music by | Patrice Rushen |
| Country of origin | United States |
| Original language | English |
| Production | |
| Editor | Stephen Lovejoy |
| Original release | |
| Release | February 6, 2006 |
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
[edit]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
[edit]- 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
[edit]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
[edit]- Raven-Symoné as Brianna McCallister
- Aisha Tyler as Desiree Howard
- Jason Lewis as Mark Manning
- Sam Jones III as Brandon Williams
- Gary Grubbs as Mr. Thornton
- William Ragsdale as Earl Randall
- Harold Sylvester as Mr Howard, Desiree's dad
- Donna DuPlantier as Aunt Marlene
- Joan Pringle
- Rhoda Griffis as Ginny Stephens
- Daina Gozan as Sela Moody
- Mills Allison as Ely Hardy
- Caroline Jahna as Carla Thornton
- James Aaron as Myron Dawson
- Louis Herthum as Sheriff Taylor
- Katie Seeley as Kelly Reynolds
- Azure Dawn as Lily Dubois
- Adam Powell as Paul Beaudine
- Chuck Halley as Newspaper Editor
Soundtrack
[edit]The end of the movie (prom scene) features Raven-Symoné's song "Gravity".[1]
Awards
[edit]- 2007 - Nominated; Image Award for Outstanding Actress in a Television Movie, Mini-Series or Dramatic Special (Aisha Tyler)
Releases
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Gravity" (For One Night) Video Link (YouTube)
- ^ "Surviving High School". Amazon. July 31, 2012.
External links
[edit]For One Night
View on GrokipediaBackground and Development
Real-Life Inspiration
The Lifetime television film 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.[8][9] Students had traditionally organized two separate private proms—one attended predominantly by white students and another by Black students—funded through unofficial channels to circumvent integration mandates.[8] 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.[9] The catalyst was Gerica McCrary, a Black 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.[3] In early 2002, 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.[8] Her efforts drew national media attention, including coverage from outlets like The New York Times and CNN, exposing the anomaly of de facto segregation in a post-civil rights era public school.[9] Community backlash included threats and parental opposition, underscoring entrenched racial tensions, yet McCrary's persistence pressured officials to act.[3] By March 2002, the Taylor County school board unanimously voted to prohibit the funding or sanctioning of racially segregated proms, mandating that any senior event be inclusive or face district penalties.[8] Students subsequently organized a single integrated prom 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.[9] 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.[3] This incident was not isolated; similar private prom segregations occurred in other Southern schools around the same period, revealing gaps in federal desegregation enforcement.[8]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 Black student at Taylor County High School in Butler, Georgia, to end the school's decades-long practice of holding separate proms for white and Black students despite formal school desegregation since the 1970s.[3][10] Harris-Lawrence's script fictionalized elements, renaming McCrary as Brianna McCallister and emphasizing personal and community conflicts over racial traditions, while centering the narrative on the protagonist's determination to attend an integrated prom.[1] 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.[11] Pre-production focused on assembling a cast suitable for a socially themed drama, with Raven-Symoné selected for the lead role of Brianna, marking her shift from comedic television roles to a dramatic lead highlighting themes of racial integration.[12] Supporting roles were filled by actors including Aisha Tyler as a mentor figure, Jason Lewis as a white student ally, and Sam Jones III, to portray interpersonal dynamics amid community resistance.[1] 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.[1] 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.[11]Plot Summary
For One Night depicts events in a small Southern town in 2002, 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.[13][3] Determined to attend prom together, Brianna 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.[14][3] Brianna rallies support among her peers, with a student vote approving an integrated prom sponsored by the school. Her persistence highlights ongoing racial divisions and ultimately culminates in the first unified prom, attended by most juniors and seniors, marking a symbolic breakthrough in local customs.[15][3]Cast and Characters
Raven-Symoné stars as Brianna McCallister, a determined black high school senior in a small Southern town who initiates a campaign to end the tradition of racially segregated proms after both the white and black student groups seek the same DJ.[1][16] Aisha Tyler plays Desiree Howard, an Atlanta-based journalist who covers the story and allies with Brianna to challenge local resistance. Sam Jones III portrays Brandon Williams, Brianna's supportive boyfriend and fellow student who joins her advocacy efforts.[1][17]| Actor | Character | Role Description |
|---|---|---|
| Gary Grubbs | Mr. Thornton | The school principal who initially opposes integration but faces mounting pressure.[1][17] |
| Jason Lewis | Mark Manning | A white student involved in prom planning dynamics. |
| William Ragsdale | Earl Randall | A local figure representing community opposition.[18] |
