Lin-Manuel Miranda began writing what would become In the Heights as a university student. The musical play would launch him as a playwright and performer. Now, 20 years later, a movie version is in theaters for its first weekend. Miranda said like other artists, he was driven by ambition but also by something else. “It was a lot of fear, honestly,” Miranda said in a recent interview. “I was 18, 19 and starting to study theater. The fear was: I’m going into a field that has no space for me, that has no roles for me. It was sort of that thing of: No one’s going to write your dream show.” In the Heights opened on June 10. It celebrates many things: the Latino immigrant experience, neighborhood communities in New York City and life itself. The movie was supposed to be released last June, but was delayed by the coronavirus health crisis. The film’s director, however, thinks the delay was not necessarily a bad thing. Moviegoers might be ready for some energetic music, singing and dancing after a year of restricted life. In the Heights Director Jon M. Chu calls the movie, “a vaccine of joy.” “On the first day of shooting, we all got in a circle and I was like: Let go of all the pressure. Let’s just entertain…these people,” Chu remembers. On Wednesday, In the Heights played at the Tribeca Film Festival with showings across New York City. It has won praise from critics. The filmmakers hope In the Heights can be for Latinos what Black Panther was for Black Americans and what Crazy Rich Asians was for Asian Americans. Hispanics are the largest minority in the United States. They make up an even larger percentage of moviegoers. But, the minority is underrepresented in Hollywood productions. Chu said, in the end, it is moviegoers who decide. Crazy Rich Asians, which Chu also directed, was a surprise pop culture hit that led to changes in the movie industry. In the Heights tells a story about a Dominican-American store owner Usnavi who dreams of returning to the Caribbean area. Miranda himself played Usnavi in the theater version. Actor Anthony Ramos, a native of New York City’s Bushwick area, performs the part in the movie. Ramos said he experienced many of the things shown in the movie. “There are shots of the food that I grew up eating, the music that I grew up listening to,” he said. A sense of responsibility weighed on Ramos during the filming in Washington Heights. Before shooting, Ramos would shout to the crew: “For the culture!” a custom he learned from director Spike Lee while working on one of his movies. “It meant that we are all here, in this moment, doing this film and telling this story for something that is way bigger than any [of] us,” said Ramos. “This is for everybody who had to sacrifice, who had to break doors open.”
