'Dear White People' creator Justin Simien says there's a deeper reason why the last season is a musical

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'Dear White People' creator Justin Simien says there's a deeper reason why the last season is a musical
Justin Simien attends the SAGindie Filmmakers Lunch At Sundance Film Festival in January 2020. Fred Hayes/Getty Images for SAGindie
'Dear White People' creator Justin Simien says there's a deeper reason why the last season is a musical
Brandon Bell and Ashley Blaine Featherson-Jenkins taking part in the musical for "Dear White People" season four. LARA SOLANKI / NETFLIX
  • "Dear White People" season four differs from previous seasons because it is a '90s themed musical.
  • The series' creator, Justin Simien, told Insider that he always "wanted to make a big ol' musical."
  • He added that the musical element was also a "perfect" metaphor for key themes in the show.

The writer, creator, and director of "Dear White People" Justin Simien recently revealed that he made the final season of the show a musical because it was the "perfect metaphor" for how Black people exist in white spaces.

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The Netflix series, based on the Sundance Film Festival award-winning movie made by Simien of the same name, follows the lives of Black students of a supposedly "post-racial" university called Winchester. The series is comedic and surreal, but raises many conversations about race and racism in America.

After two years, the fourth and final season of "Dear White People" is arriving on Netflix September 22. However, the teaser released in August surprised fans because it announced that the whole season would be a musical. Characters in the show have not really burst out into song before this.

"We've been wanting to do this musical episode from the beginning because the show always breaks into the surreality of someone's imagination," Simien told Insider earlier this week. "Breaking out into song at this point, four seasons in, is not the strangest thing that has happened in the show."

The "Dear White People" creator continued: "I'm a musical snob, so is Jaclyn [Moore, showrunner]. The first thing that a musical snob believes about a musical is there's gotta be a really integrated reason for the characters to be singing."

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'Dear White People' creator Justin Simien says there's a deeper reason why the last season is a musical
PATRICK MCELHENNEY / NETFLIX

"I just wanted to make a big ol' musical and I needed to lean into something that I passionately wanted to do for this final season and it felt appropriate."

Simien explained that the musical element was also a metaphor for these Black students at the predominantly-white Winchester, which if it existed offscren could be compared to Ivy League institutions.

"It felt like the perfect way to distil the metaphor of having to put on a show as a person of color, of having to sort of tap dance for people, of finding a way to express what's really inside," he said. "All these things that were so typical of musicals were also typical of my Black experience at least, and the way I wanted to portray their journey this season. So that's really where it started from and the more we talked about it, the more it made sense."

'Dear White People' creator Justin Simien says there's a deeper reason why the last season is a musical
LARA SOLANKI / NETFLIX

Logan Browning, who plays one of the lead characters Sam White, told Insider that she was "100% a fan" of the musical idea.

"I loved the fact that we got to do a musical season. I've always loved musicals," she admitted. "When I was in high school as a kid, I did lots of musical revues with my chorus and I was very serious about auditioning to get the parts that I wanted and I always got the parts I wanted."

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"Dear White People," also starring Brandon P. Bell, DeRon Horton, Marque Richardson and Ashley Blaine Featherson, returns September 22 on Netflix.

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