Once Upon a Time in Harlem: Unearthing William Greaves’ Lost Masterpiece
Once Upon a Time in Harlem: Unearthing William Greaves’ Lost Masterpiece The streetlamps on 125th Street have long illuminated the epicenters of Black intellectual and artistic life, but few documents capture the neighborhood's dense historical gravity quite like the documentary Once Upon a Time in Harlem. Directed by the legendary vanguard filmmaker William Greaves and his son, David Greaves, this archival film arrived on the international festival circuit in 2026 as a profound, revelatory act of historical preservation. The Core Premise: A Night at Duke Ellington’s Townhouse The film belongs entirely to a single, extraordinary summer evening in 1972. Inside Duke Ellington’s Harlem townhouse, William Greaves convened an unprecedented gathering. He invited every surviving luminary of the Harlem Renaissance he could locate—foundational figures of the 1920s artistic and literary awakening who, in many cases, had not occupied the same room in fifty years. Over t...