| CAST INTERVIEWSThe Grace Card and Race in AmericaBy Hannah GoodwynCBN.com Producer
 CBN.com 
		  - Though The Grace Card touches on many facets of family life and personal faith, the Christian movie is  -- in part -- a cinematic look at the relationship between a white and a black cop in  the South.  Director David Evans’ idea for the film was jump started by  the racial tensions of the past and present in Memphis, Tennessee.  One of the lead characters, an African-American cop/part-time preacher named  Sam, is even based on one of Dr. Evan’s patients. When he wasn’t working on The Grace Card, Evans tended to his eye-care practice.  “I’ve been around [racism] my whole life,” Evans explains. “I’ve lived in Missouri; I now  live in Tennessee.  And it never ceases to amaze me how brazen people can be in their  conversations. Oftentimes, people will think, ‘Oh, he’s white, so he’s going to  go along with this joke or he’s going to go along with this negative comment  I’m making about someone because of their skin color’. Living in the South,  it’s something I’m constantly around.” The Grace Card Casts’ Encounters with RacismEvans’ lead actors also recall their earliest memories of  racial prejudice. Comedian Michael Joiner and newcomer Michael Higgenbottom both had not yet appeared in a  dramatic film prior to The Grace Card.  Intrigued by the opportunity and the movie’s developed story, the actors became  Mac McDonald (Joiner), a bitter, angry cop and Sam Wright, Mac’s faith-guided  partner (Higgenbottom). When asked about their personal encounters with racial  division, both stories confirm that racism isn’t just a Southern issue. Growing  up in a poor section of Gary,   Indiana, Michael Joiner was a  minority in his predominately black neighborhood. One day, when Joiner was a young boy, his mother encouraged him to invite an African-American boy to play with he and his friends. The group welcomed his new friend as he did.  “There was a lot of  hostility and racism in Gary  in 1960. That was still an era of deep racism like you don't always experience,”  Joiner recalls. “I didn't know what  my mom was doing until years later. That all it takes is one person to break  that crazy mold; and look what happened. So my mom taught me early on, don't  judge a person by their color. I went through teenage years, and it was cool to  tell black jokes and so on. I'm not going to lie to you. I think white people  in Gary who  tell you they didn't, ain’t telling the truth. But you grow. I gave my life to  the Lord. God showed me that's not how we judge people.” Joiner’s on-screen counterpart, Michael Higgenbottom, also  remembers dealing with racism growing up in Chicago, Illinois. “I went to a high  school that was predominantly white, probably about 80 percent if not more,  white. I remember somebody spray painting KKK in the main hallway of our school,”  Higgenbottom recalls. “I remember us having outright fights... I had a guy  follow my sister down the hall for a week just calling her every racial epithet  he could come up with.”  Ending Racism in America Veteran actor Louis Gossett, Jr., brings years of Hollywood experience to The Grace Card, as Sam’s grandfather, George. The Academy Award  winner says he signed onto this faith-based project because it matched what he believes  – that racial injustice must be stopped and can if we show grace and allow God  to guide us. Gossett’s personal mission end racism is evident off the  movie set in his foundational work through his organization, The Eracism Foundation.  “We really cannot get along without one another. The sooner  we learn that, the better our country will go…,” says Gossett, when he was explaining the racial superiority he sees in Hollywood. Higgenbottom also sees the immediate need to eradicate racism in America  and feels The Grace Card is a great  way to start the conversation. “We've come so far, but have a long way to go as far as racial  reconciliation,” Higgenbottom says. “It’s all over the country. And it's on  both sides. Racism comes from ignorance. People don't know about the other  person, and they're too scared to find out. People need to be more open when it  comes to talks about race relations.”  Joiner says,  “There's more that we can do than just—well it’s just kind of on the outward  appearance of ‘let's not be racist’. If we understand each other, there's a  God-birth thing that could happen in there,” Joiner says. “We're not meant to  be alike. We're different. But we need to celebrate our differences. That's why  God made us. Hate to say it would be a boring place with just white people. It  would be a boring world. So God made us to be a blessing. The devil used it for  a curse. We need to undo that curse and get back to that blessing, that reason  God made us for each other; blacks, whites, everybody.”  Reconciliation for AllEven beyond the issue of race, The Grace Card’s story prompts moviegoers to see the need for reconciliation  in all broken relationships.  “This movie,  especially by the end, is about redemption, grace, forgiveness on every level,  which means it's universal. It's good for every person. And [it’s about] families;  it’s just as important as what happened with me and my partner, as what  happened with me and my wife, and me and my child.” In agreement,  director David Evans says the film is “all about relationships and how we can  extend grace and forgiveness and ultimately achieve reconciliation. And it’s  not just about racial reconciliation. It’s about husbands and wives. It’s about  fathers and sons, and mothers and daughters, co-workers and neighbors. And  that’s what’s it all about. As Louis Gossett, Jr., said, [it’s about] ‘learning  to extend grace. It’s easy to receive grace, but it’s hard to give it away.’  And I believe people walked out of the theater tonight understanding that and  understanding what it’s important to be aware of people around and how we can  express ourselves differently.” For more stories, sign up to receive Entertainment News from   CBN.com in your email. 
  Hannah Goodwyn serves as the Entertainment and Family producer for CBN.com. For   more articles and information, visit Hannah's bio page.
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