About the film
Reginald Dwayne Betts went to adult prison at 16 and survived to write about it. March Forth is an intimate exploration into the life and thoughts of this acclaimed poet, author, lawyer, activist, and MacArthur “Genius Award” winner. Betts served almost nine years for carjacking, and before becoming an adult bore witness to the cruelties of the American legal system. In prison he named himself, “Shahid,” meaning witness in Arabic. In solitary confinement, he became a poet. After his release on March 4th, 2005, Betts was determined to march forth into the world and leave prison behind. He began teaching, publishing multiple award-winning collections of poetry, a memoir, and even graduating from Yale Law School. As an attorney, he’s secured the release of men he served time with. But instead of leaving prison behind, in 2020, he created Freedom Reads, a non-profit that places libraries he curates in prison cell blocks across America. The return has been complicated. Going back means remembering who is left behind and more painfully, those he’s failed to get free. March Forth offers an intimate look into how he carries the two realities he moves through; one of immeasurable success and contribution and accolades and one of guilt and persistent doubt of his own self-worth. Through live performance, animation, poetry, and memoir excerpts narrated by Brian Tyree Henry, March Forth explores the lasting impact of serving time in adult prison as a teenager.
Cast & Crew
Reginald Dwayne Betts
Reginald Dwayne Betts is a poet, a lawyer, and the founder and CEO of Freedom Reads.
At sixteen, he confessed to an armed carjacking and was sentenced to nine years in adult prison. He discovered poetry and the law in a cell, and those discoveries have shaped everything since. Across two decades, his work has been one long inquiry into how a sixteen-year-old ends up in prison and what it takes to come home—an inquiry he has pursued through poetry, memoir, theater, photography, printmaking, and film.
Betts is the author of six books, including the memoir A Question of Freedom, winner of an NAACP Image Award, and most recently Doggerel (W.W. Norton, 2025). A Question of Freedom is a prison memoir that begins with Betts’s arrest and ends as he walks out of prison’s gates. His forthcoming memoir, Off the Cuff, begins the day he was released and navigates his first twenty years out of prison.
Out of a desire to connect more intimately with an audience, he created Felon: An American Washi Tale, a solo theater work made in collaboration with director Elise Thoron and a distinguished design team. The work transforms the story of what it means to be a felon into a meditation on what it means to be American. It has been performed in prisons and on major stages, including San Quentin and the Perelman Performing Arts Center. His exploration of these themes continues in the film March Forth, which premiered at the Tribeca Festival.
His visual art practice is an extension of his literary inquiry. While writing an essay about the poet and photographer Thomas Sayers Ellis, Betts began shooting black-and-white street photography, using the camera as a new lens on the world he has documented for years. As a printmaker, his collaboration with Titus Kaphar, Redaction, was exhibited at MoMA and acquired by Yale Law School. In a subsequent collaboration with Ruth Lingen, he transformed the clothing of friends serving lengthy prison sentences into handmade paper for prints now held in the collections of Brown University, the Morgan Library, and Smith College.
After law school, Betts began writing for The New York Times Magazine, where he has served as a poetry editor and a contributor exploring subjects ranging from Kamala Harris to Tariq Trotter. His essay “Getting Out,” an account of his journey from jail to Yale, won the 2019 National Magazine Award in Essays and Criticism. His most recent work, “A Gun Derailed My Childhood. As an Adult, I Found Relief at the Range,” continues a career-long examination of the impact of guns on the American landscape.
A 2021 MacArthur Fellow, Betts has held fellowships at Harvard’s Radcliffe Institute, the Guggenheim Foundation, New America, and the Aspen Institute. He serves on Connecticut’s Criminal Justice Commission and is an Associate Research Scholar at Yale Law School, where he earned his J.D.
Betts launched Freedom Reads with a $5.25 million grant from the Mellon Foundation. The organization is the only one in the country dedicated to opening libraries inside prison cellblocks. Each Freedom Library is handcrafted, often by people who have served time themselves, and placed within arm’s reach of the people it serves. Betts founded it on a simple conviction: freedom begins with a book.
Robe Imbriano
DIRECTOR
ROBE IMBRIANO is an award-winning director and showrunner. His animated musical documentary about the injustice of cash bail, “Criminal,” animated by Thomas Curtis with music and lyrics by Stew Stewart and Heidi Rodewald and published by The New Yorker, won Best Animated Short at the UrbanWorld Film Festival. He was the showrunner of the Hulu series, Killing County, with Colin Kaepernick.
Imbriano co-created and Executive Produced the Netflix documentary series Amend, starring Will Smith and featuring Mahershala Ali, Samuel L. Jackson, Sherrilyn Ifill, Bryan Stevenson to tell the story of the 14th Amendment and America’s struggle with equality. He was a showrunner of the launch of Soul of a Nation, the very first major broadcast network series about Black life in America, nominated for 11 Emmy Awards in its very first season. Imbriano has written and produced for everyone from Diane Sawyer and Peter Jennings to Bill Moyers and Oprah Winfrey, winning numerous honors along the way.
Valerie Hong
DIRECTOR
She has profiled John Legend, Cynthia Erivo, Halle Berry, Elizabeth Alexander, and more. Notable credits include Colin Kaepernick’s Killing County, ABC News’ groundbreaking series Soul of a Nation, and Vice World News’ Gangs Inc. Her documentary work has appeared on ABC, Hulu, HBO, and Netflix to name a few. She’s a proud member of the WGAE and Brown Girls Doc Mafia.
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