
Over the past 25 years, cinephiles from all walks of life have made Tribeca Festival in NYC the go-to destination for a week-and-a-half-long celebration in filmmaking. Budding directors, veteran actors, short film aficionados, documentarians, animators — there’s virtually no subculture of cinema that isn’t represented when it comes to the annual festivities.
2026 proved to be no different, and it was even more of a treat if you were like us and attended with a heavy focus on Black narratives. It’s safe to say our culture was represented to the fullest, not only with the Opening Night screening of Questlove’s stellar Earth, Wind & Fire documentary but also with the Closing Night documentary premiere of Alicia Keys: Girl From Hell’s Kitchen.
Screening concurrently as the Knicks took home a historic NBA Finals win, the GRAMMY-winning R&B diva gave attendees even more for their buck with a post-film Q&A and live performance joined by Nas.
RELATED: Tribeca Festival 2026 – Inside The Meaning Of March Forth
This year at Tribeca featured a whopping 118 features from 143 diverse filmmakers. Throughout its 12-day span (June 3 – June 14), attendees bounced around from a host of venues that each provided its own cinematic experience. The Beacon Theatre, AMC 19th Street East and Village East by Angelika gave the classic movie theater vibes, while SVA Theatre and OKX Theater at BMCC Tribeca Performing Arts Center made you feel like the coolest art student all over again. Of course, the optimal viewing point proved to be Tribeca Festival’s official hub at Spring Studios due to its massive multi-level size and location for most of the world premiere events. The rooftop press lounge also didn’t hurt.
This year also hosted a round of conversations with celebrities and creators in the world of Hollywood, including the Tribeca Storytelling Summit, panels via Tribeca X and Tribeca NOW, the new Games Gallery and even live podcasting events. Throughout it all, it was refreshing to see Black stories being told from every angle.
Scroll along as we look back at everything that went down this year during Tribeca Festival from our cultural point of view. From appearances by fan-favorite Black celebrities to film projects telling our stories in a variety of ways, this a recap for your viewing pleasure.
DAY 1 – JUNE 3
Opening Night screening of Earth, Wind & Fire (To Be Celestial VS That’s the Weight of the World).