Music Musician
Bob Dylan wrote his song "
Only a Pawn in Their Game" about the assassination on July 2, 1963, on what would have been Evers' 38th birthday.
Nina Simone wrote and sang "
Mississippi Goddam" about the Evers case.
Phil Ochs referred to Evers in the song "
Love Me, I'm a Liberal" and wrote the songs "Another Country" and "Too Many Martyrs" (also titled "The Ballad of Medgar Evers") in response to the killing.
Malvina Reynolds referenced Evers' murder in her song "It Isn't Nice".
Matthew Jones and the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Freedom Singers recorded a version of the latter song.
Wadada Leo Smith's album
Ten Freedom Summers contains a track called "Medgar Evers: A Love-Voice of a Thousand Years' Journey for Liberty and Justice".
Jackson C. Frank's self-titled
debut album, released in 1965, also includes a reference to Medgar Evers in the song "Don't Look Back".
Essays and books Eudora Welty's short story "Where Is the Voice Coming From?", in which the speaker is the imagined assassin of Medgar Evers, was published in
The New Yorker in July 1963. Attorney
Bobby DeLaughter wrote a first-person narrative article entitled "Mississippi Justice" published in ''Reader's Digest
about his experiences as state prosecutor in the murder trial. He added to this account in a book, Never Too Late: A Prosecutor's Story of Justice in the Medgar Evers Case'' (2001). In
Remembering Medgar Evers: Writing the Long Civil Rights Movement,
Minrose Gwin, then the Kenan Eminent Professor of English at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and coeditor of
The Literature of the American South and the
Southern Literary Journal, looked at the body of artistic work inspired by Evers' life and death—fiction, poetry, memoir, drama, and songs from James Baldwin, Margaret Walker, Eudora Welty, Lucille Clifton, Bob Dylan, and Willie Morris, among others.
Film Evers was portrayed by
Howard Rollins in the 1983 television film
For Us the Living: The Medgar Evers Story. The 1996 film
Ghosts of Mississippi, directed by
Rob Reiner, explores the 1994 trial of De La Beckwith in which prosecutor DeLaughter of the Hinds County
District Attorney's office secured a conviction in state court. Beckwith and DeLaughter were played by
James Woods and
Alec Baldwin respectively, with
Whoopi Goldberg as Myrlie Evers. Medgar was portrayed by
James Pickens Jr. The film was based on a book of the same name. Preservationist
Catherine Fleming Bruce, whose book explored the restoration of the
Medgar and Myrlie Evers Home National Monument, opened with a quote from Reiner, who included the site as a location during filming of
Ghosts of Mississippi. In the documentary film
I Am Not Your Negro (2016), Evers is one of three Black activists (the other two are
Martin Luther King Jr. and
Malcolm X) who are the focus of reminiscences by author
James Baldwin, who recounts the circumstances of and his reaction to Evers' assassination. In the 2011 film
The Help, a clip of Evers speaking for civil rights appears on television, quickly followed by news of his assassination and a glimpse of an article by his widow published in
Life magazine. The 2020 documentary film
The Evers features interviews with his surviving family members. The 2022 film
Till depicts Evers (played by
Tosin Cole) assisting
Mamie Till-Bradley (
Danielle Deadwyler) seek justice for the murder of her son,
Emmett Till (
Jalyn Hall).
Television A 2021 episode of Extra History from
Extra Credits talks about Evers, his activism, and his assassination. In 2025, Mississippi Public Television produced a two-hour documentary,
About Everlasting: Life and Legacy of Medgar Evers. ==See also==