SPOILER ALERT: This interview contains spoilers from “The Blackening,” now playing in theaters.

Dewayne Perkins is living his dream — though the $8 million box office tally for “The Blackening” wasn’t something he actually dreamed was possible.

The microbudget (just $5 million) horror-comedy, co-written by and starring Perkins, follows a group of college friends who reunite to celebrate Juneteenth at a cabin in the woods, only to be hunted by a killer. But in a genre where the Black character usually dies first, what happens when all the characters are Black?

Perkins conceived the idea in 2016 as a sketch for his Chicago-based comedy troupe 3Peat. When it aired as a short on Comedy Central in 2018, the clip went viral and got the attention of Tracy Oliver, who — hot off the $140 million box office success of 2017’s “Girls Trip” — called with the idea that they could expand “The Blackening” into a feature film.

“I had no thought past living in the moment, like this is my task: make a sketch. I didn’t think that a movie was possible until Tracy called me,” Perkins tells Variety. “I said, ‘You know more than me, so let’s do this.’”

Fast forward to 2022, when the film’s director Tim Story (“Barbershop,” “Ride Along”) snuck Perkins into a test screening. Seeing “The Blackening” on the big screen for the first time was “pretty otherworldly,” Perkins says. During the process of making the movie, he’d fantasized about what it would be like to hear the audience absorb the movie exactly how he’d intended. “They’re answering the questions. They’re singing along. They’re yelling at the screen,” he explains. “And that’s exactly what it was.”

The creator was surreptitiously seated between an older Black couple and two Black girl friends, one of whom whispered to her friend that his character (also named Dewayne) was her favorite. “I was just like ‘Oh my God, they don’t even know I’m sitting right next to them!’” he recalls.

When it came time for his seatmates to fill out their scoresheets, Perkins peeked at their grades. “I was filling out my card like, ‘Umm… 10s across the board. What y’all writing over there?’” he laughs, adding: “That was the best moment of my career so far. It was a literal dream come true. And that dream is no longer a dream; it’s just a goal that was achieved.”

When Perkins sits down with Variety in early June, he’s just finished a day of interviews for the film’s press junket — his first experience with the rapid-fire interview style. “It was amazing!” he says, as we hustle through the bustling bar at the London Hotel in West Hollywood. “I truly was like, ‘This is too short, I need more time to talk to you.’”

Perkins was grouped with his co-stars X Mayo and Jermaine Fowler for his interviews. (The stellar ensemble cast also includes Grace Byers, Antoinette Robinson, Sinqua Walls, Melvin Gregg, Yvonne Orji and Jay Pharoah.) “I don’t know why they would put the three bad kids in the same room,” he adds, admitting that the trained improvisers had been cutting up. “It was just lots of bits. It is very hard to not, ‘Yes, and,’ because it’s so ingrained.”

To celebrate, we order a round of French 75s, his new favorite cocktail. “It’s like adult lemonade,” he says, grinning as we clink glasses, settling into a booth to discuss the process of adapting “The Blackening” into a feature, the film’s take on horror tropes and what he hopes comes next.

Melvin Gregg, Grace Byers, Antoinette Robertson (front), Sinqua Walls, Jermaine Fowler, Dewayne Perkins, X Mayo in “The Blackening.” ©Lionsgate/Courtesy Everett Collection

Perkins and Oliver co-wrote the script, bonding over their love of horror films like Wes Craven’s “Scream” as well as “Scary Movie,” Keenan Ivory Wayans’ classic spoof. “I like things that make me scared; it’s a good feeling,” Perkins chirps. “Like, make me jump!” From a young age, he was intrigued by human reaction to high stakes situations, so horror was the perfect outlet.

“I like the emotional journey that it takes you on, it’s almost like emotional manipulation and fear is such an innate human emotion,” Perkins says. “As a young kid, I feel like the stakes are always so high. You’d be like, ‘Yeah, life’s a horror movie. I’m a child with no power. This is terrifying!’”

Growing up as a Black gay kid on the south side of Chicago, authority figures like police and teachers could be “horrific characters” because they held a certain (and sometimes scary) power over him. Horror captured those emotions, with characters forced into situations where they felt powerless and emerging changed by the experience. “Watching people navigate fear — because I had so much of it — fascinated me,” he explains. “And as I got older, I learned how to deal with that [fear] myself.”

Personally, Perkins learned to overcome his fears academically, using his critical thinking skills to dissect his emotions and recognize that what he feared wasn’t always the truth of the situation. “My counter is to know more so I have space and knowledge to know how to regulate,” he says.

Professionally, he embraced it. “Scream” was particularly influential on Perkins, who marveled at the film’s self-aware nature and meta jokes. It was illuminating to see Craven’s commentary on the horror genre and recognize the patterns and tropes that the film deconstructs. “It spoke to the idea that horror movies are art,” Perkins says. And, even though there weren’t any Black characters in the first “Scream” — and, in other similar films, they rarely survived to midpoint, let alone the end credits — the pull of the genre’s possibilities transcended the lack of representation. And now he’s in charge of filling in that racial blank.

“‘The Blackening’ could not have been made unless I consumed ‘Scary Movie’ and ‘Scream,’” he says. “This is a collection of everything that I absorbed. And allowing the art that has influenced me to be a part of what I’m making feels reverential.”

In expanding “The Blackening” from one scene to a feature-length runtime, Perkins and Oliver focused the sketch — where the group of friends debate over which one is the Blackest, and therefore the first to die — at the core of their story so that the throughline between the projects was clear. (In the film, the Blackface killer quizzes the group on Black facts with a wildly racist-looking board game.) Then, they expanded outward, building the characters’ backstories and relationships to one another and using them to inform the plot.

The film’s characters are all named for the members of 3Peat — “Friendship is very important to me,” Perkins says of crediting his crew — with Perkins playing “Dewayne,” who can be characterized as “the gay best friend.”

Perkins kept his name in the movie for two reasons: “It was like, ‘No one can play this but me,’” he jokes, describing the movie character as a “heightened” version of himself.

The other reason was more personal. “I grew up having a very bad stutter — I still have it now. I’ve just had years and years of speech therapies,” he explains. “But in certain environments, one of the triggers of my speech impediment is saying my name. For some reason, the sounds of my name are sometimes hard to say. And I thought, ‘If people know my name, I have to say it less,’ so it’s helpful tool for me to make my life easier.”

Perkins and Oliver studied common horror movie tropes in order to ensure viewers had enough to grab onto to form an opinion, but the archetypes they presented also had to be specific to Black folks (the activist, the maybe-thug, the native African, the corny dude, the mixed-race person, etc.).

“We’re forcing people to judge the way that they think,” Perkins says, with a knowing laugh. “As a Black queer man, literally most of my existence is counteracting the perception of people.”

It was important to nail down how people would perceive these characters at the beginning of the film and then subvert that idea. “By the end of the movie, each character is a fully-developed character taking what you thought was stereotype or a trope, and forcing the audience to move outside of that, expanding that box of what Black people can do and be,” he explains.

“The Blackening” explores the way Black people experience horror differently. It’s asking the question: “What does it mean to live a life that has always forced you to learn how to survive?” Perkins says. “In these environments, you don’t lose your life experience — that only helps you. That is why Black people be yelling at movies. Because they’re like, ‘Oh I wouldn’t do that, because I’ve been in situations where I know that’s dumb.’ Having these characters be able to live in that fully was one of the main goals.”

Perkins was particularly invested in deconstructing the “gay best friend” trope, expanding the limitations he’s experienced throughout his career as an actor and comedian. A 2020 Variety 10 Comics to Watch honoree, Perkins earned a Primetime Emmy nomination for his work on “The Amber Ruffin Show” in the writing for a variety series category, with credits including “The Upshaws,” “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” and the “Saved by the Bell” revival.

“I was an actor first, and the roles in which I was asked or given were never roles I felt showcased me and my life. So, being able to create a character that not only pushes representation for myself, but many other queer Black people was fucking great,” he says, underscoring his point. “As a gay man, I can also fight a killer. I can still be a hero. there are not many instances where I’ve seen gay Black men be heroes.” And the