“I chose my name because keys open doors,” Alicia Keys says in voiceover early in “Alicia Keys: Girl From Hell’s Kitchen.” Then she adds that she wanted to open all of them. It’s almost too perfect a line, the kind that arrives already polished for a trailer. But it also tells us exactly how One9’s documentary wants to look at her: not as an unknowable superstar, not as a subject to be interrogated, but as an artist who turned survival, discipline, talent, and New York nerve into access.
That choice has limits. ‘Girl From Hell’s Kitchen’ isn’t a warts-and-all portrait, and anyone expecting one will probably leave disappointed. It works more as a companion piece to Keys’ Broadway musical “Hell’s Kitchen,” a homecoming film, and a controlled celebration of a woman who knows how she wants her story told. The film admires her from a respectful distance. Sometimes that distance makes sense. Sometimes you wish it would cut closer.
The City That Made Her
The documentary returns to Keys’ childhood in Manhattan’s Hell’s Kitchen, where she grew up with a single mother and found herself surrounded by artists, hustlers, teachers, neighbors, and the hard-edged charge of 1990s New York. It doesn’t treat the city as a vague inspiration board; it’s a place that trains her. As Keys puts it, she grew up through a singular lens, that of survival. And so the place she’s called home teaches her to watch, practice, move fast, and keep pushing even when the door doesn’t open the first time.
One9 pulls together archival footage, family photos, home videos, and present-day reflections to connect Alicia Cook, the girl at the piano, to Alicia Keys, the global artist bringing pieces of that childhood to Broadway. The film is strongest when it lets the people around her take up space: her mother, her father, her childhood music teacher Ms. Aziza, and the Broadway performers whose own lives become part of the musical’s story. Keys is obviously the center, but the documentary understands that no artist is built alone.
Her mother’s story gives the film some of its warmth, especially in the way ambition starts to look less like vanity and more like inheritance. Her father’s presence adds a sharper note. The film doesn’t pry too deeply into that relationship, but the tension that surfaces matters because it briefly disrupts the shine. For a few minutes, the movie stops sounding like a tribute and starts touching something more unresolved.
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A Tribute With the Edges Sanded Down
The Broadway material gives ‘Girl From Hell’s Kitchen’ its shape. Keys describes the musical as one of the most important things she has ever done, and the film takes her seriously. We see the long process of turning memory into stagecraft, the pressure of handing personal history to actors and collaborators, and the strange vulnerability of watching an audience respond to a version of your life.
Some of the backstage material is genuinely lovely. The film comes alive when Keys is working with performers, shaping a song, or watching younger artists step into a story that began before they were born. Those scenes give the documentary a stronger generational pulse. Keys isn’t only looking back at how she came up. She’s also thinking about who gets to come through the next door.
One9’s Alicia Keys documentary is too polished to be revelatory, but its tribute to New York, survival, and artistic inheritance still finds the right closing-night mood.
Still, the film keeps its guardrails up. It wants intimacy, but often settles for access. We get a childhood memory, an archival clip, a career milestone, a rehearsal-room breakthrough, then we move along before anything can get too messy. One9’s “Nas: Time Is Illmatic” had a tighter object of study. On the other hand, this one wants to cover the woman, the neighborhood, the musical, the parents, the teachers, the collaborators, and the mythology of New York itself. That’s a lot of doors for one documentary to open, and a few of them only get cracked.
‘Girl From Hell’s Kitchen’: The Perfect Film at the Right Time
Despite all these, I can’t quite dismiss it as mere celebrity polish either. Timing matters. As Tribeca’s closing-night film, the documentary arrives in the middle of Knicks fever that saw New York winning the NBA championship for the first time in 53 years, and a city behind it already primed to belt “Empire State of Mind” like civic scripture.
With that critical framing, ‘Girl From Hell’s Kitchen’ then seems to know exactly what room it was playing to. On any given week, its carefulness might’ve bothered me more. In that moment, it had the right kind of “Big Knick Energy”: sentimental, loud, proud, a little corny, and completely at peace with being all of those things.
So no, ‘Girl From Hell’s Kitchen’ doesn’t unlock Alicia Keys in any startling new way. It’s too curated for that. But as a tribute to an artist, a neighborhood, and the hustle required to turn a childhood block into a Broadway stage, it has its pleasures. The film doesn’t show every door Keys has walked through. It’s more interested in the fact that she kept looking for the next one, then held it open long enough for someone else to follow.
One9’s “Alicia Keys: Girl From Hell’s Kitchen” had its world premiere at this year’s Tribeca Festival. The festival took place on June 3-14, 2026. Follow us for more coverage.
