S75 - The African Company Presents Richard III by Carlyle Brown - 5m, 2w
Earning their bread with satires of white high society, the African Company came to be known for debunking the sacred status of the English classics (which many politically and racially motivated critics said were beyond the scope of black actors). Inside the Company’s ranks, similar debates raged about whether to mimic the English tongue, or to provide a more lively interpretation of white theater by acknowledging the vibrancy of the black experience (in the words of the African Company’s manager: “Say ya Shakespeare like ya want"). Shakespeare is the chosen cultural battleground in this inventive retelling of a little known, yet pivotal event in the African Company’s history. Knowing they are always under prejudicial pressures from white society, and facing their own internal shakeups, the African Company battles for time, space, audiences and togetherness. Their competition, Stephen Price, an uptown, Broadway-type impresario, is producing Richard III at the same time as the African Company’s production is in full swing. Price has promised a famous English actor overflowing audiences if he plays Richard in Price’s theatre. Fearing the competition of the African Company’s production, which is garnering large white audiences, Price manipulates the law and closes down the theatre. The Company rebounds and finds a space right next door to Price’s theatre. At the rise of curtain of the next performance, Price causes the arrest of some of the actors in a trumped-up riot charge. The play ends with the Company, surviving, its integrity intact, and about to launch an equally progressive new chapter in the American theatre: They’ll soon be producing the first black plays written by black Americans of their day.
7 Comments:
I really enjoyed this play based on actual facts in the evolvement of Black American theater. Could we cast such an ambitious effort? Let's discuss!
This is a really interesting story of some great theatre history. Really great nuanced characters with complex questions about art, representation, the power of theatre, and also what is or is not worth standing up for. Great dialogue. Would need the right director and a good dialect coach for the Caribbean characters.
I would love to see this on a TRP season. (Rochester Community Theater is doing it in October this year.) It's a yes for me.
This is an interesting play. I have the same concerns others have expressed. I wonder if qw will be able to cast the show and obtain a strong, experienced director and dialect coach.
I'm about halfway through - it's really engaging and I like it a lot. It feels ambitious for us but potentially doable. Will try to update when I make it all the way to the end.
It is ambitious - but I would love to see it on our stage. I think we could pull it off and know one of the directors of color in the pool led a local Shakespearean group for several years and I think it would be really engaging for him to take on. I worry most about the dialects - especially after just seeing Henry V on our stage with a Scottish accent that was barely understandable. A good dialect coach would be a must. I think it is daring and just what we need for 75!
I agree that we would need the right director and cast. Obviously, we would need people who can handle the racial and cultural needs of the play. But on top of that, we would need people who are used to lengthy monologues and classical text. There are a lot of very long bits of dialogue in this piece (almost long-winded at times). We would need actors who could sustain the audience's interest throughout all that dialogue and a director who has experience working with those moments. But, yeah, this would be an impressive piece to do if we got the right people working on it. I'm comfortable with us taking a chance on it. Especially if it were produced late in season 75 so we could promote (and maybe recruit for) it.
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