| |
|
REVIEW:
PlayMakers Repertory Company: Yellowman Takes an Unflinching Look
at Intra-Racial Prejudice Among Blacks
by
Robert W. McDowell
Give her a provocative play on a controversial topic, such as
intra-racial prejudice in the African-American community, and PlayMakers
Repertory Company associate artist Trezana Beverley is at her best.
Beverley, who imaginatively employed the African storytelling tradition
to stage an especially memorable presentation of Oscar Wilde’s
scandalous biblical drama, Salomé, in the spring of 2003,
brilliantly guest-directs Yellowman for PRC. Beverley pours her
heart and soul into creating an absolutely magical production of
South Carolina-born playwright Dael Orlandersmith’s heartbreaking
two-character drama about the pernicious effects of color-consciousness
among blacks.
When African facial features, hair, and skin tones are despised
and when darker-skinned African-Americans hate their lighter-skinned
brethren, and vice versa their children grow up thinking that
they are ugly and stupid merely because their features deviate
from the family norm. The hatred and the seething self-hatred
generated by intra-racial prejudice provides the constant background
of Yellowman, whose star-crossed lovers lose their best chance
at marrying and living happily ever after when an alcoholic and
viciously abusive dark-skinned father, who despises his sensitive “high
yella” son, finally pushes Eugene (Sam Wellington) too far,
triggering a wild, drunken slugfest that gets way, way out of hand.
New York actor Sam Wellington makes a most auspicious PlayMakers
debut as Eugene. He gives a charismatic characterization of the
sweet, sensitive young man who loves Alma (Kathryn Hunter Williams)
with a rare passion, but who ultimately tires of being his father’s
whipping boy and strikes back at his perennial tormentor, with
tragic consequences.
A Carrboro, NC actress and PRC veteran, Williams gives, perhaps,
her best performance to date as Alma, who flees her horrible dead-end
life in the Low Country of South Carolina for the limitless possibilities
to “grow” in New York City. Alma has darker skin and
more African features than Eugene, but she will not accept her “place” at
the bottom of the social ladder and she adamantly refuses to be
verbally, physically, and sexually mistreated like her abusive,
alcoholic, hideously overweight mother was.
There is terrible pain and inspiring poetry in the truly memorable
characters that dramatist Dael Orlandersmith creates and in the
frank dialogue that she gives Alma and Eugene to express their
deepest fears and longings.
Wellington and Williams not only portray the young lovers, but
all their acid-tongued tormentors as well. The result is two incandescent
performances.
Although dialect coach Bonnie Raphael fails to school Williams
and Wellington in authentic Low-Country accents indeed, they
sound more like residents of Virginia than inhabitants of coastal
South Carolina scenic designer Robin Vest’s simple but
evocative suggestion of various Low Country and Big Apple locales,
lighting designer Peter West’s artful manipulation of his
instruments to underscore the mood of each scene, costume designer
Marion Williams’s striking array of period fashions that
take the characters from the 1960s to the early 1980s, and sound
designer M. Anthony Reimer’s sweet original score and versatile
soundscape, which underscores the action with the sounds of breaking
waves in the Low Country and big-city sounds in New York also help
Yellowman be all that it can be dramatically.
PlayMakers Repertory Company presents Yellowman Tuesday-Saturday,
March 1-5, 8-12, and 15-19, at 8 p.m.; and Sunday, March 6, 13,
and 20, at 2 p.m. in the Paul Green Theatre of the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Center for Dramatic Art. $10-$32.
919/962-PLAY (7529) or http://purchase.tickets.com/buy/TicketPurchase?organ_val=21117.
PlayMakers Repertory
Company: http://www.playmakersrep.org/news/index.cfm?nid=31 [inactive 3/05].
The Playwright: http://www.newdramatists.org/dael_orlandersmith.htm [inactive 11/10] .
The Play: http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?1400032067 [inactive
8/05].
PREVIEW: PlayMakers
Repertory Company: Yellowman Examines Color-Consciousness
in the African-American Community
by
Robert W. McDowell
Color-consciousness in the African-American community is the thorny
subject of Yellowman, an audacious new two-character memory play
by prize-winning African-American actress/playwright Dael Orlandersmith.
PlayMakers Repertory Company associate artist Trezana Beverley, another
award-winning woman of color, will direct guest actors Sam Wellington
(Eugene) and Kathryn Hunter Williams (Alma) in the upcoming of PRC
production of this raw but poetic finalist for the 2002 Pulitzer
Prize for Drama.
A South Carolina native now living and working in New York City, Dael Orlandersmith
won the 1995 Best-Play OBIE Award for her one-woman show Beauty’s Daughter.
The New York Times once called her “an otherworldly messenger, perhaps
the sorcerer’s apprentice, or a heaven-sent angel with the devil in her” and
praised Yellowman as a “landmark in theater history…. Enthralling….
Mind-altering.” And The Times of Trenton, N.J., called Yellowman “one
of the most gripping, instructive, transforming hours in contemporary theater.”
African-American actress/director/teacher Trezana Beverley won the 1977 Tony
Award® for Best Featured Actress in a Play for her performance as the Lady
in Red in the Broadway debut of For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide
When the Rainbow Is Enuf by Ntozake Shange. Beverley previously directed PRC’s
luminous April 9-May 4, 2003 presentation of Salomé by Oscar Wilde.
Two veteran African-American actors will play childhood sweethearts Eugene and
Alma, a light-skinned young man and a dark-skinned girl whose puppy love blossoms
into the real McCoy. New York actor Sam Wellington will make his PlayMakers debut
in Yellowman, but Kathryn Hunter Williams is a familiar face to PRC patrons.
She appeared in Salomé, Our Town, The Man Who Came
to Dinner, The Laramie
Project, Wit, and Constant Star.
Trezana Beverley says, from the time they first met as children in a small South
Carolina town during the 1970s, Eugene and Alma are soul-mates and they remain
soul-mates throughout their lives. Because of the alcoholism that runs in both
their families and because Gene’s dark-skinned father hates his son
and anyone else with a “high yella” complexion they become a sort
of African-American Romeo and Juliet, star-crossed lovers whom circumstances
keep apart.
Beverley says, “Alma came from abject poverty; she had a mother who was
an alcoholic and showed her very little love. But she was able to get herself
out of that dilemma and make something of herself. Gene’s [financial] circumstances
were a whole lot better; but because of the alcoholism [in his family] and his
own weakness, he has problems. Gene’s father was dark and hated anybody
who was light-skinned. Then, when Alma moves out of the picture [to attend Rutgers
University in New Jersey], Gene falls apart.”
Originally commissioned by the McCarter Theatre of Princeton, NJ, Yellowman had
its world premiere as part of the theater’s Second Stage Onstage series
in January 2002. Dael Orlandersmith’s rare public examination of intra-racial
prejudice among black people went on to play the Wilma Theater in Philadelphia,
the Long Wharf Theatre in New Haven, CT, and the Manhattan Theatre Club in New
York City.
McCarter Theatre dramaturg and director of new play development Janice Paran
wrote, “The action of Yellowman unfolds in the 1970s on a South Carolina
school playground, where, united by an affection for the Monkees, Batman play-acting,
and running fast in the sticky Southern heat, Alma and Eugene quickly become
friends and soul-mates. We follow the progress of their relationship through
the agonies and ecstasies of adolescence and young adulthood, the joys and jolts
of self-discovery, and the competing tugs of family history and hope for the
future. Both are eager to re-invent themselves, to put distance between themselves
and their surroundings, and to quell their insecurities about themselves and
each other, only to discover how indelibly the demons of their pasts and their
parents’ pasts have marked them.”
PRC guest director Trezana Beverley says, “Dale Orlandersmith paints a
very plain, raw picture of both families. I like that. Within that context, she
deals with the issue of color and the prejudice of color within the black race.
"I just love this play,” Beverley admits, “and I feel
that
it will be such a mirror to the people of the white and black race.” She
also thinks audience will identify with a lot of Yellowman and subsequently be
drawn into the play.
In addition to director Trezana Beverley, the PRC production team for Yellowmanwill include scenic designer Robin Vest; lighting designer Peter West; costume
designer Marion Williams; and sound designer M. Anthony Reimer, who also composed
an original score for the play.
Beverley says, “We have a beautiful [picture-frame] set by Robin Vest….
It looks like a Jacob Lawrence picture, out of which some of the world of these
two characters sort of pops. The PRC stage is a thrust stage, and the actors
need that bareness to bring the world of the play alive. This play is almost
a dance between two actors.”
She adds, “You have to light this show as though you’re lighting
a dance concert.” Yellowman is a memory play, Beverley says, so the moments
that the director selects to emphasize must be chosen very carefully.
Beverley says, “Our costumes are designed by Marion Williams. It is one
basic costume of the period [for each actor]. We’re looking at the late
Sixties to early Eighties. They may [also] wear a hat or add a scarf or a sweater.
"Yellowman is written in the first person,” Beverley explains, “and
both Alma and Eugene talk about their lives and the lives of the other characters,
how the other characters spoke to them, what they said. It’s a narrative
in the first person, there are no stage directions, and there is almost no scene
breakdown. It almost reads like a novel.”
She adds, “The question [for a director] is, How are you going to frame
this? How are you going to shape this? … I’m very skilled at a theatrical
mode called Transformations, which I studied with Omar Shapli at the New York
University School for the Arts. Omar came out of Second City in Chicago and had
worked with Jerzy Grotowski.”
Beverley adds, “Being a physical actress and a physical director and
understanding how to help the actors embody the life of the play without need
of much help other than a prop here and a prop there, very sparingly used I have been able to shape a world around them that I think is pretty amazing.
I think what they do as two actors on that stage is pretty amazing, too.”
Trezana Beverley says, “I compliment David Hammond for bringing this play
to PlayMakers. It’s intense, but it has lots of humor in it that makes
the serious issues more palatable. I think it is one of the most compelling plays
about the color issues inherent in the black race…. I think it’s
a very incisive investigation into this issue, and I hope plenty of African-American
people of all ages come out to see it. There’s great music, and there’s
even some dance in it.”
Note 1: This play contains adult language and deals frankly with adult situations.
Note: 2: PlayMakers Repertory Company
and the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black
Culture and History will host “Color Consciousness: A Symposium About Intra-Racial
Prejudice, Its History, Sources, and Prevalence in the World Today,” a
FREE public symposium starting at 4:30 p.m. on Feb. 27th in the Paul Green Theatre.
Symposium panelists will include: Yellowman director Trezana Beverley; Dr. Valerie
Kaalund, director of African Women’s Studies at Bennett College for women
in Greensboro, NC; and Robin Vander, postdoctoral fellow in the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill Department of African and Afro-American Studies.
UNC Department of Dramatic Art professor of theater history Dr. John Harris will
moderate the discussion.
PlayMakers Repertory Company presents Yellowman Wednesday-Saturday,
Feb. 23-26, at 8 p.m.; Sunday, Feb. 27, at 2 p.m.; Tuesday-Saturday, March 1-5,
8-12, and
15-19, at 8 p.m.; and Sunday, March 6, 13, and 20, at 2 p.m. in the Paul Green
Theatre of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Center for Dramatic
Art. $10-$32, except $40 opening-night gala Feb. 26th. 919/962-PLAY (7529) or
http://purchase.tickets.com/buy/TicketPurchase?organ_val=21117.
PlayMakers Repertory
Company: http://www.playmakersrep.org/news/index.cfm?nid=31 [inactive 3/05].
The
Playwright:
http://www.newdramatists.org/dael_orlandersmith.htm [inactive 11/10] .
The Play: http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?1400032067 [inactive
8/05].
|
|