In the old blues song,
Joe Turner is a mystery man who brings food and comfort to the distressed but,
in this dynamic play, he is the power that strikes a man down. Set in Pittsburgh in 1912, Joe Turner's Come
and Gone is the second in August Wilson's
Century Cycle, which illuminates the struggles and lives of African
Americans throughout the 20th century. This
play, that ran on
Broadway in 1988 for 105 performances, focuses on former slaves making a
fragile living in a Northern city, many of whom continue into other plays in
the cycle.
Kind landlords, Seth
and Bertha Holly, run a boarding house where clearly they never turn anyone
away – no matter how dodgy. There is Bynum Walker, an oracular old man who slaughters
pigeons for their blood and does home grown voodoo; there is young Jeremy
Furlow, who works as a laborer on the roads but is a proudly talented guitarist;
there is Mattie Campbell, a Texas gal who wants the magic man to bring back her
fickle lover, and Molly Cunningham, a vivacious young woman of dubious
reputation. Into this mix strides Herald Loomis, looking like an avenging
specter, with his innocent girl child in tow. Turns out he has been released
from Joe Turners chain gang after seven long years, and is now searching for
the wife he left behind. Whether to kill her or embrace her only time will
tell.
Wilson's "Pittsburgh Cycle" consists of ten
plays - nine of which are set in Pittsburgh's
Hill District, an African-American neighborhood that takes on mythic literary
significance like William Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha
County. Each play is set
in a different decade and, as Wilson has said, aims
to "raise consciousness through theater” and echo "the poetry in the
everyday language of black America."
Leading this
superb cast is John Douglas Thompson as a powerful Loomis; with strong assistance
from Glynn Turman as Bynum; Keith David as Seth, and Lillias White as Bertha;
also excellent are Gabriel Brown, January LaVoy, Vivian Nixon, Raynor Scheine
and Erica Tazel. Child actors Skye Barrett and Nathaniel James Potvin are
delightfully professional.
Director
Phylicia Rashad boldly illuminates Wilson’s
paradoxical style as it segues from naturalism to melodrama to hyper realism to
surrealism. Plaudits for scenic design by John Iacovelli, lighting by Allen Lee
Hughes, sound by Cricket S. Myers, costumes by Karen Perry, Wigs & Hair by
Carol F. Doran and original music by Kathryn Bostic.
At the Mark Taper Forum, Los
Angeles Music Center, 135, N. Grand Ave, LA, through June 9. Tickets at (213)
628-2772, Center Theatre Group Box Office, or www.CenterTheatreGroup.org.
Hi, Morna,
ReplyDeleteI'd love to send a press release to you for The Real Housekeepers of Studio City, an original one-act musical premiering at the Hollywood Fringe Festival 2013. Is there an email or snail-mail address I should send to?
Much appreciated,
Heidi Powers