History in the Making
As Black History Month continues, Debra Ann Byrd, Woodie King, Jr., Alfred Preisser, and Dr. Barbara Ann Teer discuss the cultural opportunities for African-American theater.

Confessions of Stepin Fetchit
One of the ways this is being done is through the Black History Month Play Festival, produced by Woodie King Jr.'s National Black Touring Circuit. The event is an extension of the 34-year-old organization's mission to highlight the work of black artists. The presentations include A Rose Among Thorns, about Rosa Parks, which was performed February 15-17 at the Harlem School of the Arts, Confessions of Stepin Fetchit, by Matt Robinson, which will perform at the National Black Theatre February 22-23, and Paul Robeson, also at the National Black Theatre February 29-March 2. "The works are highly educational," says King of the kinds of pieces he produces for the Circuit. "But we first must get them theatrical. We deal with highly visible, well written plays that can stand the scrutiny of New York critics."
The festival kicked off on February 8 with a star-studded reading of the late Ossie Davis' The People of Clarendon County, starring Ruby Dee, Danny Glover, and Ruben Santiago-Hudson, and a second reading of the play will be presented at the Labor Center in Midtown on February 29, featuring Dee, Louis Gossett, Jr., Alan Alda, and Rev. James A. Forbes. "Ossie's thinking process and his commitment to his freedom and his people's freedom is an awesome wonder to me, and he's not paralleled in any way," says Teer, who participated in the initial reading.

An attention to the classics is also the focus of the Classical Theatre of Harlem, which recently remounted its acclaimed production of Trojan Women in a partnering with Harlem Stage at the Gatehouse Theatre, and continues to tour its musical production of Romeo and Juliet. The company began operations in 1999 at The Harlem School of the Arts, and while it is no longer affiliated with the school, artistic director Alfred Preisser -- who is not himself African-American -- notes the importance of that initial connection.
"When they made me head of the theater department, I asked if I could start a professional theater company there," he says. "Since we were working in Harlem, the objective was always to bring in African-American actors at all levels to act, perform, to be part of a crew. We continue to define our work with African-American performers, although it's not a big crusade. It's just the way the company started as part of my job, and an extension of the creative community I encountered."

(© Ruth Sovronsky)
On Broadway, one can currently find Passing Strange, a musical about a young African-American man's search for art and identity, and Debbie Allen's all-African-American version of Tennessee Williams' Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, starring Terrence Howard, Anika Noni Rose, James Earl Jones, and Phylicia Rashad. Still to come this season are Laurence Fishburne as Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall in the solo piece Thurgood and Morgan Freeman non-traditionally cast in the starring role of Mike Nichols' revival of Clifford Odets' The Country Girl.
All of these shows contribute to a vibrant theatrical landscape that goes far beyond the bounds of a Black History Month, and continues throughout the year.
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