poem, "TEMPTATION," by "PURLIE VICTORIOUS" with to move more
Transcription
poem, "TEMPTATION," by "PURLIE VICTORIOUS" with to move more
NEW UNIVERSITY SUPPLEMENT On Thursday and Friday evenings, February 25th and 26th, the UCI Black Theatre will present its variety production "CHANGES: An Experience in Black Theatre," the first performance of the theatre on the campus in its three-year existence as part of the Fine Arts The twenty-four Department. actors and dancers project with sustained vitality the oppressive social, political, cultural path the Black man in America has trod since slavery "created" his Black American identity. In his attempt to control the slave by brainwashing him with "white" religion the white man did not forsee the slave using this religion as a survival weapon against him. It was the slave's inner strength and faith in the master's invisible God that kept him from total demoralization. Religion then became one of the focal points of Black life in the the Black man United States seeking guidance from the God who created himu And so, the performance opens with James Weldon Johnson's poem "THE CREATION," performed by Larry Chatman, followed by a gospel church sequence introducing the entire cast. The affect of religion on Black people is also emphasized in the poem, "TEMPTATION," by Langston Hughes in which Barbara Maull finds herself tempted by "THE SPIRIT/' Terminating the religious phase of the production an exerpt from the play "PURLIE VICTORIOUS" with Donald Johnson and Asa Sims in respective roles as Purlie and Ludie Belle., , -- I^WV - Jin | "PURLIE VICTORIOUS' Donald Johnson as Purlie; Asa Sims as Ludie Belle Eulogizing the ghettos of America, Dawn Johnston, in a medly of poems written by young children comes to the conclusion that the only real freedom is in death. The poem "A THEME FOR ENGLISH B" reminds whites that although they try to separate themselves from Black people they are in fact part of them. It is not only whites to whom the hour-and-a-half performance is directed but Blacks as well in attempt to move more deliberately towards socio-political unity. "A POEM TO COMPLIMENT OTHER POEMS" by Don W^ Larry Chatman performing 'THE CREATION' by James Weldon Johnson "JOURNEY INTO SELF" with dancers Kathryn Farquhar Brenda Gibbs, Larry Chatman and Cleveland Pennington