February 14, 2008
- Issue 264 |
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Gem
of St. Louis By Jamala Rogers BC Editorial Board |
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Gloria Terrell
was my 11th grade English teacher. Ms. Terrell was one of my favorite
teachers. I thought about her as I experienced Othello at the Black Rep
recently. I went on to college, where I majored
in English and faced a whole semester of Master Shakespeare. Thanks to
Ms. Terrell for the prep and for the beginning of a special love affair
with the theater. To truly revel in your theater experience, you must let yourself be totally drawn in. I love being taken through all the emotional high and lows with the characters and the storylines. I can get totally immersed, like in singing my favorite songs in Tell Me Something Good or being pulled onto a slave ship with a melancholic song in Crossin’ Over. The young actor/singer Kelvin Roston Jr. sang the hinges off that song! I look forward to each season where I can check out veteran faves like Linda Kennedy, J. Samuel Davis, A.C. Smith, Lawrence Drummond, Denise Thimes, Erik Kilpatrick, Lisa Harris, Dennis and Fannie Lebby, and others. Sometimes, founder Ron Himes gives up his director’s chair for a stage role. All of these folks are professional, but they aren’t snooty. If you hang in the lobby, you can meet the cast members after any given show. Following the Othello performance, I couldn’t help myself. I waited to plunge an imaginary dagger in the side of the Darryl Alan Reed. He accepted it with good humor, knowing it meant that he had successfully projected the loathsome nature of his character, Iago. The Black Rep is where I have seen all
of the profound works of August With Radio Golf, the Black Rep will have
featured the entire cycle of the Pulitzer Prize winner’s epic work penned
for each decade of life in The Hill, the working class community in BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member Jamala Rogers is the leader of
the Organization
for Black Struggle in |
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