Theater Preview: FREE STREAMS OF SIX PLAYS BY BLACK WRITERS (Los Angeles Theatre Works)

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by Tony Frankel on June 19, 2020

in Extras,Theater-Los Angeles

FREE STREAMS OF SIX PLAYS BY BLACK WRITERS

L.A. Theatre Works, the  world’s leading producer of  audio theater, has chosen six titles by Black playwrights from its extensive collection of work to stream free on its website. The six plays, including  A Huey P. Newton Story, written, directed and performed by  Roger Guenveur Smith;  Ceremonies in Dark Old Men  by  Lonne Elder III;  Fabulation, or The Re-Education of Undine  by  Lynn Nottage;  The Mountaintop  by  Katori Hall;  The Night Watcher, written and performed by  Charlayne Woodard; and  Stick Fly  by  Lydia R. Diamond, are available to stream free of charge  at  LATW Black Voices, now through Aug. 30, 2020.

The LATW recording of  A Huey P. Newton Story  preserves Roger Guenveur Smith’s brilliantly-imagined, Obie Award-winning exploration of the life of the controversial Black Panther leader through a series of improvisations based on his own words and writings.

In  Ceremonies in Dark Old Men,  a Harlem family dreams of a better life, but pursues it in tragic ways. First produced by the Negro Ensemble Company in 1969, this modern classic opened the door for a new generation of African American playwrights, including August Wilson and Lynn Nottage. The LATW cast is headlined by  Rocky Carroll  and  Glynn Turman.

Fabulation  is two-time Pulitzer Prize-winner Lynn Nottage’s satirical tale about a successful African-American publicist (Charlayne Woodard) who stumbles down the social ladder after her husband steals her hard-earned fortune. Broke and pregnant, Undine is forced to return to her childhood home in the Brooklyn projects, where she must face the challenges of the life she left behind.

The Mountaintop  is Katori Hall’s gripping, slyly humorous, Lawrence Olivier Award-winning re-imagining of events as they might have taken place at the Lorraine Motel on the night before the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The LATW recording stars  Aja Naomi King  and  Larry Powell.

In her acclaimed one-woman show  The Night Watcher, playwright/performer Charlayne Woodard tells the story of a woman who chooses not to have children ’” only to be pulled into the real-life struggles of kids of all ages, races and backgrounds.

Stick Fly  is Lydia Diamond’s powerful comedy-drama about an upper-class African American family (recorded for L.A. Theatre Works by  Justine Bateman,  Dulé Hill,  Tinashe Kajese,  Carl Lumbly,  Terrell Tilford  and  Michole Briana White) wrestling with parental expectations, sibling rivalry, and issues of class and race during a vacation on Martha’s Vineyard.

“Even as we are drawn into the great stories and characters, these plays expand our knowledge and awareness of the Black experience,” says L.A. Theatre Works producing artistic director  Susan Albert Loewenberg. “It is our pleasure to be able to provide free access to these state-of-the-art recordings to students, teachers and the general public.”

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