On November 22, 2014 AfriClassical posted:
South Coast Repertory's 'The Whipping Man' Set For The Pasadena Playhouse 2014-2015 Season
Los Angeles Times
January 3, 2015
By Mike Boehm
January 3, 2015
By Mike Boehm
Martin Benson deferred his enlistment in Civil War drama for half a
century, but now the stage director is bringing a zeal for realism to
"The Whipping Man," his first assignment concerning America's bloody —
and far from finished — reckoning with the consequences of slavery.
Matthew
Lopez's play is set in a ruined, looted mansion in Richmond in the days
immediately following the Confederate surrender at Appomattox. In the
opening scene, a downpour engulfs two newly freed slaves who've spent
their lives in the house, serving the masters and sharing their Jewish
faith.
It's a small irony that "The
Whipping Man's" playwright grew up in Pensacola, Fla., rolling his eyes
at people caught up in reenacting moments from the War Between the
States in meticulous detail — namely his parents and younger brother.
They were Civil War buffs and battle re-creation enthusiasts who
gradually filled the house with muskets, uniforms, tents and everything
else needed to impersonate a combatant.
"As a teenager, I was absolutely mortified they were doing this," Lopez, 37, recalled from his home in Brooklyn.
***
What
the 1989 film "Glory" and Ken Burns' 1990 documentary "The Civil War"
had done for the rest of the household, early exposure to his family's
stage connections had done for him: He caught the theater bug from his
aunt, Priscilla Lopez, a Tony Award-winning actress who starred in the
original 1975 Broadway production of "A Chorus Line," singing its
signature song, "What I Did for Love."
Lopez said his roundabout
path to the Civil War and "The Whipping Man" began later in the 1990s,
when he was a student at the University of South Florida in Tampa and
saw a video of the TV version of Anna Deavere Smith's one-woman
documentary play "Fires in the Mirror," about fatal confrontations
between blacks and Hasidic Jews in the Crown Heights section of
Brooklyn."The
Whipping Man" has been one of America's most frequently staged dramas.
"I saw two groups
not seeing their shared history" of enslavement and persecution, said
Lopez, who was raised a Christian but had gotten a window on Jewish life
after an uncle married a Jewish woman.
***
The upshot, many years later,
was a play that was developed and first staged by a New Jersey theater,
Luna Stage, in 2006, then took off after subsequent productions in
Minneapolis in 2009 and at the Old Globe in San Diego in 2010, where
Lopez made final revisions.
Comment by email:
Wonderful! Thanks so much, Bill! [Jonathan White]
Comment by email:
Wonderful! Thanks so much, Bill! [Jonathan White]
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