Acclaimed tap dancer DeWitt Fleming, Jr. flies high in the role of
legendary jazz musician Jelly Roll Morton. The North Carolina Black
Repertory Company's production of George C. Wolfe's Tony award-winning
musical "Jelly's Last Jam" opens the 2019 National Black Theatre
Festival on Monday at the Stevens Center in Winston-Salem. Photo
courtesy of North Carolina Black Repertory Company.
by David Ford
Jul 26, 2019
American historian John Henrik Clarke once said, “Slavery ended and
left its false images of black people intact.” Since 1979, the North Carolina Black Repertory Company — the first of its kind in this state — has been deconstructing those images through the power of theatre. This season marks the 30th anniversary of NC Black Rep’s world-renowned National Black Theatre Festival, with over 130 performances, workshops, films, and more in venues throughout Winston-Salem.
It all begins Monday night with the musical Jelly’s Last Jam,
telling the fascinating story of jazz legend Jelly Roll Morton. The
Tony award-winning show features dance, the music of New Orleans, and a
deep exploration of the complexities of African-American life.
On Monday, a kick-off event for the new season was held in a West End
neighborhood home in Winston-Salem. Roughly 40 actors, musicians,
dancers, directors and supporters gathered in the living room there to
raise a glass to NC Black Rep, and sample live performances from their
upcoming show, Jelly’s Last Jam by George C. Wolfe.
The musical is set in the 1920s and 30s featuring the early jazz sounds and tap dance popularized during that era.
Pianist and music director Tyrone Jackson is based in Atlanta. He
says Jelly Roll Morton’s stride piano style may sound easy, but it’s
anything but.
“So, what you have to do is cover the melody, which is important,
right, but you also have to carry the feel which is going on with the
bass, and you also have to get the changes in,” says Jackson. “So, your
left hand is going to carry the bass and the harmonic changes as well
and let your melody and your embellishment come from the right hand.”
NC Black Rep Artistic Director Jackie Alexander is originally from
New Orleans, and the musical holds a special place in his heart. It was
the first show he ever saw on Broadway. He later directed the city’s
first production of the show at the famed La Petit Theatre during that
venue’s 100th anniversary season.
“There’s a line in one of the songs, ‘We are the rhythm that colors
your soul,’ and I kind of feel like that’s the festival when it comes to
black theatre,” says Alexander. “We are the rhythm that colors the soul
of black theatre.”
Alexander anticipates more than 60,000 NBTF attendees this year flocking to Winston-Salem for theatre performances like Jelly’s Last Jam which begins the Festival this year.
***
Jelly’s Last Jam, the story of the self-proclaimed inventor of
jazz, opens the National Black Theatre Festival’s 30th year on July
29th. It’ll run through August 3rd.
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