ANGELA G. KING
All over Detroit, Black folks were putting on plays wherever they couldâin schools, storefronts, recreation centers and especially churches.
Enter three idealistic young actors in the early 1960s with the gumption to open a Black theater with a permanent home. Motivated by the social and political unrest of the day, Woodie King Jr., Cliff Frazier and David Rambeau joined forces to establish Concept East.
âWhen we started Concept East, we believed that we could do anything, and we did it,â says Frazier, now based in New York, as is King. It was that feat that catapulted Detroit, according to the late preeminent African-American playwright August Wilson, into the limelight as a cultural hub that was to theater what New Orleans was to jazz.
Ron Milner. S. Epatha Merkerson. Lloyd Richards. Cliff Roquemore. Dorothy Robinson. Aku Kadogo. Ernie Hudson. Even Tony Brown, host of the venerable PBS television series that bears his name. All these performers and playwrights, among others, passed through Concept East on their way to national, even international, prominence on stage and screen.
That was nearly 50 years ago. Concept East is long gone, as are other local Black theater groups such as the Ira Aldridge Players, Harmonie Park Playhouse, Spirit of Shango, Ashby Players and Afrikan American Studio Theatre.
Yet Black theater has not vanished completely. The scope of stories told has changed. More common are faith-based musings of fledgling writers and producers. And, like the rest of the country, Detroitâs Black theater community struggles amid fickle audiences and financial hard times.
âIt is very heartbreaking not to have a lot of thriving Black theaters [here],â says veteran stage actor Otis Youngsmith. Having launched his career with Concept East, he left Detroit in 1974 while touring with King in âWhat the Wine-Sellers Buy.â He settled in New York until returning to this area in 2006.
âAll I can hope for is that more people decide to say, âIâm going to get me a building and open up a theater,ââ Youngsmith says. âI just wish five or 10 or 15 people would get together and do that.â
Fueling that desire are fond memories of pre-1974 Detroit that include Amiri Baraka putting on his play âSlave Shipâ here. Maggie Porter was still running the Harmony Park Playhouse. And Milner ran Spirit of Shango.
One factor that has resulted in a shrinking theater scene, Black or otherwise, is decreased financial support for the arts from corporate sources, like the Big Three U.S. automakers. âEverybody is suffering,â acknowledges Barbara Busby, who, with artistic director Bruce Millan, helped found the Detroit Repertory Theatre 54 years ago. Still a primarily White-run establishment, the theater continues to survive, as it has since its start, committed to racially diverse casting and shows that appeal to an 80 percent African-American audience. It relies heavily on group ticket sales to majority African-American nonprofits.
The Plowshares Theatre Company remains another artistic beacon in Detroit, even after having had to move, at one point, six times in nine years. Credit its 22-year history to producing works by seminal African-American playwrights such as Wilson, Pearl Cleage and Richard Wesley. Today, itâs the only professional Black theater company in Michigan.
âItâs been as difficult as running any other small business,â says co-founder Gary Anderson. âWeâre not unlike a local bakery or a car dealership. We still are trying to achieve the same thing: grow our audience base and sustain it over time. We have a [theater] community that has great breadth and some depth, but itâs not organized.â
Over the next five years, Anderson wants to develop Plowshares into a theater company that can better cultivate the local talent pool. Heâs seeking volunteers to help transform the company into an ensemble of 20 to 40 actors, directors, designers, musicians and playwrights to collaborate on plays for up to three years at a time. Andersonâs goal is to follow in the footsteps of Concept Eastâs founders and have a permanent home for Plowshares. Currently, heâs busy conducting acting workshops and planning his upcoming theater season.
Anderson has not been alone in preparing a new generation of theater professionals. Five years ago, Wayne State lured Aku Kadogo from Australiaâwhere she had been working in theater since 1978âback to Detroit to head its Black Theatre program.
âIt has been wonderful to have a platform at WSU,â says the Detroit native, now on leave and working as a visiting professor at Yong In University in Seoul, South Korea. âI have been quite specific about trying to present works that offer food for thought and keep us connected with some of our traditions.â
While at Wayne State, she directed such works as âZora is My Name!â the 1989 PBS television drama adapted for the stage by Ruby Dee, and âThe Talented Tenthâ by Wesley. A Concept East alum, sheâs also directed the show that made her a star on Broadway before going overseas: Ntozake Shangeâs âfor colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf.â Kadogo has even ventured into more contemporary works here, such as âFlowâ by award-winning, hip hop stage performer Will Power.
She points out the future for African Americans in theater lies not only in performing. It means branching out, like her, behind the scenes into other areas like producing, writing, directing, stage managing and set designing.
Robert L. Douglas agrees. He is the force behind the Repertory Theatre of Hope, a community theater that started as a ministry of Southfieldâs Hope United Methodist Church in 1991.
Douglas, who went out on his own seven years ago, was commissioned to write âThe Life of Sam,â a play he directed about legendary singer Sam Cooke that was staged at Music Hall in late December and early January. He hopes to produce another musical he wrote, âJoy Road,â next year and pen even more musicals that are not in the mold of the gospel productions he says have dominated Black theater since the 1980s.
Also at Music Hall, in October theatergoers can look forward to âMercy, Mercy Me,â a play about Marvin Gaye written and produced by Angela Barrow Dunlap. A local theater professional who has had a string of gospel play hits, her productions have toured the country.
New writers, directors and producers are cropping up, writing and putting on shows at venues like the Northwest Activities Center or the Boll Family YMCA Theatre.
Emerging Detroit playwright Octavia Lesley is working with three other writers to put on âLife: In 4-Part Harmony,â four one-act plays, at the International Institute next month. Sheâll hone her writing skills at the Urban Playwrights Conference in Orlando, Fla., in December. In the meantime, sheâs working on a play loosely based on her life called âWhat You Wonât Do for Loveâ to be performed at Wayne State in October, and an updated version of âA Raisin in the Sun.â
âI love gospel stage plays. Donât get me wrong, thatâs my genre,â says Lesley, also a minister. âBut a lot of times I think we local playwrights fall into the trap that our play has to have the grandma who is struggling or the relative whoâs strung out on crack. I beg to differ. Detroit theater patrons are so much more intelligent. I really want more playwrights to step out and not be afraid to do something different.â
One canât help but wonder if local Black theaterâs seeming collapse happened because so many of those who trained and thrived here have relocated or died. âThe city is in financial decay and people are moving out everyday,â says King. âThe future of Black theater in Detroit will be placed right along side of Black people in Detroit."
Once Milner passed in 2004, for instance, âIt was almost like part of the groove in the city as far as serious theater was concerned, went right along with him,â says acting veteran and coach, Harold Uriah Hogan.
Bill Harris, a poet, author, Wayne State English professor and prolific playwright, is one Detroit talent who stayed. There have been more than 100 productions of his plays in cities including Chicago, Philadelphia, Atlanta and Los Angeles, such as âStories About the Old Days,â which starred the late jazz singer Abbey Lincoln. In April, Denzel Washington and S. Epatha Merkerson starred in his play âEvery Goodbye Ainât Goneâ at Woodie Kingâs New Federal Theatre in New York.
Named the 2011 Eminent Artist by the Kresge Foundation, Harris says, âPublic taste has changed both in terms of what its notion of theater is, and the quality and content of the product available to them. The â60s introduced politically relevant dramas whose intent was to uplift and inspire, not just personally but communally.â
He attributes the state of African-American theater in Detroit today to the fact that it has been âsupplanted by cultural shifts to other forms of entertainment.â As for the future of independent local Black theater, says Harris, âThere are young people, often with more business savvy than artistic or esthetic background, who are discovering its possibilities as a means of communication. If they are willing to learn the history and techniques, there is hope.â
ANGELA G. KING IS A DETROIT-BASED FILMMAKER, ACTRESS AND WRITER.