google-site-verification=cXrcMGa94PjI5BEhkIFIyc9eZiIwZzNJc4mTXSXtGRM White Supremacy is their True Religion – Black Theatre Matters - 360WISE MEDIA
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White Supremacy is their True Religion – Black Theatre Matters

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WASHINGTON D.C., USA – JANUARY 6: Trump’s “Save America” Rally included many white Evangelicals who express their faith in very extreme ways.

When a Trump supporter drags a big picket cross across the Captol Mall as one did in the course of the “Save America” Rally, I can understand the need to clarify what we saw on January sixth as having been influenced by Christianity. Christian iconography was throughout on that day of the Capitol siege. It’s easy accountable a faith system since it doesn’t use empirical evidence to come back to a conclusion. Faith relies on evidence of things unseen. One has to imagine first before physical evidence might be revealed – if ever. But Trump followers continue to exist a gradual fact-free eating regimen. They imagine Trump’s claims that there was rampant election fraud singling out his race from the entire others that were conducted on November 3, 2020. The success of Republicans who performed higher than Trump on the exact same ballots was ignored. But faith wasn’t the motivating factor on that Wednesday in Washington. It wasn’t even the abundance of false evidence that he repeated each day to support his assertions and emboldened his followers. It was their willingness to disregard the entire overwhelming evidence on the contrary for the promise of more cruelty, more racist, and incompetent policies supported by the President of the United States.

Devotion to Christian beliefs was not what moved the white Evangelicals, Catholic or Protestant Christians who make up Trump’s most ardent followers. They would must ignore the key tenets of the religion, the Ten Commandments. A Christian would must refute all of its instruction on personal conduct to behave in the way we saw on display in Washington D.C. This indictment includes the politicians who perpetuated the lie that this election was stolen from Trump. You cannot lie, carry weapons, threaten to hold or murder someone, and align those actions with the adoption of Commandment #6, “Thou shall not kill,” or Commandment #9, “Thou shall not bear false witness against thy neighbor.” In fact, the very act of being a follower of Trump, his mendacity, bigotry, cruelty, and general amoral behavior is in direct opposition to the lifetime of an individual of religion. That calls for an excellent deal of self-delusion.

WASHINGTON D.C., USA – JANUARY 6: Nuns who attended the “Save America” Rally.

The real motivator is race. More specifically, racial resentment and its handmaiden, white nationalism. That is the true”religion” these Trump supporters worship. White people in fear of a Black planet where they will’t get away with all the pieces or have their way on every topic. They don’t need to share power. It’s called “white privilege” for a reason.

Wednesday, January 6, 2021, was a likelihood for all of America to see the America Black people have known since 1865. It pulled the curtain back o an America violently defending white supremacy. This is the go-to strategy each time a major group of white people believes their free will and unbridled influence on all the pieces is being constrained. That is why Reconstruction gave birth to the Ku Klux Klan. It’s why Black soldiers getting back from World War I gave rise to race riots within the country. From the Red Summer of 1919 through the Race Massacre of Tulsa, OK, in 1921, incited a brand new wave of racial intimidation and terrorism. White people took up arms to destroy Black communities, kill Black men who had been armed and trained by the United States military, and support manipulation of the law to secure white dominance in every a part of life. Just because the response to the election of Barack Hussein Obama as our first Black president inspired the establishment of the Tea Party Movement, the Freedom Caucus, and the overtly racist Birther Movement. The regular rise of white grievance has been ignored within the last forty years. Trump couldn’t have been elected without it.

So it should come as no surprise that the siege on the U.S. Capitol was following the mounting anger on the failure to overturn Georgia’s ends in the 2020 election in Trump’s favor. Triggered almost on cue, the Trump “Save America” Rally became a riotous mob mere hours after the primary Black Democrat had been elected to the Senate from the South, with the potential for the opposite Georgia Senate seat flipping, all done by the record-breaking efforts of Black Georgians organizing and voting en masse. This turned Georgia – a formerly reliable Republican stronghold – right into a battleground state for the primary time since 1992.

This article was originally published on : blacktheatrematters.org
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Applications open for the 2020-2021 Soul Producing National Black Theater residency – Black Theater Matters

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National Black Theatre, founded by the late Dr. Barbara Ann Teer, is now accepting applications for its 2020-2021 Soul Producing Residency.

First launched in 2015, the Soul Producing Residency is a training ground for Black artists whose mission is to “empower the next generation of producers, CEOs and curators of the future.” The eight-month program recognizes one Black producer who will receive a minimum stipend of $10,000, administrative support and access to office space, skilled development opportunities and real-time skilled experience culminating in a self-produced one-day event.

Applications can be accepted until July 1 at 11:59 p.m. Click here to use.

This article was originally published on : blacktheatrematters.org
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Telling the story of the Apollo Theater

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The Apollo Theater is an iconic, legendary place in New York. Many great black artists, equivalent to Ella Fitzgerald and Stevie Wonder, began their careers in its hallowed halls.

And yet, so much for the director, Oscar and Emmy winner Roger Ross Williams“Amazingly, despite 85 years of history, knowledge and power built into these partitions, there has never been a definitive document about this famous theater.

“For me, Apollo embodies what it means to be black in America. It’s a hub, kind of a nucleus of black culture, black music, black art and 85 years of history,” Williams explained to ESSENCE in a telephone interview.

Williams felt he had no selection but to share this vital piece of Black history with others. And so the documentary premieres on HBO on November 6 at 9 p.m. EST.

It’s show time

Williams, the first black director to win an Oscar, skillfully wove the unique history of the Music Hall, with particular attention to the iconic Amateur Nights, with hope for the future and legacy of Apollo, using the stage adaptation of Ta- Nehisi Coats’s award-winning book confirms this thesis.

“Amateur Nights began in 1934 and for the first time the public had the opportunity to choose the winner. That’s saying a lot because there’s nothing better than a Harlem audience. Black audiences are responding,” Williams emphasized. “There is a call and response of the artist and the audience that is based in the Black church, so when you were an artist there, when you were at the Apollo, it felt like you were going to church.”

But the film just isn’t only about what was happening at the Apollo, but in addition about what was happening in Harlem and across the country at the time – highlighted by Billie Holiday’s mournful voice shouting “” or when James Brown loudly announced: from his “I’m Black and I’m Proud” scenes.

“Apollo is the town hall. “It is much more than a house of music and entertainment,” Williams said. “It is a home where we have expressed who we are as a people, where we are in this country, where we want to be and where we are going, and the struggles that we face.”

The stage adaptation element – ​​which featured Angela Basset, Black Thought and lots of other well-known actors and artists – underscores how much has modified since then, not only in the Black experience, but in addition in Apollo.

Telling the story of the Apollo Theater

“Ta-Nehisi says it, and I believe it, that Apollo is the only place he could have done it [the stage adaptation of] because of history and because Apollo continues to serve black audiences,” Williams said. “Apollo continues to be a unique place where Black artists can hear from and speak to their community.”

But perhaps most of all, it showcases the unique talent of Black people to create something beautiful, even out of pain, to specific their truths in wildly creative forms, in a shocking display of defiance and resilience.

“Through the arts, we have tremendous power as Black people to speak our truth, to connect and understand each other, and to highlight the realities, good and bad, of our place in American culture,” Williams said. “We have always used art, music and comedy to talk about our reality, and the rest of the world has always stuck to it and been inspired by it. We are resilient as Black people in America, and Apollo represents that resilience in an incredibly powerful way. We must continue to demonstrate resilience because we face incredible struggles and issues in America today.”

Telling the story of the Apollo Theater

This article was originally published on : www.essence.com
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Black lives, black words – black theater matters

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Here’s a recap of today’s episode: In segment #1, I’ll answer last week’s query about Black Theater trivia and supply some historical context. So let me ask you this week’s query. In segment #2, I’ll present this week’s Black Thought. This week’s quote from Audre Lorde most closely fits the theme of the episode. Finally, in segment #3 now we have the interview.

https://player.simplecast.com/753229f9-98c8-4087-bdda-aeef89c86b72?dark=false

Today we’ll devote a lot of the program to an interview with founders Reginald Edmund and Simeilia Hodge-Dallaway. is an International is an art movement spanning all countries and continents where Black narratives are told by Black Artists – and under their full control – with a mission to empower all audiences. They occur to be partners in each life and theater, as Reggie and Sim are married.

Additionally, Reggie is Playwright-in-Residence at Tamasha Theater in London, England and Playwright-in-Residence at Chicago Dramatists Theatre, Artistic Associate at Pegasus Theater-Chicago, Artistic Patriot at Merrimack Repertory Theater, and a 10-11 Many Voice Fellow with the Playwrights Center. His play Southbridge was a runner-up within the Kennedy Center’s Lorraine Hansberry and Rosa Parks National Playwriting Awards and was most recently the winner of the Southern Playwrights Competition, the Black Theater Alliance Award for Best New Play, and the Edgerton Foundation’s New American Play Award. His nine-play series titled “The City of the Bayou Collection”, including , and , has been performed at esteemed theaters including Pegasus Theater-Chicago, Deluxe Theatre, Actors Theater of Charlotte, Bush Theater (UK), Boston Court @ Theatre, Landing Theatre, Playwrights’ Center and National Theater (UK). Reginald Edmund earned a BFA in Theater Performance from Texas Southern University and an MFA in Playwriting from Ohio University.

Simeilia is the founder and CEO (www.adofthefuture.com), and Founder/CEO of Beyond The Canon (www.beyondthecanon.com), former problem solver and head of the Black Play archive on the National Theatre, editor of the primary anthology of monologues for Black Plays inspired by Black British Plays. She has been included within the Top 100 Acts list for 3 years in a row, and last yr she was included in The Progress 1000: London’s Most Influential People 2018 – Performance: Theater.

Other publications that Simeilia has edited include The Oberon Book of Monologues for Black Actors: followed by a second anthology of monologues published by Bloomsbury Methuen Drama: interim associate producer at Theater Royal Stratford East and former board member of the Directors Guild of Great Britain and Company of the Theater Angels . She has also worked nationally and internationally as a theater director, producer, playwright, educator/guest lecturer, and audience development consultant. Simeilia is currently a member of the magazine’s editorial team (Routledge/UK).

NOTE: The interview audio is ideal for Reggie and Sim. But from ten feet away I sound like I’m talking through a can. Otherwise, it’s an ideal interview. Enjoy.

https://www.blacklivesblackwords.org/support-our-revolution

http://www.beyondthecanon.com

About the affairs of the Black Theater

Black theater matters is a bi-weekly podcast exploring the intersection of culture, politics and blackness. Black theater matters explores various plays, people and topics vital to Black Theatre, elements of production, and the unique dynamics of Black Theater. In other words, Black Theater matters.

Plowshares Theater Company, BTM, is designed to be a liberal arts resource dedicated to supporting, documenting, and celebrating the achievements of Black theater artists throughout the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom.

Subscribe to Black Theater Matters on Apple Podcast, Google Podcast, Spotify, Stitcher, or anywhere else to hearken to podcasts.

Also like and follow us on:

Instagram, Facebook and Twitter: @blacktheatrematters

Website: https://blacktheatrematters.org where you will see that additional articles on Black Theater in addition to an intensive list of Black Theater in America or follow the hashtag #BlackTheatreMatters.

Finally, send me your comments and suggestions at gary@blacktheatrematters.org.

Ashe!

This article was originally published on : blacktheatrematters.org
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