黑人剧院,城市生活:非裔美国人艺术机构与城市文化生态》,作者 Macelle Mahala(评论)

IF 0.8 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER THEATRE JOURNAL Pub Date : 2024-06-06 DOI:10.1353/tj.2024.a929534
Sandra M. Mayo
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Throughout the chapter, Mahala documents the theatre’s policy of colorblind and nontraditional casting, arguing that they reflected the diverse community they served. The chapter showcases Karamu’s storied history of producing folk plays (stories of rural life) in the 1920s, nurturing and inspiring Langston Hughes in the 1930s, and serving as a producing unit of the Federal Theatre also in the 1930s. As Mahala narrates, despite a number of early challenges (the Depression, the destruction of their building by fire, and the disruption of World War II), the company nevertheless engaged with the civil rights movement in the 1960s, the Black Power movement of the 1970s, and witnessed the ascent of August Wilson in the 1980s and ’90s.</p> <p>In chapter 2, Mahala moves on to representative African American theatres in Pittsburgh that benefited from the amazing success of one of their own, August Wilson. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 黑人剧院,城市生活:作者:Macelle Mahala Sandra M. Mayo 《黑人剧院,城市生活:非裔美国人艺术机构与城市文化生态》。作者:Macelle Mahala。伊利诺伊州埃文斯顿:西北大学出版社,2022 年;第 270 页。戏剧史学家和教育家马凯尔-马哈拉(Macelle Mahala)通过记录非裔美国人剧院在坚持和生存过程中种族、历史时刻和环境之间的关系,加深了我们对文化生态学的理解。在《黑人剧院,城市生活:在《黑人剧院,城市生活:非裔美国人艺术机构与 [完 127 页] 城市文化生态》一书中,Mahala 重点介绍了克利夫兰、匹兹堡、旧金山和亚特兰大的剧院,记录了它们的使命、发展、挑战和令人难忘的作品。她在概述的同时,还分析了这些艺术机构与其服务的社区之间的相互关系。玛哈拉的作品探讨了有关地区剧院的学术研究稀缺的问题。非裔美国人戏剧史的叙述通常集中在纽约地区(如洛夫滕-米切尔的《黑人戏剧》,1967 年),在较大的叙述中仅对纽约以外地区的戏剧进行简要回顾(如埃罗尔-希尔和詹姆斯-哈奇的《非裔美国人戏剧史》,2003 年),或通过主要作家的作品发展历史(如莱斯利-凯瑟琳-桑德斯的《美国黑人戏剧的发展》,1988 年)。在这一地区重点方面,Mahala 的著作与 Jonathan Shandell 的《美国黑人剧院和漫长的民权时代》(2019 年)、Sandra M. Mayo 和 Elvin Holt 的《斗争和庆祝的阶段》(Stages of Struggle and Celebration:德克萨斯州黑人戏剧制作史》(2016 年),以及哈维-扬和梅卡西亚-扎布里斯基女王的《黑人戏剧即黑人生活》:芝加哥戏剧和舞蹈口述史,1970-2010 年》(2014 年)。马哈拉》对地区剧院的深入研究补充并拓宽了我们对美国剧院的了解。例如,希尔和哈奇(Hill and Hatch)关于非裔美国人戏剧的研究值得称赞,但其中只有几段介绍了亚特兰大地区的艺术。马哈拉》用一章的篇幅解决了这一不足,该章详细介绍了制作历史、著名艺术家和社区合作关系,很有启发性。第 1 章从克利夫兰的卡拉穆之家开始叙述,该之家成立于 1915 年,是旨在帮助新移民适应城市的安置之家计划的一部分。本章总结了该机构一百多年来的发展历程,从一个娱乐项目发展成为一个全国知名的剧院,并从儿童剧开始。受尤金-奥尼尔(Eugene O'Neill)的《琼斯大帝》(Emperor Jones)中演员查尔斯-吉尔平(Charles Gilpin)的启发,卡拉穆组织了吉尔平剧团(Gilpin Players),该剧团的前身是大仲马戏剧俱乐部。在整个章节中,马哈拉记录了剧院的无色盲和非传统选角政策,认为这些政策反映了他们所服务的多元化社区。本章展示了卡拉姆在 20 世纪 20 年代制作民间戏剧(农村生活故事)、在 20 世纪 30 年代培养和激励兰斯顿-休斯以及在 20 世纪 30 年代作为联邦剧院制作单位的传奇历史。正如马哈拉所叙述的那样,尽管剧团在早期遇到了一系列挑战(经济大萧条、剧团大楼被大火烧毁、第二次世界大战造成混乱),但剧团还是参与了 20 世纪 60 年代的民权运动和 70 年代的黑人力量运动,并见证了奥古斯特-威尔逊在 20 世纪 80 年代和 90 年代的崛起。在第 2 章中,马哈拉介绍了匹兹堡具有代表性的非裔美国人剧院,这些剧院都受益于他们自己人奥古斯特-威尔逊的惊人成功。她重点关注的剧院包括黑人地平线剧院(成立于 1868 年)、昆图剧团(1974 年)、匹兹堡剧作家剧团(2003 年)和奥古斯特-威尔逊非裔美国人文化中心(2009 年)。这些组织的范围更加广泛,使她能够揭示剧院通过艺术参与黑人力量运动、匹兹堡大学、街头节日、社区提升计划、青年和当地剧作家的情况。第 3 章将读者带向西部,介绍湾区的情况,首先关注的是黑人剧团剧院(Black Repertory Group Theater,成立于 1964 年)。该剧团最初设在唐斯卫理公会纪念教堂并得到其支持,1987 年由市政府和其他社区合作伙伴出资搬迁到加利福尼亚州伯克利的新址。玛哈拉继续在洛林-汉斯贝里剧院(1981 年...
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Black Theater, City Life: African American Art Institutions and Urban Cultural Ecologies by Macelle Mahala (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Black Theater, City Life: African American Art Institutions and Urban Cultural Ecologies by Macelle Mahala
  • Sandra M. Mayo
BLACK THEATER, CITY LIFE: AFRICAN AMERICAN ART INSTITUTIONS AND URBAN CULTURAL ECOLOGIES. By Macelle Mahala. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2022; pp. 270.

Theatre historian and educator Macelle Mahala sharpens our understanding of cultural ecology as she documents the relationship between race, historical moment, and milieu in the perseverance and survival of African American theatres. In Black Theater, City Life: African American Art Institutions and [End Page 127] Urban Cultural Ecologies, Mahala focuses on theatres in Cleveland, Pittsburgh, San Francisco, and Atlanta, chronicling their missions, development, challenges, and memorable productions. She juxtaposes this overview with an analysis of the interrelationship between these arts organizations and the communities they serve.

Mahala’s work addresses the scarcity of scholarship on regional theatres. African American theatre historical narratives have often concentrated on the New York area (e.g., Loften Mitchell’s Black Drama, 1967), have given only a brief review of theatre in the regions outside of New York in larger narratives (e.g., Errol Hill and James Hatch’s A History of African American Theatre, 2003), or have developed the history through the work of major writers (e.g., Leslie Catherine Sanders’s The Development of Black Theater in America, 1988). In this regional focus, Mahala’s book joins Jonathan Shandell’s The American Negro Theatre and the Long Civil Rights Era (2019), Sandra M. Mayo and Elvin Holt’s Stages of Struggle and Celebration: A Production History of Black Theatre in Texas (2016), and Harvey Young and Queen Meccasia Zabriskie’s Black Theatre Is Black Life: An Oral History of Chicago Theater and Dance, 1970–2010 (2014). An in-depth study of regional theatres, as achieved by Mahala, complements and broadens our understanding of theatre in America. For example, Hill and Hatch’s laudable study of African American theatre has only a few paragraphs on the arts in the Atlanta area. Mahala addresses this paucity with a chapter that addresses production histories, notable artists, and community partnerships in enlightening detail.

Chapter 1 begins the narrative with Karamu House in Cleveland, founded in 1915 as part of the settlement house program designed to help new immigrants acclimate to the city. This summary of over one hundred years surveys the evolution of the institution from a recreation program to a nationally acclaimed theatre, starting with a children’s theatre initiative. Inspired by actor Charles Gilpin of Eugene O’Neill’s Emperor Jones, Karamu organized the Gilpin Players, originally the Dumas Dramatic Club. Throughout the chapter, Mahala documents the theatre’s policy of colorblind and nontraditional casting, arguing that they reflected the diverse community they served. The chapter showcases Karamu’s storied history of producing folk plays (stories of rural life) in the 1920s, nurturing and inspiring Langston Hughes in the 1930s, and serving as a producing unit of the Federal Theatre also in the 1930s. As Mahala narrates, despite a number of early challenges (the Depression, the destruction of their building by fire, and the disruption of World War II), the company nevertheless engaged with the civil rights movement in the 1960s, the Black Power movement of the 1970s, and witnessed the ascent of August Wilson in the 1980s and ’90s.

In chapter 2, Mahala moves on to representative African American theatres in Pittsburgh that benefited from the amazing success of one of their own, August Wilson. The theatres she focuses on include the Black Horizons Theatre (founded in 1868), Kuntu Repertory Theatre (1974), Pittsburgh Playwrights Theatre Company (2003), and the August Wilson African American Cultural Center (2009). This more expansive constellation of organizations allows her to reveal theatres’ engagement through the arts with the Black Power movement, the University of Pittsburgh, street festivals, community uplift programs, youth, and local playwrights.

Chapter 3 takes the reader west, chronicling the Bay Area and focusing first on the Black Repertory Group Theater (founded in 1964). The company was initially housed in and supported by Downs Memorial Methodist Church before relocating in 1987 to a new home in Berkeley, California, funded by the city and other community partners. Mahala continues with the Lorraine Hansberry Theatre (1981...

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来源期刊
THEATRE JOURNAL
THEATRE JOURNAL THEATER-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
40.00%
发文量
87
期刊介绍: For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.
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