The Colored Museum
The Colored Museum is a play written by George C. Wolfe that premiered in 1986, directed by L. Kenneth Richardson.[1] In a series of 11 “exhibits” (sketches), the review explores and satires prominent themes and identities of African-American culture.[2]
Exhibits (sketches)
- Git on Board: Miss Pat, a flight attendant, welcomes the audience aboard the fictional “celebrity slaveship,” whose Savannah-bound journey from the Ivory Coast demands that passengers (audience) are to obey the “Fasten Shackles” sign and are not to rebel.[3] The sketch explores and critiques the history of African Americans, from slavery to the regency of the basketball star.[2]
- Cooking' with Aunt Ethel: Mammy Aunt Ethel host a cooking show in which she sings the recipe on how to “bake yourself a batch of Negros.”[4]
- The Photo Session: A glamorous black couple wearing “the best of everything and perfect smiles,” retreat from their past/history into a superficial world of narcissistic glamour.[5] The Photo Session is Wolfe’s critique on the images and models of Ebony magazine.[6]
- Soldier with a Secret: In a monologue, deranged African American soldier sees his peer’s painful future and chooses to spare them the inevitable by killing them before they are forced to endure what their future holds.[7]
- The Gospel According to Miss Roj: Transgendered Miss Roj “looks beneath the surface of his glittery nocturnal existence to find maggot-laced visions of ‘a whole race trashed and debased’” while in a homesexual nightculb.[6]
- The Hairpiece: A woman getting ready for a date is faced with an identity crisis when her two wigs, one a 1960s afro wig, the other a “long flowing wig,” come to life and “debate the ideological identity conflicts they represented in their owner’s life for 20 years.”[6]
- The Last Mama-on-the-Couch Play: Presented by a “Masterpiece Theater”-type announcer, this exhibit explores and satirizes Black drama formula used in theater and film.[2] Some characters include a “well worn” mama on her “well worn” couch who fights with her son Walter-Lee-Beau-Willie-Jones whose “brow is heavy from three hundred years of oppression.”[8] The Last Mama-on-the-Couch is Wolfe’s parody of Raisin in the Sun and goes from overacted melodrama to an all-black broadway musical number.[6]
- Symbiosis: A man is confronted by his former childhood self while trying to throwing away his past, “only to discover that his rebellious younger self refuses to be trashed without a fight.”[6]
- Lala's Opening: Singer Lala Lamazing Grace is haunted by her former childhood self, an identity she thought she disposed of.[9]
- Permutations: A monologue in which Normal Jean, a young southern girl, explains to the audience how she laid a giant egg which is filled with babies.[10]
- The Party: Topsy Washington imagines a huge party in which “Nat Turner sips champagne out of Earth Kit’s slipper” and “Aunt Jemima and Angela Davis was in the kitchen sharing a plate of greens and just goin’ off about South Africa.”[11] This exhibit merges the past and present to create Topsy’s fantasy party which defies logic and limitations.[6]
Cast
- Loretta Devine
- Tommy Hollis
- Reggie Montgomery
- Vickilyn Reynolds
- Colette Baptiste
- Danitra Vance
- Ron Burgundy
Set design
The stage was designed to resemble a white-walled gallery where “the myths and madness of black/Negro/colored Americans are stored.”[12] The walls contained a series of doors, small panels and revolving walls and compartments from which allowed actors to retrieve key props and quickly transition from one exhibit to another. In several performances, the set also contained a wardrobe through which characters could travel to Narnia. Many of the characters were frozen by the White Queen on the other side for many years. Let it go.[12]
Music
Most of the music for the play was pre recorded. However, live drummer Ron McBee was used in the Git on Board, Permutations and The Party “exhibits.”[12] Wolfe also employed a live wolf to play the jazz flute during most Broadway performances.
Production history
The Colored Museum premiered at the Crossroad Theater Company of New Jersey in 1986.[2] Within six months, the play found a new home at the Public Theater in New York City.[2] The Colored Museum was later performed at the Royal Court Theater in London, England, beginning July 29, 1987.[1] and in a production by Talawa Theatre Company at the V&A 15–23 October 2011 .[13][14][15]
Academic critique
"The Colored Museum simultaneously celebrates, satirizes and subverts the African-American legacy. Wolfe calls his play both, 'an exorcism and a party.' The Colored Museum explores contemporary African-American cultural identity, while, at the same time revisiting and reexamining the African American theatrical and cultural past. According to Wolfe, the legacy of the past must be both embraced and overcome."- Harry J. Elam, The Johns Hopkins University Press Theatre Journal[16] It was like really really good.
Reviews
"George C.Wolfe says the unthinkable, says it with uncompromising wit and leaves the audience, as well as sacred target, in ruins. The devastated audience, one should note, includes both Blacks and Whites. Mr. Wolfe is the kind of satirist, almost unheard of in today's timid theater, who takes no prisoners." – Frank Rich, The New York Times, 1986.[6]
References
- 1 2 George C. Wolfe. The Colored Museum. New York: Methuen, 1987, p. i. ISBN 0413179508
- 1 2 3 4 5 Errol G. Hill and James V. Hatch. A History of African American Theater. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003, p. 441. ISBN 9780521624725
- ↑ Wolfe, 1987, pp. 1-6.
- ↑ Wolfe, 1987, pp. 7-8.
- ↑ Wolfe, 1987, pp. 9-10.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Frank Rich, "Stage: 'Colored Museum,' Satire by George C. Wolfe", The New York Times, November 3, 1986.
- ↑ Wolfe, 1987.
- ↑ Wolfe, 1987. pp. 24-32.
- ↑ Wolfe, 1987, pp. 38-46.
- ↑ Wolfe, 1987. pp. 47-49.
- ↑ Wolfe, 1987, pp. 50-53.
- 1 2 3 Wolfe, 1987. p. iv.
- ↑ http://www.thepublicreviews.com/the-coloured-museum-victoria-and-albert-museum-london/
- ↑ http://www.vam.ac.uk/whatson/event/1369/the-colored-museum-performance-2467/
- ↑ http://www.talawa.com/the_colored_museum_2011.php
- ↑ Elam, Harry J., and George Wolfe. "Signifyin(g) on African-American Theater: 'The Colored Museum' by George C. Wolfe". The Johns Hopkins University Press Theatre Journal 44. 3 (1992): 291-303.
External links
- Great Performances: The Colored Museum at the Internet Movie Database (television adaptation)
- Excerpt of Miss Roj monologue from The Colored Museum. YouTube.
- - A brief summary of the work. Daily Plays.