News on your favorite shows, specials & more!

Discover One Black Woman's Awakening In BREATHE

This form of Art Activism premieres virtually with two live-streamed and two encore performances on YouTube and Twitch.

By: Nov. 13, 2020
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

Discover One Black Woman's Awakening In BREATHE  Image

With the recent political, racial, and global unrest occurring throughout 2020, the premiere of Breathe., a live-streamed multi-media and interactive theater event, a form of art activism - fusing live performance, cinema, performance art and artistic swimming in a hybridized narrative that could only be born during these challenging, yet galvanizing times.

Philicia Saunders (Black is King, Tabala Zo in Star Wars: The Force Awakens & The Rise of Skywalker) wrote and stars in this one-woman live theater show portraying 20 characters. Breathe. is based on her life-changing personal journey towards activism after a chance trip to a Civil Rights monument during a civil rights tour in Alabama and mentorship by a luminary of activism, Sweet Alice Harris, one of Watts' most beloved community organizers. The piece is directed by Saunders' fellow Princeton alum Roger Q. Mason (playwriting seen at Circle in the Square, New York Theatre Workshop, American Theatre of Actors, Son of Semele, Skylight Theatre, among many others).


Breathe. evolved from Saunders graduate school thesis called Sick and Tired of Being Sick and Tired which was a series of taped interviews that she had with Sweet Alice from 2012, and now in 2020 these interviews are more relevant today and are seen in this current version of Breathe. It is of interest to note that some of the themes and events which occurred in the 1965 Watts unrest are still relevant and unfortunately happening in 2020. Parents of Watts organization was created by Sweet Alice as a result of the Watts unrest of 1965. (Coincidentally 2020 is the 55th Anniversary of the Watts riots).


As Saunders learned from Sweet Alice: "You can't just be silent and stand in one place." This highly unique production is sure to spark discussion and action among viewers everywhere. Breathe. is being performed and recorded at the Broadwater in Hollywood and facilitated to online through _Outpost_13, an accessible sanctuary for artists, creators, unsung storytellers and audiences to realize their imagination by combining technology and live theatrical experience.


The virtual premiere of Breathe. streams on YouTube (except for Dec. 13 when it will be Twitch) - LIVE on Friday, Dec. 11 at 5:00 p.m. PST and on Saturday, Dec. 12 at 3:30 p.m. PST. Encore performances with post-performance Talkbacks will take place on Sunday, Dec. 13 at 2:00 p.m. PST (this presentation plays on Twitch and is pay-what-you can; Talkback is with Sweet Alice) and Friday, Dec. 18 at 5:00 p.m. PST. Registration is available at http://breatheshow.eventbrite.com on a sliding scale between $5-$50 with a portion of the proceeds going to Sweet Alice's nonprofit Parents of Watts and the Community Coalition.


"Our country paints fringed peoples as monoliths. Through Breathe., Saunders dynamically disrupts such a singular vision of Black life, womanhood, and youthful professional and personal yearning. In the piece, we assay a young middle-class Black woman who has access to many of the same experiences that are typically associated with her white counterparts (i.e. private school education, the Ivy League, travel, artistic swimming, etc.). One would think she has the access and socio-economic power to "buy" immunity from systemic racism. However, as Saunders' work reveals, there is still a palpable disadvantage to living while Black and female in America and Europe," exclaims Mason.


"Breathe. was an ever-changing and intriguing passion project for me. It's been a year in the making and I am so proud of how far it has come. Writing and acting in this play has elicited very strong emotions for me, but the inspiration, sense of satisfaction, and meaning that came from putting this show together has carried over into other areas of my life in a beneficial way", explains Saunders. "I am eager to start making a change and spark those conversations that we need to be having - about racism, identity, silence, action. I dedicate this show to my parents and my parents' parents and my ancestors before them, and to those who have lost their lives to acts of hatred and senseless violence. I also dedicate this show to those who still can't breathe."


The creative team for Breathe. include set designer Carlo Maghirang, composer Vince di Mura and sound designer David Gonzalez. The creative producer is Michael Struna, production stage manager is Letty Aguilar, and produced by Philicia Saunders, Roger Q Mason, Jessica Hanna and _Outpost_13.


For more information please visit http://breatheshow.eventbrite.com or https://outpost13.org.



Comments

To post a comment, you must register and login.



Videos