Blues diva Ma Rainey and her band have come to a Chicago studio to cut a record, but their artistic differences nearly stop the session before it starts. Full of unforgettable characters and the raw power of the blues, this 1920s installment of Wilson's groundbreaking cycle of plays confronts the issues of race, fame, and generational divides through the rhythms of the African-American South.
August Wilson (1945-2005) The most-produced African-American playwright of all time, August Wilson was a self-taught writer whose distinctive style combined poeticism and everyday slang. The plays of his remarkable Pittsburgh Cycle chronicled the black experience in America in every decade of the 20thcentury, winning two Pulitzer Prizes and redefining African-American storytelling for a generation of theatergoers.
Videos
Petite Rouge, A Cajun Red Riding Hood
Imagination Stage (12/11 - 2/8) | ||
Season 18: CONSTELLATIONS and HEAD OVER HEELS
Constellation Theatre Company (2/6 - 6/1) | ||
All the Devils are Here: How Shakespeare Invented the Villain
STC's Klein Theatre (12/6 - 12/29) | ||
Leopoldstadt
Shakespeare Theatre Company (11/30 - 12/29) | ||
Virginia Opera: A Taste of Opera
Hylton Performing Arts Center (2/5 - 2/5) | ||
Hand To God
Keegan Theatre (2/6 - 2/28) | ||
Death on the Nile
Arena Stage (11/30 - 12/29) | ||
Keyboard Conversations® with Jeffrey Siegel: A Few of Our Favorite Things
Hylton Performing Arts Center (3/2 - 3/2) | ||
Sofonisba
Washington Stage Guild at Undercroft Theatre (4/10 - 5/4) | ||
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