At the crossroads of a revolution:Its 1969, and change is in the air. But for the owner of a threadbare diner in a dying Pittsburgh neighborhood, the civil rights movement may just be an impractical dream. Torn between whether to gamble on an urban-renewal buyout or sell his building to a predatory businessman, he finds himself caught between idealism and brutal reality. August Wilsons searing portrait of African-American life in the 60s tells a complex story of the inner lives of ordinary people at an explosive turning point in American history.Memphis Lee's coffee shop lies in Pittsburgh's Hill District, a neighborhood on the brink of economic development. The restaurant serves as a hangout for a host of regulars: a local intellectual, an elderly man who imparts the secrets of life as learned from a 322-year-old sage, an ex-con, a numbers runner, a laconic waitress who slashed her legs to keep men away, and a developmentally disabled man who was once cheated out of a ham. With Chekhovian obliqueness, the author reveals simple truths, hopes and dreams, creating a microcosm of an era and a community on the brink of change.
Videos
My Brother Death
Zeiders American Dream Theater (1/23 - 2/1) | ||
MJ
Chrysler Hall (2/4 - 2/9) | ||
Choir Boy
Little Theatre of Norfolk (1/10 - 1/26) | ||
Treasure Island
ShenanArts, Inc. (1/23 - 1/26) | ||
Ripcord
Little Theatre of Virginia Beach (5/23 - 6/15) | ||
Little Shop of Horrors
Wells Theatre (3/12 - 3/30) | ||
Georgia Rogers Farmer: Perfect Pair
Richmond Triangle Players (3/27 - 3/29) | ||
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