Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Young a Finalist for National High School Musical Awards

Memphis lives on Broadway thanks to the National High School Music Awards (the Jimmy Awards) and recent Hernando High School grad Riley Thad Young.

Young made his Broadway debut this week at the Jimmys where he competed against students from around the country and performed a selection from Memphis the musical at New York City’s Minskoff Theatre.

The soon-to-be college freshman was selected as outstanding lead performer at The Orpheum’s 2018 High School Musical Theatre Awards. He was a $3,000-scholarship winner and one of eight finalists selected for a solo performance at this year’s Jimmys.

Here’s Young’s interpretation of “Memphis Lives in Me.”

Young a Finalist for National High School Musical Awards

If you’d like to learn more about the Jimmys, Playbill covered this year’s awards. Also, if you want to know what the process is like, Young kept a journal for Broadway World

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

This Week At The Cinema: Sordid Lives and Reefer Madness!

It’s gonna be stupid hot outside this week, so cool off with one of the many special film events hitting big screens in the 901.

Sordid Lives

Tonight, Tuesday, June 26th at Studio on the Square, Indie Memphis presents The King, a documentary by two-time Sundance winner Eugene Jarecki. The filmmaker takes Elvis’ Rolls Royce on an epic road trip through America, seeing sites and interviewing guests from Presley biographer Peter Guralnick to Chuck D. This one’s a don’t-miss. Tickets are available on the Indie Memphis website.

This Week At The Cinema: Sordid Lives and Reefer Madness! (2)

On Wednesday, June 27th, the Malco Kids Summer Film Fest presents the 1998 Dreamworks animated musical The Prince of Egypt at the Paradiso and various other theaters all over their network.

This Week At The Cinema: Sordid Lives and Reefer Madness! (4)

That night (Wednesday), the final film of the Outflix Summer Series screens at Studio on the Square. Sordid Lives is a cult-classic, LBGTQ comedy of the culture clash that comes when the matriarch of a small-town Texas family unexpectedly dies in the midst of a tryst with a much younger man. This 2000 film by playwright turned filmmaker Del Shores stars Olivia Newton John and Delta Burke, and later spawned a TV series.

This Week At The Cinema: Sordid Lives and Reefer Madness!

Across town at Railgarten, Indie Memphis presents an encore performance of the 2017 Memphis music video bloc, featuring 28 works pairing Memphis filmmakers and musicians.

Here’s just one example from hip hop mogul and Memphis Flyer‘s current cover model IMAKEMADBEATS. This animated extravaganza was #2 on our list of Best Memphis Music Videos of 2017.

This Week At The Cinema: Sordid Lives and Reefer Madness! (3)

Then, on Friday and Saturday, June 29th and 30th, a new screening series debuts. Curated by Memphis’ own master of psycho-tronic madness, Mike McCarthy, Midnight At The Studio sets the tone for late-night, cinematic mischief with the accidental 1936 classic Reefer Madness. As the laugh-a-minute trailer so seriously intones, “see this important film now, before it’s too late.”

This Week At The Cinema: Sordid Lives and Reefer Madness! (5)

See you at the cinema! 

Categories
News News Blog

Memphians Organize Against Border Separation

Facebook- Jordan Howard

Emily Fulmer of Indivisible Memphis

About 400 Memphians crowded into Shady Grove Presbyterian Church Monday night to address the Trump administration’s policy of separating families at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Hosted by activist group Indivisible Memphis, the meeting served as a space for brainstorming and organizing ways to support and advocate for those seeking asylum. Emily Fulmer of Indivisible Memphis said when it comes to immigration policies, the country is experiencing a “moral and political failure.”

“If you are like me, you are bringing a rock in your throat and anger that’s making your skin burn and sadness and lots of other feelings,” Fulmer told the audience. “I welcome all those things, as well as your passion, compassion, and determination.”

Fulmer said the purpose of the”action and organizing” meeting was to determine the next steps to help families who have been detained and those seeking asylum. One of the ideal ways to help, a representative with Latino Memphis said, is to donate money. At the meeting, $4,200 was raised to provide legal assistance to asylum seekers and families who have been detained.

Although President Donald Trump created and signed an executive order last week to end the of separation of families at the border, Gina John of Latino Memphis said “it’s not enough.” John said the order maintains Trump’s zero-tolerance policy, and people seeking asylum are still being turned away, which she says is illegal. The order also still grants permission for families to be detained, John said, which is “not something that we want,” as detained individuals have limited access to legal assistance.

The next step is a demonstration planned here for Saturday, June 30th, as a part of a national day of action protesting the separation of families. Hosted by Latino Memphis and the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition, the rally will take place at 10 a.m. at Gaisman Park.

Attendees will have the opportunity to take further action steps, like registering to vote and contacting lawmakers about immigration legislation.

Categories
News News Blog

Monday: A “Call to Action” Meeting to End Separation at Border

A meeting is scheduled in Memphis Monday, June 25th, to address the separation of immigrant families at the U.S.-Mexican border by the Trump admistration.

The meeting is planned for 5:30 p.m. at Shady Grove Presbyterian Church. On the event’s Facebook page, more than 1,000 individuals have shown interest.

Indivisible Memphis, the event’s organizers, are seeking to take action in support of asylum-seekers and to keep families together.

Additionally, a demonstration hosted by Latino Memphis and the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition, is slated to take place here on Saturday, June 30th, as a part of a national day of action, responding to President Donald Trump’s policy of separating children from their parents. The rally will take place at 10 a.m. at Gaisman Park.

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Louise Page

Music Video Monday is covered in flowers!

Louise Page is releasing her second album, Simple Sugar, this Friday with a show at 831 S. Cooper. This music video for Page’s song “Blue Romance” was directed by Sam Leathers, and stars Page, Moth Moth Moth, Brenda Newport, Jawaun Crawford, Annalisabeth Craig, Michael Laurenzi, Victor Sawyer, and Michael Todd. It’s a gauzy, flower-filled burst of fabulousness. Take a look:

Music Video Monday: Louise Page

If you would like to see your music video featured on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com. 

Categories
Opinion The Last Word

The Steve Miller Ban

What would you call a nation that separates children from their immigrant parents and warehouses them in abandoned Big Box stores behind chain-link fences? What do you call a regime that institutes a “zero tolerance” policy for immigrant families fleeing violence, political upheaval, and poverty in their own countries? What does it say about the law when the attorney general quotes Bible scripture to justify the administration’s gestapo tactics while grinning at the camera? And what do you say about a national leader who demands that all followers of a global religion be banned from entering the country?

It used to be verboten for any responsible person to compare our democratic republic with Nazi Germany. But how do you avoid the comparison, when two Texas public defenders testify that some parents were told by U.S. Customs agents that their children were being taken “to be bathed” and were never returned? Reporters have told of nursing babies taken from their mothers; the screams of parents following the realization that their children were gone; and the tears of refugees who presented themselves at proper border crossings seeking asylum but instead were hustled off into criminal custody.

I saw a documentary about children torn from their parents’ arms once, only it took place in 1939 and I had to read the subtitles because it was in German. This is no longer the home of the brave and the land of the free. It’s the home of the intolerant and the land of the incarcerated. I don’t know about you, but I want my country back.

REUTERS | Leah Millis

Stephen Miller

Always looking to deflect his assholism on to someone else, Trump tweeted in his own ungrammatical way, “Democrats can fix their forced family breakup at the Border by working with Republicans on new legislation, for a change.”

He’s lying. No law requires this.

During the influx of mothers and children from Central America in 2014, the Obama administration attempted to detain families with Immigration and Customs Enforcement until their cases could be adjudicated, which was administrative rather than criminal detention. Even then, a federal judge ordered a stay for confined asylum seekers and ruled that families could be held in detention for only a short period of time — usually 20 days. And children were not taken from their parents.

In Trump’s America, immigrants are taken into federal criminal custody, thus transforming their children into unaccompanied minors who are then whisked away to one of 200 immigrant detention centers all across the fruited plain. Presidential Chief of Staff John Kelly claimed that children and their parents would be separated “in order to deter more movement along this terribly dangerous network. The children will be taken care of — put into foster care or whatever.”

Or whatever.

Currently, the government has opened a “tent city” near El Paso, Texas, to house 360 minors in 100-degree heat, with plans to construct numerous such “cities” across Texas. They are also actively looking at military bases to house immigrant children. Even conservative pastor Franklin Graham said it was “disgraceful.”

It only figures that a corrupted corporatocracy like the United States would eventually cough up a hairball like Donald Trump, but you’d have to look far and wide to find a Jewish Nazi like Stephen Miller. A far-right icon, Miller is a senior advisor to the president at the age of 32. Born into a liberal Jewish family in Santa Monica, California, Miller is a descendant of ancestors who fled the pogroms of what is now Belarus. His conversion to conservatism took place after reading Guns, Crime, and Freedom, a screed against progressive ideas and criminal justice reform written by National Rifle Association CEO Wayne LaPierre.

While at Duke University, quasi-Nazi and white nationalist Richard Spencer claims he mentored Miller, although Miller disavows knowing Spencer. Miller’s first D.C. gig came as spokesman for Minnesota’s moron Congresswoman Michele Bachmann, who said in 2014 that American Jews “sold out Israel” by voting for Obama, and apologized in Jerusalem only last week for her calls for converting “as many Jews as we can” because “Jesus is coming soon.”

In 2009, Miller became advisor and communications director for then-Senator Jeff Sessions. In an interview with Breitbart News, Sessions praised the National Origins Act of 1924 which restricted immigration from Eastern Europe, saying, “It was good for America.” The irony was lost on Miller.

Miller followed Sessions into the White House, where his white nationalist views meshed perfectly with the new administration. After cozying up to the incendiary Steve Bannon, Miller invited the writers and editors of Breitbart News to the White House to discuss immigration. He played an integral part in Trump’s illegal travel ban and was a crusader for restricting refugee resettlement and immigration from Muslim countries. He even wrote Trump’s “American Carnage” Inaugural speech.

His initial appearance on national news was notable for his assertion that “the powers of the president to protect our country are very substantial and will not be questioned.” A recent New York Times article said, “Mr. Miller was instrumental in Mr. Trump’s decision to ratchet up the zero tolerance policy.” Senator Lindsey Graham opined, “As long as Stephen Miller is in charge of negotiating immigration, we are going nowhere.” 

I don’t know the conditions that create a self-loathing Jew. If Miller was oblivious to the darkest chapter of the 20th century, you’d have thought he’d at least seen Schindler’s List

The Times reports that over the last six weeks, an estimated 12,000 children have been separated from their families. One immigrant from Honduras killed himself in custody after being separated from his wife and child. With Josef Goebbels wannabes like Miller advising the president, the time has come to decide whether the United States will retain its status as a beacon of liberty to the world or become just another “shithole country.”

Randy Haspel writes the “Recycled Hippies” blog.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Hunt Sales, Ray Wylie Hubbard, & Carson McHone: Austin Pays Memphis a Sunday Visit

Everyone knows what a music hub Austin is, and how diverse its scene(s) can be. But fewer are hip to the ties that bind Austin and Memphis together. They go way back, and only seem to be getting stronger in recent years. Will Sexton moved here some years ago, and we now host Dale Watson as well, but they are only the most visible signs of the long standing networks connecting Memphis musicians with our Texan friends, and vice versa.

This weekend, we can feel, see, and hear those connections, as three Austin-area artists appear on the same day.

Carson McHone
For an early start to your weekend’s end, get thee to the Memphis Music Mansion before 7:00 pm. The historical “music inn” offers a characteristically intimate show with rising star Carson McHone, who comes to Memphis with Tim Regan’s endorsement. Regan, as most Flyer readers know, is in the band Snowglobe, though he himself is now an Austinite. When he joined Spiral Stairs at Growlers a year ago, McHone opened with duet performances of her emotionally bare songwriting and captivating voice. Now’s a chance to hear her solo, with her singing now front and center. With echoes of Gillian Welch, she has a unique ability to convey loss and longing.

Here’s an episode of Texas Music Scene TV that focuses on McHone’s songwriting. Get your tickets to the Memphis Music Mansion show soon, as seating is limited and only advance sales are offered.

Hunt Sales, Ray Wylie Hubbard, & Carson McHone: Austin Pays Memphis a Sunday Visit (2)

Ray Wylie Hubbard

Also hailing from (near) Austin is an old favorite of Memphis music lovers, Ray Wylie Hubbard. Hubbard, by the way, is a Carson McHone fan, saying that she “writes songs like her life depends on it.” That could be said of Hubbard himself, and he’s garnered many fans in this area, especially as he’s nurtured a more down and dirty approach to songwriting in the past decade or so. While he still brings a strong folk troubadour game, his fondness for North Mississippi blues also rings true, especially on tunes like “Jesse Mae,” his ode to Jesse Mae Hemphill. You can hear his version of Austin/Memphis cross fertilization Sunday as well, at the Levitt Shell’s Orion Free Music Concert Series. 

Hunt Sales
And finally, representing perhaps the most fruitful cross-pollination of all, there will be a rare performance by Hunt Sales at Bar DKDC Sunday night at 10:00. Relatively rare, that is: Lately, Sales has been showing up more and more. After making a name for himself playing with Iggy Pop (drumming on “Lust for Life”) and David Bowie (Tin Machine), among others, Sales has approached music in a more personal way of late. As he recently told Beale Street Caravan, “All I’ve been doing for all these years is sitting in rooms and writing music. Playing a gig here and there. I’m not one of these people that’s totally driven. Whether anyone hears it or not, that’s not why I do it. It’s all about the work.”

It was his friend Will Sexton who brought him here. “I’ve been working out of Memphis quite a bit this last year,” says Sales. “And Memphis reminds me of being a child. It takes me back to a time in my life when I was developing. Memphis has been great. Seriously. It’s been a new chapter of my life.”

As Art Edmaiston, who has been playing sax with Sales, explains, “Hunt met Bruce Watson (Fat Possum Records/Big Legal Mess) through Will Sexton while tracking at Bruce’s Delta Sonic Studio downtown. Bruce was so impressed with Hunt’s drumming that he offered Hunt a chance to return with his band and record a couple singles for Big Legal Mess. Well, Hunt showed up a couple weeks later and had something like six or seven tunes that were all popping, and he cut them all in one afternoon with his trio.”

But Sales, who is deeply grounded in powerful jazz drumming and old school R&B, wanted more than just a trio with his Austin cohorts, so he called up Edmaiston, Jim Spake (sax), and Pat Fusco (keys) to fill out the record. Edmaiston explains, “After keys were added, me and Jim show up and begin to lay down some ‘straight pipes on a Harley’-sounding duel saxophone parts, that we layered a few times until you’d think the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse were actually Junior Walker, Arnett Cobb, Lee Allen and Big Jay McNeely! I mean, this stuff sounds big and wet and nasty….And Hunt had all the ideas for the parts. He dictated them exactly to Spake and myself, and boom – here it is.”

Edmaiston is rather excited by the new record, “The rhythm tracks range from a Link Wray vibe to something Little Richard would lay down if he had two Marshall Stacks. It’s rock and roll from the hip and hits you in your heart while it’s kicking you in the ass. We had a ball! Bruce loved it so much, he invited Hunt back to cut some more tunes and make a full length record.”

Sales emphasized to Beale Street Caravan that his latest excursions to Memphis have been revelatory. “The music is great, I make great music there. I run into great musicians. The people there are sincere. The diversity of Memphis has got soul. Memphis has got soul, deep. Just send me to Memphis and put some of that rub on that chicken there, and put me in the studio or on a live gig with some of them great musicians. And I am in heaven.”

Austin comes to Memphis on June 24: Carson McHone plays the Memphis Music Mansion at 7:00. Ray Wylie Hubbard plays the Levitt Shell at 7:30. And Hunt Sales plays Bar DKDC, with soul-jazz openers L.A.P.D., starting at 10:00.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Won’t You Be My Neighbor?

I’ve started to become suspicious when someone points and says “This is what America is all about” or “this is not America.” America is many things. Americans wrote: “We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” Americans also owned slaves — and later, freed slaves. America is a nation of immigrants that erected a statue welcoming the tired, poor, and hungry masses yearning to breathe free. Americans have also looked down on, at various times, Irish, Italian, Chinese, Japanese, Cuban, and Hispanic immigrants. America is, as the bad term paper cliche goes, a land of contrasts. Because America is made up of humans, who are themselves a mixture of good and bad, the American identity is always a tug of war between extremes.

From 1968 to 2002, one of our perpetual tug of war’s strongest pullers for good was Fred Rogers. He was a Presbyterian minister from Pennsylvania who fell in love with television, and saw in it a potential to do good on a vast scale. His TV show, Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood, started on a Pittsburgh area educational television station in 1968 and became PBS’ first hit. As one producer puts it early in the documentary Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, Mr. Rogers’ show was the exact opposite of everything conventional wisdom held was “good TV.” The sets were cheap, the puppets nowhere near Muppet levels of sophistication, and there were often long stretches of silence. And yet it became a cultural touchstone, thanks to the steady magnetism and stalwart humanity of its host.

Won’t You Be My Neighbor? is helmed by Morgan Neville, one of the finest documentary directors working today. He won the Best Documentary Oscar in 2013 with his film about backup singers, 20 Feet From Stardom, and last year he shared an Emmy with Memphian Robert Gordon for Best of Enemies, the story of the epic political debates between William F. Buckley and Gore Vidal during the 1968 election season. (Neville’s new film also boasts a Memphis connection: composer Jonathan Kirkscey provides the score.)

Daniel Tiger (left) and Fred Rogers, star of Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood

Documentaries are always judged first by their subject, and Neville has a knack for choosing exactly the right ones. A master of documentary structure, he makes the case for Rogers’ continued relevance right out of the gate. Launched in 1968, during the most violent period of the Vietnam War and the rash of political assassinations in America, Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood never shied away from wrestling with tough questions. During its very first week, there was a storyline where King Friday XIII wanted to build a wall around the Neighborhood of Make Believe because he was frightened of change. After Robert Kennedy was killed, Rogers did a week of shows teaching children how to deal with death.

The most electrifying moment in the film comes when Rogers is asked to testify before a Congressional committee hearing debating the future of PBS. His unpretentious eloquence brings everyone in the room to tears, including the senator who is there to grill him for wasting $20 million of taxpayer money on kid’s shows. Through it all, Rogers’ uncanny talent for connecting onscreen shines through as he makes friends with everyone from cellist Yo Yo Ma to KoKo the gorilla, who signs “friend” and “love” at the TV host.

You can tell a lot about a person by the quality of his enemies. Rogers was a lifelong Republican who advocated for an “open, accepting Christianity.” During the early years of Fox News, Rogers was routinely attacked as a decadent influence whose doctrine of radical compassion had raised a generation of soft liberals. When he died, his funeral was picketed by the notorious hate group Westboro Baptist Church. Won’t You Be My Neighbor? is what you would call a warts and all documentary — or at least, you would call it that if its subject had any real warts to expose. At various points during the film, the people who knew and worked with Rogers say that he was exactly the same person offscreen as onscreen, thoroughly kind and empathetic to a fault. The worst thing Neville can come up with in the interest of balance is that, toward the end of his TV career, he started to identify more with the grumpy King Friday XIII than with the meek Daniel Tiger. I guess power really does get to everyone eventually.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Neighborhood Threat! “Raisin” Is a Great Musical, and an Important Story

From a technical standpoint I could pick Hattiloo’s Raisin to pieces. The set doesn’t look down at heel, it looks slapped together. The presence of living actors insures that the show’s minimal, thoughtful choreography, will sometimes be under-supported by otherwise well-made recordings of a horn-driven, 70’s-era soul-inspired score built to jump off the stage and get up in your life choices. Tracks get the job done though, and, as always, so much of any show’s success depends on material strength and a cast’s ability to leverage it. In this regard everything about Raisin delivers. Music and dancing never undermine the message in this faithfully adapted retelling of Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun. This story of the Younger family and their struggle to buy an affordable home and possibly start a family business is a subtle, almost generous look at how America and its wealth became segregated. It is a deeply felt family drama that ends with a devastating loss barely tempered with dignity and determination.

Raisin won the Tony Award for best new musical in 1973, and promptly fell off the face of the Earth. A best musical win doesn’t ensure immortality or heavy rotation, but ever since Kiss Me Kate picked up the first best musical trophy in 1949, a win has typically meant Broadway tours, lavish revivals, and some longevity on the regional circuit. Raisin, — a musical described by New York Times writer Clive Barnes as being, “perhaps even better than the [Tony nominated] play” —  just went away. Why?

To answer that question we probably have to go down to the crossroads of real estate and money. It surprises people when I suggest that, for all the edgy content that marches across our stages, our regional theaters are still relatively conservative spaces shaped more by donor/subscriber communities than the broader communities they inhabit.  There’s only been so much room for black programming in these spaces and while a gut-wrencher like Raisin or Caroline or Change might get produced once in a while we’re more likely to see upbeat revivals of pop-culture touchstones like The Color Purple or sparkly showbiz epics like Dreamgirls. If one must return to the musty old stories, Hansberry’s original drama is accepted canon, and always less expensive to produce than a musical on your second stage.

Thing is, there’s nothing musty about the original, if you pay attention to the whole text, not just the big “amen” lines about not capitulating to people who don’t think you’re fit to share the Earth.

It’s probably fair to say that most folks, liberal and conservative alike, have bought, in some measure, the big lies about segregation and how it continues to exist because people self-select. It’s always been malarkey. Contemporary segregation and urban slums were created by single family housing/industrial zoning, by the Federal government’s refusal to insure mortgages to African-Americans, and the inability of African-Americans to obtain credit via the usual channels. It was advanced by public housing back when public housing was nice and park-like and not for poor people, but for exclusively white workers priced out of areas close to job centers. It was further maintained by restrictive covenants insuring that certain properties could only be sold to white buyers. When courts turned on the covenants Neighborhood associations were created. To buy in you had to belong. To belong you had to be white.

As more and more Americans moved out of apartments and into single family homes, the limited amount of property made available to African Americans was typically far more expensive than property being offered to whites. Absent credit, it was sold via a contract system that eliminated equity. One missed payment could result in eviction, with nothing to show for your effort. Families with little discretionary income for upkeep, did sometimes crowd into substandard housing, but decay was always the result of a cruel, deliberately exploitive system backed by customary business practices and law. Though these circumstances are alluded to rather than expressly stated, this is the legal, social and economic environment in which Raisin unfolds, and to get the most out of the musical experience, it’s helpful to divorce ourselves from political myths, and open ourselves to a more complete history.
[pullquote-1] Raisin isn’t about integration or white flight from the urban core. It’s about a family’s struggle to create legacy inside a system designed to prevent it. The family patriarch has died leaving $10,000 in life insurance. Lena, the surviving matriarch wants to sink most of the money into an affordable home in a white neighborhood, not because of the demographics, but because “It was the best [she] could do for the money.” Her son Walter Lee’s a chauffeur who wants to invest the money in a family business — a liquor store. Her daughter, pressing against both race and gender norms, has exchanged faith for science and wants to go to medical school. Glimpsing a bigger world she may choose to get out entirely and move to Africa with her foreign-born boyfriend. In the absence of credit or anything more than sustenance income, all these dreams hinge on one pot of insurance money representing the sum total of one man’s difficult life. Add to this dynamic a white representative of Clybourne Park’s progressive neighborhood association who’s arrived to negotiate a kinder, gentler way to keep blacks out, and you have all the ingredients necessary for an emotionally honest and devastating primer in how everything went wrong.

Raisin‘s story is famously inspired by the poetry of Langston Hughes. More crucially it’s informed by the Hansberry family’s personal experience in court, fighting the restrictive legal covenants and members only neighborhood associations. Hers is a deeply sad but open-hearted critique of the American Dream, a Depression-era fiction embraced by President Herbert Hoover to sell the advantages of single family home zoning where ethnic groups were excluded, over crowded apartment-based urban living where anybody might move across the street.

Hattiloo has told this story before, and told it well. Stagecraft notwithstanding, the musical tops it, if only because it gives great source material a beat and sticks it to your brain like a bubblegum hit on the radio.

At the top of the show I plunged my face into my hands — I couldn’t look. Committed, vibrant performances were at odds with cool, canned music. It just looked silly and I was sure I was in for a night of deadly theater. But the commitment was real. It was relentless. It overcame and the result was so much more memorable than I ever could have ever imagined during those cringe-worthy opening moments.

Raisin’s Lena became an almost instantaneous theatrical archetype. George C. Wolfe brilliantly lampooned that archteype in The Colored Museum’s  “Last Black Mama on the Couch” sketch. Hattiloo stalwart Patricia Smith never sits on a couch or plays to type. Her Lena shifts from thoughtful, nurturing and wise, to superstitious, impulsive and tyrannical. She struggles to create security for her family without realizing how restrictive security can be — or how tenuous. Smith exudes maternal virtue, but her’s is a nuanced, warts-and-all take on a part the veteran performer could have easily phoned in.

Director Mark Allan Davis gets top shelf performances from an ensemble cast that includes Rashideh Gardner, Samantha Lynn, Aaron Isaiah Walker, and Gordon Ginsberg. But Kortland Whalum’s leave it all on stage take on Walter Lee Younger is really something to see. Whalum feels nothing lightly and his words and songs land like punches — some weak, flailing and ineffectual, some like haymakers. It’s as rich a performance as I’ve seen in ages, just at the edge of too much but never tipping over.

Walter Lee gets swindled, of course. I don’t think that’s a spoiler given the shopworn material. He’s one more casualty of unstable alternative economies created when people are isolated and shut out of the regular economy. The Youngers may be moving into a Chicago neighborhood but in this moment Walter Lee becomes the embodiment of Hughes’ “Harlem,” and the “dream deferred.” Maybe this gifted, young, imperfect black man who’s trying to do all the things he’s supposed to do but still can’t get ahead, will finally dry up like a raisin in the sun. Maybe he’ll fester like a sore or stink like rotten meat or sag like a heavy load. Maybe he’ll explode. In a beautifully manicured interpretation, Whalum gives you the sense it’s all on the table all the time.

Short take: This Raisin has some real problems. Telling one helluva strong story isn’t one of them.

Categories
News News Blog

Senators Fire Back at Trump TVA Proposal

Tennessee Senators fired back at a proposal Thursday at a Trump Administration proposal to sell the Tennessee Valley Authority’s (TVA) electric transmission lines, calling the plan “loony” and “harmful” for the agency.

The move is one of several ideas President Donald Trump floated Thursday in a plan to re-organize parts of the federal government. The 131-page plan called “Delivering Government Solutions in the 21st Century Reform Plan and Reorganization Recommendations” was made by executive order and outlines a number of ideas to streamline government.

”Americans routinely shop online, use smart phones to order rides, and get electronic money transfer services, and yet are forced to deal with multiple agencies and excessive bureaucracy when they interact with federal agencies,” reads the proposal.
[pdf-1]
The proposal would, among other things, privatize the U.S. Postal Service, spin off federal responsibility for air traffic control to a nonprofit agency, end the federal oversight of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and combine the Departments of Education and Labor into a single agency, called the Department of Education and the Workforce.

But it was Trump’s proposal to sell TVA’s transmission lines that drew criticism of Senators Bob Corker and Lamar Alexander.

“While TVA has not received any taxpayer funding since 1999 and has taken positive steps in recent years to pay down its debt, I do think it’s valuable to evaluate, from time to time, reforms that could cause TVA to function more effectively for Tennessee taxpayers and ratepayers,” said Corker in a statement. “That said, at the end of the day, I continue to believe that selling TVA’s transmission lines would be harmful to the Tennessee Valley and remains a very unlikely outcome.”
[pullquote-1] Alexander did not mince words and said the idea threatens to increase power bills for consumers.

“This loony idea of selling TVA and TVA’s transmission lines seems to keep popping up regardless of who is president, and each of those proposals have all been soundly rejected by Congress,” Alexander said. “When President Obama proposed selling TVA in 2013, all it did was undermine TVA’s credit, raise interest rates on TVA’s debt and threaten to increase electric bills for 9 million ratepayers.

”TVA has among the lowest power rates in the country which, along with its reliability, help bring numerous new businesses to the region.”

According to Trump’s proposal, selling the 50,000 miles of power lines and other assets to a private company would “encourage a more efficient allocation of economic resources and mitigate unnecessary risk to taxpayers.” It would save the government $9.5 billion over 10 years, according to the report. 

The federal government’s role in electricity production and marketing dates largely to the New Deal, proposal says, and has expanded that role since then.

“Today, a strong justification no longer exists for the federal government to own and operate these systems,” reads the proposal. “The private sector already meets the vast majority of the nation’s electricity needs.

“Private ownership of transmission assets could result in more efficient operations and capital improvements while reducing the subsidies (both implicit and explicit) that the federal government now provides to the respective regions’ ratepayers.”

The Trump proposal also notes that Presidents Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, and Barack Obama have all proposed selling the assets.