Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Popular Children’s Theater Stage Door Productions Announces Shut Down

Justin Fox Burks

Kroc Center

UPDATE: The Kroc has responded to questions. Says understanding differs from social media accounts but does not say how. A lightly edited version of their statement is quoted at the bottom of this report.

Stage Door Productions, a 501C3 company that has hosted classes and camps and produced kid-sized Broadway musicals at the theater housed inside Memphis’ Kroc Center, announced it would end operations Monday, May 13th. The announcement arrives in the wake of public allegations related to the procedural handling of a harassment complaint.

“We want each and every one of you to know how incredibly difficult this decision is to make,” an email to the Legally Blonde cast and camp attendees read. The announcement came with a charge to the company’s young participants: “Feel every emotion freely, but only for one hour. After that let your anger go.”

“I can confirm Stage Door Productions programming will cease on Monday, following the final performance of Legally Blonde Jr. this Sunday,” Stage Door co-founder Brandon Kelly wrote in an email. Kelly said he would consider sharing more information at a later time. “Right now, we will be focusing our love, passion, and support entirely on the kids in our final show. They are the ones most affected and need our support and complete attention.”

Allegations regarding the mishandling of a harassment complaint appeared on Facebook last week. They were widely shared, generating community support and backlash. Less than a week after the original May 3rd posting, Stage Door shared a letter that appears to say there was no official knowledge of the complaint prior to the recent Facebook posting. “Since this has been brought to our attention, we have had an internal and external review done at Stage Door,” the communication stated.  Stage Door’s Facebook page is now offline. The website is live but inactive. 

The Kroc Center has not yet responded to The Flyer‘s request for information. Pages related to the facilities art programs and to Lindsay and Brandon Kelly are not currently live.

According to the most recent information posted at guidestar.org, Stage Door had posted regular losses of up to $10,000 in net assets since 2015 when that value was pegged at $91,425.
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Latest Update: The Kroc responds:

“For the past five years, The Salvation Army Kroc Center – Memphis has partnered with Stage Door Productions (SDP) to provide quality theatre opportunities for the youth in our area. SDP, an independent non-profit, worked to provide a meaningful arts experience for its participants. Kroc Center members valued SDP’s programming expertise and SDP valued the Kroc’s outstanding facilities.

Last week, we were made aware of a social media post with troubling accusations within SDP of sexual harassment and abuse between two underage cast members from 18 months ago. We acted immediately—launching an internal review and ensuring the incident allegation was reported to Tennessee’s Child Protective Services.”

“The Salvation Army has a zero-tolerance policy for any kind of abuse or harassment. Our staff are well trained in appropriate behavior and how to spot signs of abuse in others. Though SDP is a separate entity, we hold them to the highest standards for safety and professionalism.

Our understanding of events vary from those reported in social media. We are still conducting our review and will fully cooperate with the authorities in investigation. Because those referenced are minors and this is an ongoing investigation, we are unable to comment about specifics. Our prayers are with each one and we ask you to join us with your prayers.

Today, SDP announced it is ceasing programming effective Monday, May 13, 2019. While we are ending our work with SPD, the Arts remain a vital and vibrant pillar of the Kroc’s purpose. We are looking at ways to expand our existing arts education offerings. We know the value the Arts have on overall student achievement and want to do our part to build tomorrow’s leaders. We consistently look for ways to improve member experiences, program quality, and program offerings. Just as we strive to inspire excellence, so do we strive to be excellent.” 

This post will be updated as more information becomes available. 

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

We Ate ALL of Gibson’s Donuts, Part I

The original idea was that we would eat all the donuts at Gibson’s and then rank them, but that struck us as horrible to rate all these beauties, each brilliant in its own way. And when we were told that the number of different donuts was north of 50, the task seemed undoable. I was desperate to scale back. But, Donahue was fixed on the idea of eating them all. And, so eat them all we did. We did leave you some. And, by the way, by our count, there are 35 donut varieties, which is plenty, indeed.

This is part 1.

Maple Iced – Heavy maple flavor. The no-bacon version of the Maple Bacon doughnut.

Glazed – The perfect glazed doughnut. Sweet, but not cloying. A great dunker with coffee.

Cinnamon Sugar – Softer than the Cinnamon Sugar Cake version, but still has a great cinnamon taste.

Red Velvet – Tastes like the famous cake.

Blueberry Filled – The classic jelly doughnut, but with blueberry, not strawberry filling.

Maple Bacon – Sweet and savory with the sweet maple and the salty bacon. It’s like breakfast without the pancakes.

Plain Cake with Chocolate Icing – The classic cake, but with a chocolate topping. Great, tasty combination.

Cinnamon Sugar Cake – Lots of cinnamon. Good dunker.

Caramel Cake – Doesn’t taste like a caramel cake, but still is delicious.

Powder Cake – A nostalgic, tasty taste from childhood. Don’t eat this while wearing a black shirt.

Chocolate Devil’s Food – Decadently good. Chocolate lovers will love this.

Plain Cake – Not very sweet – in a good way. Great dunker.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

New Venue for Margarita Festival

Margarita Festival ain’t scared of a little rain. But it is moving to a new venue due to impending weather.

The Margarita Festival is now at the Creative Arts Building at the Fairgrounds. This is next to the Pipkin Building. So the good news is: Great margs now with lots of parking!

The Margarita Festival is Saturday, May 11th, 3-6 p.m. (This is a sold out event! Check back next year.)

Categories
News News Blog

No Charges for Cops in Martavious Banks Shooting

The police officers involved during the shooting of Martavious Banks have been cleared of criminal charges, even though they turned off their body cameras during the event.

Shelby County District Attorney General Amy Weirich issued a statement Friday morning saying, “there is no evidence of any criminal conduct on the part of these officers.”

The move comes after the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations (TBI) gave Weirich its investigation report in January.

Banks

Memphis Police Department (MPD) director Michael Rallings asked the TBI to investigate the incident last year. Banks was shot by an MPD officer in September. The officers involved in the incident did not have their body cameras turned on during the incident.

While the police were cleared, Banks, 26, is now up on charges of intentionally evading arrest in a motor vehicle with risk of harm to others, unlawful possession of a weapon, driving while license suspended, revoked or canceled, and reckless driving.

Here’s the full statement from Weirich:

“On Thursday, a Shelby County Grand Jury indicted Martavious Banks, 26, on charges of intentionally evading arrest in a motor vehicle with risk of harm to others, unlawful possession of a weapon, driving while license suspended, revoked or canceled, and reckless driving.

These indictments stem from an incident that occurred on September 17th, 2018. On that date, Martavious Banks was shot by a Memphis police officer.

Weirich

I asked the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation to investigate the shooting and the events leading up to it after learning that some officers had disengaged their body-worn cameras during the pursuit of Martavious Banks. The TBI conducted a complete investigation and delivered the report to me on Jan. 11 of this year.

“The report has been reviewed by our office to determine if any state criminal laws were violated. My job is not to determine if policies or procedures of the Memphis Police Department were violated that day.

“After reviewing the investigative file and all of the evidence available to us, I asked the TBI to seek an indictment against Martavious Banks. I have not requested and will not request criminal charges against any police officers involved in the incident. There is no evidence of any criminal conduct on the part of these officers.

“In addition to the indictments returned Thursday, Martavious Banks has pending criminal cases in General Sessions Criminal Court Division 10 and in Criminal Court Division 6. An arraignment date on the new indictments has not been set.
Because of the pending prosecution, our office is prohibited from releasing to the public at this time any body-worn camera footage or any information contained in the TBI investigative report.”

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

Harris Conducts Smooth First Meeting as Dems’ Chair; Other Local Officers Elected

JB

Harris presiding over his first meeting as SCDP chair

The executive committee of the Shelby County Democratic Party completed its reelection of officers Thursday night in a placid, orderly meeting that concluded in a shouting match over whether its newly elected local chairman, Michael Harris, can continue as party leader.

Harris, a suspended lawyer who has admitted having to live down a formidable list of professional “mistakes,” would, on the strength of commentary from members Thursday night, seem to have ample support on the local committee to continue. But committee member Sanjeev Memula, on behalf of a group of Democrats opposed to Harris’ continuation as chair, was able, amid controversy, to move for a hearing on the Harris matter, coupled with a call for a new chairmanship election.

Harris himself agreed to accept Memula’s motion after a ruling from parliamentarian Larry Pivnick that only the chairman or the executive committee itself, functioning as a grievance committee, could approve the motion. Before that happened, there were calls from several members to purge Memula and two other members publicly opposed to Harris — and a temporary motion to the effect, later withdrawn, from member Williams Brack.

Time and place for the hearing on the Harris matter have, as of Friday morning, yet to be set.

Harris’ professional issues — resulting in a 5-year suspension from the practice of law by the Board of Professional Responsibility and disqualification of him as a bankruptcy petitioner by the United States Bankruptcy Court — have complicated his tenure from the moment of his election, by a single vote over “none of the above” as a stated alternative , in a stormy organizational meeting early in April.

The beleaguered chairman’s conduct Thursday night of his first meeting as chairman could hardly be faulted. It was generally agreed, even by critics, that he seemed smooth, organized, and focused as he discussed a series of items with the membership — including the time and place of future committee meeting (likely to be held at AFSCME headquarters downtown), plans for a forthcoming public event, strategies for community outreach, and possible sponsorship of a mayoral debate during the ongoing city government election.

Memula and other critics of Harris have alleged, however, that his personal issues should disqualify him as a party leader and have brought the party into bad repute. They cite the likelihood that Republicans will be able to exploit those issues for their own purposes, and, indeed, the Tennessee Star, a publication featuring the point of view of right-wing Republicans, has already featured Harris’ problems in a published feature.

Aside from the chairmanship issue, the other standout fact of Thursday night’s meeting was that it included the first fully completed successful use of ranked choice voting in a local election. RCV backer Aaron Fowles was on hand to serve as an advisor on the process, which allows sampling of runner-up votes to determine a winner in multi-candidate races without a majority winner in the first round of voting.
Elected Thursday night were the following:
*Sara Beth Larson, first vice chair;
*Brian McBeidge, second vice chair;
*Regina Perry, secretary;
*Emily Fulmer, assistant secretary;
*Jesse Huseth and Williams Brack, steering committee members

Harris’ appointment of Lucretia Carroll as treasurer was accepted by acclamation by the membership.

Categories
News News Blog

‘Mama’s Day Bail Out’ Part of Strategy to End Money Bail, Pre-Trial Detention

Toby Sells

Shahida Jones (left), and Erica Perry (right) speak about the Mama’s Day Bail Out campaign ahead of Mother’s Day.

Six Memphis mothers will get a trip just in time for this Mother’s Day weekend, a trip out of jail.

The Official Black Lives Matter Memphis Chapter (BLMMC) group has sprung 30 people from jails here since 2017, posting bail for them when they couldn’t afford it. In those years, they’ve hosted two “Mama’s Day Bail Out” events, making bail payments for local, black mothers and caregivers.

“We wanted to make sure they can be home with their families for Mother’s Day so they can be celebrated and loved on,” said Erica Perry, an organizer with BLMMC, said during a news conference Thursday. “We also wanted to bring awareness to the true injustice of money bail and pre-trial detention.”

BLMMC limited bail payments for the Mama’s Day event up to $10,000 each. The group raised money and awareness over the last month for the campaign. (Donate here.) Shahida Jones, a BLMMC organizer, said they have about $30,000 they can spend during this year’s Mother’s Day event.

‘Mama’s Day Bail Out’ Part of Strategy to End Money Bail, Pre-Trial Detention

The group paid bail for mothers Wednesday, Perry said. It was $100. But last year, Jones said, they had a special case outside the Mother’s Day Event. A 16-year-old girl was being held and the group raised an additional $60,000 to get her out of jail.

But Jones said her group provides help even outside the jail.

“(Our donations) go to help pay bail but they also go to provide supportive services,” Jones said. “That includes things like housing and transportation, food, whatever they need to make sure they are healthy and whole and that they can move forward.” 

“We also wanted to bring awareness to the true injustice of money bail and pre-trial detention.”

Perry said the move was a part of an overall strategy to end money bail and pre-trial detention here. Perry said about 2,800 people sit in Shelby County jails now, many of them waiting for their trials and can’t get out “simply because they cannot afford to pay their bail.” Nearly $80 million is spent annually to hold people in jail here and “that’s just far too much money.” She suggested that $80 million be invested in community programs like education, housing, and more.

“That’s what our Mama’s Day Bail Out is about,” Perry said. “It’s about highlighting how many people are in jail. These people are our mothers, our sisters, our family members, people who take care of us, people who take their children to school. When they’re held in jail because they can’t afford to pay bail, they’re children miss school, they miss doctor’s appointments, they get fired from their jobs because they can’t call into or out of work.”

Perry said BLMMC is now working with members of the Shelby County Commission to create a task force to review local policies on bail and pre-trial detention.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Playhouse On The Square Invites You To The Cabaret

The cast of Cabaret, Playhouse on the Square

“No use permitting some prophet of doom
To wipe every smile away
Life is a cabaret, old chum
So come to the cabaret”
— “Cabaret”

I posted some thoughts about Cabaret‘s nearly infuriating relevance last week. It was a kind of preview for Playhouse on the Square’s opening. Only, instead of looking behind the scenes, it went behind the text to ask where all the Nazis came from. And, by extension, I wanted to know where America’s Nazis went when the U.S. entered WWII and the national narrative turned against them.

As musical theater rollouts go, it was a pretty bleak exercise. But even a week ago, I don’t think I could have anticipated the kinds of headlines I’d wake up to on the morning I sat down to write the review. Twitter was full of news about racism, misogyny, drunkenness, sexual exhibitionism and drug use inside Tennessee’s GOP leadership — rot in the head of an organization so grotesque it wouldn’t hear, let alone approve, a 2018 proposal to condemn Nazis and white supremacy. But the headline that really got my attention was this: “Man Patrolling With Border Militia Suggested Going ‘Back To Hitler Days.”
“Why are we just apprehending them and not lining them up and shooting them?”  Armando Gonzalez was quoted as saying. “We have to go back to Hitler days and put them all in a gas chamber.”

That’s a lot to deal with at the top of a review, but hard to ignore given Cabaret’s subject matter and Playhouse on the Square’s sometimes very brave and sometimes ragged interpretation of material that stubbornly refuses to become nostalgia.

As taught in schools, history is the story of great men, noble ideas, and the march of progress. But history is a horror show that we live inside and can’t escape. It’s a theme we see even in mainstream entertainments these days, and in that vein, Cabaret director Dave Landis effectively takes us “back to the Hitler days.”  His Cabaret bends the all the weirdness and decadence of Berlin’s club scene toward hallucinogenic nightmare. 

Inspired by I Am A Camera, I’ve previously written how Cabaret, shows three snapshots of Germany during Hitler’s rise to power: a sentimental Berlin, a decadent Berlin, and the Berlin where Nazis multiply and metastasize. The first pictures win out hearts and other parts before the last one comes into focus.

We experience these pictures through the eyes of Cliff (Donald Sutton), a writer visiting Weimar Germany, looking for inspiration. The young American gets more than he bargained for when he comes into the orbit of British expatriate and club singer Sally Bowles. With lighting that lands on the audience like a cutting remark and action that breaks the fourth walls at will, this interpretation of the book borrows ideas from expressionist theater, vintage German agitprop and probably Babylon Berlin, but with a considerably smaller budget.

As Bowles, Whitney Branan is more Lotte Lenya than Liza Minnelli. She lets her voice go ugly, and I mean it in the best way possible. She slings sound like a hammer or a razor. It’s the perfect tool for a character who flourishes in the midst of disaster because she’s more Mother Courage than meets the eye.

Though sometimes incomprehensible as he spits out too many words too fast in a thick German accent, Nathan McHenry’s intentions are never unclear. As the emcee he welcomes the audience like a good horror host, and ushers them back and forth across Cabaret‘s intersecting storylines, on journey all the way to hell. It’s an impressive, athletic performance, but it’s Playhouse stalwart Kim Sanders who emerges from the chorus to deliver Cabaret’s crushing blow. She leads the cast through “Tomorrow Belongs to Me,” an infections, inspirational number that begins so sweetly, and ends with the earth shifting hard on its axis. From nowhere so many Nazis emerge. Only they don’t really come from nowhere; they were there all along.

Playhouse On The Square Invites You To The Cabaret

The film version of Cabaret achieves a special kind of clarity. Berlin’s Nazis aren’t hidden at the beginning, they’re just pushed to the margins and not taken seriously. Then suddenly they’re everywhere. They’re everybody. It’s a strong blueprint for negotiating any narrative vagaries in the stage musical’s book.

What it lacks in this level of subtlety, Playhouse on the Square’s production counters with the somnambulant urgency recently described by the Twitter parody/tribute account Werner Twertzog: “Dear America: You are waking up, as Germany once did, to the awareness that 1/3 of your people would kill another 1/3, while 1/3 watches.”

I sat in a box seat far house left, and so many of this Cabaret’s more intimate moments took place far stage right. That means there’s a lot about this show I really can’t discuss with any authority, because my view was so badly obscured. This won’t be a problem for most audience members, but for me it was enough of an issue to cut the review short. What I saw was thoughtful and provocative. What I couldn’t see at least sounded like a close match.

It’s so easy to fall for Sally Bowles – to buy into her spiel about the short distance from cradle to tomb, and carpe diem, and all that. “Come to the Cabaret,” she belts like a carnival barker, pitching all the attractions. Only Elsie, the former Chelsea flatmate Bowles valorizes in the musical’s title song, didn’t win a prize by dying blissfully ignorant. Nobody won anything by ignoring their prophets of doom, certainly not the people Elsie’s happy corpse left behind in the soup.

I don’t always know why we go to the theater anymore. I don’t think it’s to serve any of the old civic functions, but maybe it is sometimes. It’s certainly not for any kind of meaningful moral instruction or else all those money-printing productions of A Christmas Carol would have fixed us up pretty good by now.

Escapism’s high quality these days, relatively cheap,  and almost always at our fingertips. But if Hamlet’s right and plays really are conscience catchers, many playgoers will see themselves inside the Kit Kat Club when the show’s grimy, accusatory lights come up over audience. That’s the kind of Cabaret this is. But if it doesn’t move them to do more than renew their season subscriptions, we’d might as well start celebrating. Right this way, your table’s waiting.  

Categories
News News Blog

Groups File Lawsuit Challenging New State Law on Voter Registration


Three groups filed a federal lawsuit Thursday challenging a new Tennessee law that would put substantial requirements in place for groups that participate in voter registration efforts.

The suit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Tennessee, Campaign Legal Center, and Fair Elections Center on behalf of the League of Women Voters of Tennessee, the American Muslim Advisory Council, the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center, Rock the Vote, and Spread the Vote.

The defendants in the suit are Mark Goins, coordinator of elections for the state of Tennessee; Herbert Slatery, Tennessee Attorney General; and members of the state election commission.

The law in question, signed by Gov. Bill Lee last week, lists a slew of requirements for those participating in voter registration efforts and penalties for those who don’t comply.

[pullquote-1]

The legislation, HB 1079/ SB 971, sponsored by Rep. Tim Rudd (R-Murfreesboro)  and Sen. Ed Jackson (R-Jackson) includes conditions organizations must adhere to when holding voter registration drives.

Some of the requirements include providing the coordinator of elections with information about the drive prior to holding it, completing a training, and filing a sworn statement stating an intention to obey the laws and procedures pertaining to the process.

The law also creates civil and criminal penalties to groups or individuals who turn in more than 100 “deficient filings.”

The organizations who filed the lawsuit maintain that the law violates the freedoms of speech and association, due process, and the right to vote under the First and 14th Amendments.

“This is a lawsuit challenging strict, unnecessary, and irrational restrictions on community-based voter registration speech and activity,” the complaint reads. “Plaintiffs bring this action to prevent the enforcement of a new Tennessee law that unconstitutionally burdens and chills there core political speech and associational rights.”

The ACLU-TN said Thursday that Tennessee is ranked 44th in voter registration, but that there was a surge in registration during the 2018 midterm elections. The group believes the new law comes as a result of that registration growth and election officials’ lack of resources to handle the influx.

Sophia Lakin, staff attorney for the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project said the legislation is “punishing” civic organizations that advocate for people’s right to vote and that help them do so.

“With its dismal voter registration rates, Tennessee needs these groups on the ground,” Lakin said. “What politicians should be doing is making sure that local election officials have the adequate resources to do their jobs. Silencing civic groups’ voices is not the solution.”

Paul Garner, organizing director of the Mid-South Peace and Justice Center, one of the plaintiffs agreed, calling the law “draconian” and a form of voter suppression. Garner said the law punishes “those that want the democratic process to reflect and represent as many people as possible in communities like Memphis.”

[pullquote-2]

The lawsuit aims to ensure the political participation of all the state’s eligible voters, Hedy Weinberg, executive director of ACLU-TN said.

“Voter registration drives have long been a way for communities that are historically disenfranchises — including students, people of color, immigrants, and senior citizens — to empower individuals and gain access to the ballot box,” Weinberg said.

The League of Women Voters of Tennessee, another plaintiff, has prioritized making sure voters are properly registered and have all the information they need for nearly 100 years, according to Marian Ott, president of the organization.

“Voter registration surges like the one Tennessee saw in 2018 should be celebrated, not penalized,” Ott said. “We saw this law as a threat to democracy and a direct violation of our Constitution.”

The law created the “country’s most aggressive” penalties for voter registration drives, Paul Smith, vice president of the Campaign Legal Center, said.

“If the court does not intervene, the state will unlawfully chill the efforts of organizations working to get people registered,” Smith said. Voter registration drives for years have been a way for historically marginalized groups to empower their communities and gain access to the ballot box. We are taking Tennessee to court to protect that tradition against government threats of fines and jail time.”



Read the full complaint here

Categories
Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Blueshift Ensemble Live-Scores Memphis History Tonight at Crosstown Theater

Memphis’ decentralized bicentennial celebration continues tonight at Crosstown Arts.

As part of the arts organization’s new film series, which is devoted to “showcasing a diverse collection of independent, international, historically significant, artistic, experimental, cult, underground and documentary features,” they’re trying something new. Justin Thompson, Crosstown Arts Director of Film and Video Production, raided the film and video archives at the Memphis Public Library and created a montage of history. From the well-known images of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Sanitation Workers Strike to obscure footage of sock-hopping teens, our visual story will be accompanied by the Blueshift Ensemble. The neo-classical chamber music group, featuring film composer/cellist Jonathan Kirkscey and musical director/flautist Jenny Davis, will create a semi-improvised soundtrack for Bluff City history. It’s a unique marriage of image and sound you won’t see anywhere else.

The show starts at 7:30 tonight at Crosstown Theater. Tickets are $5 at the door.

CROSSTOWN ARTS FILM SERIES: MEMPHIS BICENTENNIAL BOOGIE TRAILER from Crosstown Arts on Vimeo.

Blueshift Ensemble Live-Scores Memphis History Tonight at Crosstown Theater

Categories
Music Music Blog

New Festival Honors Omar Higgins

Memphians gathered at Clayborn Temple Wednesday, May 8th, for the unveiling of a new, multi-venue festival to take place October 5-6, 2019. Memphis MOJO Festival will be held Downtown, at a series of venues that includes the Orpheum, B.B. King’s Blues Club, Handy Pavilion, and the main stage at Church Park.

The festival is, in part, the brainchild of the late Omar Higgins, beloved frontman and bassist of reggae group Chinese Connection Dub Embassy, and the hardcore band Negro Terror. Higgins, 37, died on April 18, 2019 from complications related to an untreated staph infection. Higgins was named the Legacy Founder of the upcoming festival, which, like its founder, an avowed fan of a wide spectrum of musical styles, will celebrate multiple genres and promote unity.

The event on Wednesday was a who’s who of local musicians, activists, and business leaders, with Rosalyn Nichols representing Clayborn Temple, Anna Mitchell of Royal Studios, Dale Watson of Ameripolitan Festival fame, and Omar’s brothers and bandmates, Joseph and David Higgins, among the speakers. They praised Omar’s vision and activism and reminded their listeners to carry the torch. “The voice of Memphis is epitomized in the life and spirit of our friend and brother, Omar Higgins,” Mitchell said.

Joseph Higgins speaks during the announcement of the festival.

“This is something we’ve been trying to do for years,” Joseph said, as he stood next to a large photo of Omar. “He believed in unifying every single person.” David spoke next, saying that MOJO Fest was dreamed up when he, Omar, and a friend, a rockabilly fan, ate breakfast together, chewing the fat, dreaming of a festival that lifted up local acts and brought disparate communities together. That breakfast, with its meeting of reggae, hardcore, and rockabilly set the tone for the festival-to-be. David said that, even in the hospital, Omar mentioned the festival and wanted it to happen. He remembered his brother saying, “You know that festival we were talking about last year? Keep that going.”
MOJO is definitely going, and, as envisioned, it looks to be a party. In addition to the six stages of music, there will be a MOJO Expo Industry Event October 2nd-5th, before the festival proper. And the tone of the meeting to announce MOJO Festival wasn’t somber; it was more of a rallying of spirits. Memphis-based muralist Birdcap was on hand, painting a mural of three brilliantly multicolored birds. “They played ‘Three Little Birds’ by Bob Marley at [Omar’s] funeral,” he said, noting that the funeral was also held at Clayborn Temple. And the musicians on hand represented an array of genres and styles — soul, blues, singer-songwriter — who played songs before and after the speakers. There was a banjo and saxophone, electric and acoustic guitar, and violin.

Other guests spoke about Higgins and his vision of Memphis, as a unified city where citizens, artists, and activists can celebrate both its history and its future. Dale Watson said that he was pleased MOJO would feature “a little sliver of Ameripolitan,” in a festival with a lineup that proposes to include soul, jazz, blues, punk and garage rock, and gospel music. It’s evident that the festival organizers intend to honor their commitment to diversity, which looks to mean an embarrassment of riches celebrating Memphis’ multifaceted music scene and the life and legacy of one of its most generous musicians. 
Memphis MOJO Festival will be held at multiple locations, October 5-6, 2019. www.memphismojofestival.com