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Theater Theater Feature

Hattiloo opens Ruined, welcomes artistic director Hall.

Katori Hall has good lines. Hall’s the playwright behind Hurt Village and Hoodoo Love. She won an Olivier for The Mountaintop, which ran on Broadway with Samuel L. Jackson and Angela Bassett in leading roles. She’s also the newly appointed artistic director for the Hattiloo Theatre. “I bleed barbecue sauce,” she said last Friday, stressing her Memphis bona fides and enchanting a near-capacity crowd of invited guests come to welcome her to the new gig. It was a homecoming of sorts for the Craigmont grad (and Columbia, and Harvard) who regards Lynn Nottage as her mentor and whose latest play Pussy Valley is being developed as a streaming series for STARZ.

Friday’s opening night performance of Nottage’s Pulitzer-winning drama Ruined was preceded by a reception celebrating Hall’s arrival and the announcement of a new vision for the Hattiloo. Together with the company’s founder, Ekundayo Bandele, Hall wants to transform the Overton Square playhouse into a small professional company with a national reputation for developing actors and fostering emerging writers.

Ruined is a strong opener and evidence of what the ambitious but inconsistent Hattiloo is capable of. Under the direction of Shondrika Moss-Bouldin, it’s the most satisfying, fully realized thing the company’s done since Tony Horne’s vividly imagined production of Marcus Gardley’s The House That Will Not Stand last season. When Nottage’s Congolese Civil War drama is on, it’s on fire.

Set in Mama Nadi’s bar in a bleeding and brutalized mining town in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ruined borrows knowingly and well from shows like Cabaret and Mother Courage and Her Children. Mama is a businesswoman selling cigarettes, whiskey, and other goods and comforts to the soldiers, militiamen, miners, and dealers on all sides of a shapeshifting conflict. She buys other kinds of merchandise, too — rescuing two women, Sophie and Salima, from sexual torture that scars them physically and wrecks them socially. She rescues them and puts them to work entertaining soldiers indistinguishable from the ones who ruined them.

Mama’s protection is a mixed blessing that comes at a price for women still coping with sexual trauma, particularly for Sophie, who becomes a popular singer at the bar, with a head for business and petty larceny. But touchy, insistent soldiers cause panic and paralysis, putting her on a collision course with Mama’s business side. She will ultimately fare better than Salima who arrives with a secret she knows she can’t keep hidden.

Ruined starkly considers the rape and the sexual mutilation of women as weapons and tactics of war. These nightmares are brought to vivid life by 2017 Ostrander nominee Jessica “Jai” Johnson and Kiah Clements as Salima and Sophie.

As Mama, Maya Robinson leans heavily on strong comedy chops. The humor softens Mama’s hard edges but not too much. It’s a rich performance, and her scenes with Bertram Williams Jr. — a supplier and would-be romantic interest — keep hope alive in a violent place. Williams, it should be noted, has been performing with Hattiloo since the beginning and has transitioned from serviceable leading man to commanding presence who gets better with each new role.

Americans are isolated, largely untraveled, and tend to think of foreign conflicts as somebody else’s problem. But globalism means the violence is usually closer than you think. When you watch a production of Ruined, you’ve got to know that the modern technology everybody enjoys has funded war in the Congo. Cell phones funded it. Laptop computers funded it. Video game consoles funded it. That’s not what the show is about, but the brutality has context. Coltan, the rare mineral found in abundance in the Congo and used as currency in Ruined, is that context. Recommended.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Alan Scoop

This week’s Music Video Monday comes home.

“This video is a love letter to my city,” says director Katori Hall. “Memphis, you are majestic even when distressed. In these hard times when we’ve gotten used to seeing images of black death, I offer this visual meditation on BLACK LOVE.”

Hall’s video for Alan Scoop’s “Sweet Love”, the first from his album Preamble, is a stylish, passionate piece starring Memphis It Girl Rosalyn Ross as a flight attendant home for a quick layover with her sweetie.

Says the director: “Special thanks to so many, but especially my bestie/cuz Christy Henry, CD & assistant Stori Ayers, DP Ryan Earl Parker, #2 on camera Breezy Lucia, gaffer Andy Allmendinger, editor Anne-Laure D’hooghe. Robin Owens over at Germantown Community Theatre, who provided costuming, Westy’s, Crystal Palace Memphis, Dan Putnam of Sheraton Memphis Downtown Hotel, Glenn Thomas of Memphis International Airport, Paula of Paula & Raiford’s Disco, Sharon Fox O’Guin of the The Memphis & Shelby County Film and Television Commission, and Mr. Robert Hollowell and his mean blue El Camino.”

Music Video Monday: Alan Scoop

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

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Theater Theater Feature

Hoodoo Love at Hattiloo

She keeps a ra’t’s foot in her hand at night when she goes to sleep,

She keeps a ra’t’s foot in her hand at night when she goes to sleep,

to keep [me with] her, so I won’t make no midnight creep.

— “Bad Luck Woman Blues,” Papa Charlie Jackson

I’d like to see a Texas cage match where Katori Hall’s Hoodoo Love takes on Memphis: The Musical. Not because I think it would be much of a fight, but because it would be deeply satisfying to see Hall’s scruffy fairy tale school that wannabe rock-and-roll origin story by a couple of good-intentioned Jersey boys.

Hall’s a Memphis writer who writes Memphis and writes it well. Hoodoo Love, currently onstage at the Hattiloo Theatre, is an intensely poetic love story from the Great Migration, about a little bitty woman with a great big voice, who escapes her hellish preacher’s daughter’s life in rural Mississippi, hoping to make it as a blues singer on Beale Street and to cut a record for the white man on down the road in Chicago. She spends most of her time washing clothes for other people and thinking up songs.

Toulou, sweetly embodied by Keia Johnson, falls hard for Ace, a masterful bluesman with a girl in every town. Desperate to make him her one and only, she turns to Candy Lady, a conjure woman, whose root work is “powerful shit.” The charms work, but there’s a price.

To spice up this voodoo stew, Toulou’s violent, hard-drinking brother follows her to town with the intention of founding his own congregation. Jib, a character reminiscent of Jacob Engstrand from Ibsen’s Ghosts, brings everything Toulou was running away from with him.

Hall has a gift for writing colorful, idiom-laden dialogue that tumbles from her characters’ mouths like Shakespeare’s prose. Hurt Village sounds like Shakespeare. It also sounds like North Memphis at the turn of the last century. She also has a gift for style-hopping, and Hoodoo Love’s mix of earthy music and magical realism is like an Alice Walker story arriving by train in one of Sam Shepard’s early rock-and-blues fantasias. It studies the violence and deprivation underpinning the thing we call the blues, riffing on myths, and the memories of people who claim to have seen guitar legend Robert Johnson on the day he died, crawling on the floor on his hands and knees and barking like a dog.

There are many satisfying things about the Hattiloo’s run through Hoodoo. Johnson’s vulnerable, unforced performance tops the list, although every actor brings something good to the table. Arthur Ford’s Ace is a smooth operator, whether he’s blowing harp or blowing smoke. His scenes in Toulou’s arms, and under her spell, make steam. As brother Jib, Rickey Thomas is an awkward mess of a manchild and a loose cannon. Candy Lady is brought vividly to life by Hurt Village veteran Angela Wynn. But on opening weekend, not all of the actors seemed comfortable with the lines and blocking, and nothing upsets the flow of a performance like actors having to think about what they are doing and saying. Here’s hoping that gets better once the cast has a few shows under its belt.

It’s frustrating, in Memphis especially, to watch actors pretending to play blues out of sync with music from the wings. Even if you commit to actors who can’t play, Hoodoo Love‘s Memphis setting and magical elements create opportunities to present music in a theatrical way, without turning the show into an actual musical.

Director Brooke Sarden may not have found perfect solutions for Hoodoo Love‘s musical challenges, but she seems especially attuned to the meaning and natural musicality of Hall’s language.

Although it’s set in the 1930s, Hoodoo Love‘s modern Memphisness shines through in a way that should make it especially satisfying for regional audiences.

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News

Magic and Memphis, Along With a Little Bit of Music

Former Memphian Katori Hall’s play, “Hoodoo Love,” opened at the Cherry Lane Theatre in New York this week. The New York Times weighed in with a review:

“Ms. Hall casts a sprawling net around her tale, hauling in a fair number of cliches, some rather arbitrary plot points and some strong moments in her right-minded but ambling opus.

“The play, which was workshopped in Cherry Lane’s Mentor Project under the eye of the MacArthur Fellowship-winning playwright Lynn Nottage, is really about a woman involved with two men: a blues singer and ladies’ man named Ace of Spades, and her huckster no-account brother, Jib. Rather than being honest with Ace, she turns to the hoodoo of her elderly neighbor, Candy Lady, to bind him to her.”

Read the entire review at the NYTimes website.

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News

Memphian Katori Hall’s Play to Open in New York

The New York Times has a nice story today on young Memphis playwright Katori Hall. An excerpt:

KATORI HALL’S earliest plays were a smash, keeping the audience rapt for hours. They were staged in a Fisher-Price dollhouse in Ms. Hall’s Memphis living room, and she was author, director, doll handler and the entire audience.

“That’s all I did was make up little plays and perform them for myself,” she said in a recent interview. “When I lost the Fisher-Price people, I snuck into my dad’s toolbox and got batteries to make into people, and I’d roll lint from under the couch into balls and make them the dogs.”

Ms. Hall, 26, is about to find a wider audience. Her first major production, “Hoodoo Love,” begins previews on Tuesday at the Cherry Lane Theater in the West Village and opens Nov. 1.

Read the Times story.