ReportWire

Tag: Stagolee and the Funeral of a Dangerous Word

  • The Deeper Meaning of Stagolee and the Funeral of a Dangerous Word at Main Street

    The Deeper Meaning of Stagolee and the Funeral of a Dangerous Word at Main Street

    [ad_1]


    Pictures of Black civil rights leaders pepper the forest green walls of the office on stage. The office bulletin board is haphazardly scattered with various community events. Papers littered over an office desk. Everything is reminiscent of a workplace except the big brown rectangular box that can’t help but call attention to itself. Did somebody die?

    In this world premiere production of Stagolee and the Funeral of a Dangerous Word by Thomas Meloncon, it doesn’t take long to discern what the dangerous word is. Is there any other word in American English that conjures up its own meaning without even having to utter it in its entirety. Ask someone what the T-word is. Be prepared for various responses and confused faces. Ask someone what the N-word is. Be prepared for a silence that rings just as loud as the six letter word.

    click to enlarge

    Stagolee (Timothy Eric) and Naomi (LaKeisha Rochelle Randle) speaking about the town’s most recent race riot.

    Photo by Pin Lim / Forest Photography.

    Directed by Errol Anthony Wilks, Stagolee and the Funeral of a Dangerous Word offers engaging insights into how the dangerous word gains meaning over the course of a lifetime. Beyond the realistic set design (James V. Thomas) marked with the astute detail of the blinds opening up to the street, the crux of this production hinges on the story and its acting.

    With any new play, there can be a sense of overwriting. Extraneous details that add unnecessary confusion. A few “two” many frivolous characters. An ending that feels duty-bound to wrap up all loose ends regardless of how rushed it feels.

    However, a perfect script has never been a requirement for a thoughtful and worthy production. Stagolee and the Funeral of a Dangerous Word is at its best when it focuses on Stagolee, the son, and the dangerous word. Despite some awkward blocking that obscured sightlines and a confusing choice for the NAACP director to deliver an impassioned speech during a climactic scene from a closed downstage position, the conversations about the dangerous word went beyond “who can say it?” or “what does it mean?” Instead, this play adds a more interesting perspective. When does it become meaningful? How does the meaning of the word change over time on a personal level?

    click to enlarge

    Rodger (Seth Carter Ramsey) arrives at the NAACP office and listens to Sam (Byron Jacquet) give the ground rules.

    Photo by Pin Lim / Forest Photography.

     Any word that can incite violence is worth these discussions, so when Rodger (Seth Carter Ramsey) uses the dangerous word within earshot of Stagolee (Timothy Eric) while they’re working, a race riot ensues. The head of the local chapter of the NAACP, Sam Kingsley (Byron Jacquet) arranges a deal with the District Attorney’s office so that both avoid the harsh charges for inciting a riot. Both Stagolee and Rodger agree not to ever say the word and that they will talk about the dangerous word at the NAACP office under the guidance of a clinical psychologist, Dr. John Cohen (Ed Muth).

    When Stagolee begrudgingly visits the NAACP office ahead of his first meeting with Dr. Cohen, he and Naomi (LaKeisha Rochelle Randle), an old friend and NAACP employee, are at odds. She is frustrated that Stagolee lacked the self discipline to avoid the violence of the race riot while Stagolee is indignant that she is in support of the resolution that he should never say the dangerous word.

    click to enlarge

    Sam (Byron Jacquet) sharing with Stagolee (Timothy Eric) the racial violence that he and his family have had to overcome.

    Photo by Pin Lim / Forest Photography.

    The dangerous word is his to say. The word has been reclaimed. His father taught him so. Alongside the passion for being allowed to use the dangerous word is his tender fondness for Naomi. Scattered within their heated discussion are Stagolee’s declarations of love and desire that would make most women swoon. Instead, she rebuffs his advances and repeats often that he is not her type.

    She’s planning a funeral where they plan to bury artifacts of racial injustice and pledges from children declaring they will no longer say the dangerous word. Stagolee wants no part of it, but with the help of Rev. Moses Kulani (Manning Mpinduzi-Mott), Naomi hopes the procession will calm racial tensions and bring healing to the community.

    click to enlarge

    Rev. Moses Kulani (Manning Mpinduzi-Mott) asking the ancestors for help for the procession.

    Photo by Pin Lim / Forest Photography.

    When Rodger and Stagolee meet for their meetings with Dr. Cohen, tensions never seem to calm, but both share their unfiltered perspectives about the dangerous word. By the end of their sessions, there’s too much pent-up bitterness. It escalates, and all have to manage the fallout. Eventually, Stagolee is able to understand the NAACP and even decides on attending the procession.

    From the moment Timothy Eric swaggers on stage with his Stetson hat, he endows Stagolee with a sincerely overwhelming sense of self. Even as he gloriously rattles off the implausible stories about his father, he delivers the lines in such a manner that it’s clear that he believes those stories. While the others call it folklore, there’s nothing mythological about Stagolee’s father.

    His bravado originates from these stories, and his bravado is real — built up over time in a community where there are people who believe he is nothing due to the color of his skin. He looms on stage even when he’s sitting. His stares are just as revelatory as his stories. He leads this production with enough certainty to plaster over any skepticism.

    click to enlarge

    Rodger (Seth Carter Ramsey) trying to get under Stagolee’s (Timothy Eric) skin.

    Photo by Pin Lim / Forest Photography.

    The crux of this play lives in the sit downs that take place between Stagolee, Rodger, and Dr. Cohen. Ramsey clarifies Rodger’s prejudice by playing the truth of the character rather than only expressing the brute prejudice. The curiosity he conveys about who owns the dangerous word produces constructive tension. His choice to never sit down and his constant walking-back-and-forth contributes to the contentious mood. The more they talk, the more combative they become.

    Muth’s more mild-mannered and composed temperament grounds the discussions. When Rodger finds out that the psychologist is Jewish, he does not hesitate to spout out his hatred for Jews. Rather than react to his hostility, Dr. Cohen chooses to be patient. Muth’s meekness allows for focus to remain on what Stagolee and Rodger believe and why they believe it.

    LaKeisha Rochelle Randle’s charismatic performance of the Harvard-educated Naomi has a natural charm and magnetic presence. She moves with purpose across the stage, and her expressions clearly convey her wishes and desires. Though the initial scenes predominantly feature her, she disappears and then appears after the intermission in a less prominent capacity.

    Her dynamic energy is sorely missed. She and Eric work well off each other, and their character interactions invite engaging insight. What more would be revealed if more of the dangerous word is explored through their relationship?

    click to enlarge

    Stagolee (Timothy Eric) and Naomi (Lakeisha Rochelle Randle).

    Photo by Pin Lim / Forest Photography.

    This play doesn’t definitively put the dangerous word away. The big takeaway is not “don’t say the n-word.” Instead, it seeks to reveal why people wish to use it, who can use it, and how that word evokes memories and hardships that make some never want to hear or say the word.

    By tracing the affects of the dangerous word on a personal level rather than the historical (this play does not ignore the historical), Stagolee and the Funeral of a Dangerous Word is a bracing look on what feeds the power of the dangerous word and what makes it so dangerous.

    Performances continue through April 21 at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and 3 p.m. Sundays (no performance on March 31, Easter Sunday) $35-$59.at Main Street Theater’s Rice Village location, 2540 Times Boulevard. For more information, call 713-524-6706 or visit mainstreettheater.com.

    [ad_2]

    Ada Alozie

    Source link

  • Stagolee and the Funeral of a Dangerous Word on Stage at Main Street Theater

    Stagolee and the Funeral of a Dangerous Word on Stage at Main Street Theater

    [ad_1]


    “The N-Word has been around since 1619. It’s been a part of American history, American literature and there’s so much controversy over the use of it, who can use it, who can’t. Who has permission to use it?”

    That’s Thomas Meloncon, Texas Southern University associate professor and author of about 30 plays and two books of poetry, starting to explain why he wanted to explore this divisive topic into his play Stagolee and the Funeral of a Dangerous Word  which is having its world premiere at Main Street Theater.

    Meloncon has often focused on relationships in his plays. His play Diary of Black Men has been staged all over the United States and  internationally since 1982  and centers on six stereotypical Black men and their understanding of relationships with Black women.

    Growing up in the Fifth Ward, Meloncon was well acquainted with Lloyd Price’s 1959 No. 1 pop hit “Stagger Lee.” (Both Stagolee and Stagger Lee are alternative spellings.) It and many other stories and songs told the story of a Christmas Day brawl in 1895 that led to the death of one of two men in a bar in St. Louis, Missouri.

    “Stagolee, of course, is based upon a fight between a guy by the name of Lee Shelton and Billy Lyons in 1895. Two people fighting over a dice game or politics. The legend goes that Billy Lyons knocks Lee Sheltons’ — Stagolee’s  — hat off his head which is something you don’t do to any man and particularly to any African American man and so that fight started,” Meloncon said.

    In real life, the fight took place on Christmas Day 1896 in a St. Louis, Missouri bar and Lyons died early the next day after being shot in the abdomen. From this account, Meloncon began to build his story of two men fighting over one’s use of the N-word.

    “I’ve been writing this story off and on or a number of years now,” Meloncon said laughing.  “It’s gone through different phases and different twists and turns.”

    The five-act play takes place in the fictitious town of Deep River, Texas. The local chapter of the NAACP is planning a funeral for the N-Word. A riot develops around this particular word. It addresses racism. It addresses the fact that the word is still toxic and when it’s used, people have emotional responses to it.”

    Meloncon set the play in 1999, the year that Mos Def (now known as Yasiin Bey) put out his debut album Black on Both Sides that used a variation of the N-Word 49 times and was considered one of the best albums of the year.

    “Part of the story is centered around an incident at a lumberyard where my two characters work and the white guy uses the word and Stagolee who’s the son of Stagolee  tells him he can’t used the word without his permission That argument still exists today.”

    After the fight at the plant both men are charged with inciting a riot. To resolve that, the head of the NAACP makes a deal with the district attorney to have the two sit and talk about the N-Word in the office of the NAACP.

    “So they bring in a Jewish psychologist who’s a very good friend of the head of the NAACP and his role is to get these two men to sit down and unravel the psychological origin of this word. When did they learn this word. And when did they learn the meaning of it?” Meloncon said.

    “When do kids both black and white first use this word? Do they understand what it means? Do they abandon the word at some point or do they continue to use it? It gets into the flesh of why this word exists and why do we use it and why is it sometimes funny, toxic? Sometimes it’s used casually.  There are so many layers to this.”

    In the Main Street production, Timothy Eric plays Stagolee, Seth Carter Ramsey plays Roger and Ed Muth plays the Jewish mediator. Errol Anthony Wilks directs. .

    And as far as resolution goes?

    “They do come to some understanding. It’s not what you call a happy understanding. There’re are ups and downs. But they do come to realize from each other how they learned this word.

    “I hope that the after effect of [his play]  is that we come to — even the young people — we come to a better understanding of this word, a word that has been used as a weapon of mass destruction both internally and externally. “

    Performances ate scheduled for March 30  through April 21 at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and 3 p.m. Sundays (no performance on March 31, Easter Sunday) $35-$59.at Main Street Theater’s Rice Village location, 2540 Times Boulevard. For more information, call 713-524-6706 or visit mainstreettheater.com

    [ad_2]

    Margaret Downing

    Source link