MENU

Bio
Wishlist

SEARCH



RECENT STOPS

The Show Will Not Go On
Technical difficulties
My Favorite Dance Company
My Brother's Keeper
Mojo Workin'
Ok-maybe I'll come back
Gone Fishing
Off the cutting room floor
Personal Responsibility
Ain’t Much to Say



FELLOW TRAVELERS

A Burst of Light

AfroerotiK

AllAboutGeorge

The Allen Gallery

Better Days Coming

Black Gay Blogger

Black Griot

Blabbeando

BrothaLove RantSpace

Clay Cane

culturekitchen

Daily Views, Pop Culture, Rants, and News

Donald

EJ Flavors

Edge of Night

The Emancipation of ProfessorGQ

Ergane in Retrograde

Every Shut Eye Ain't Sleep

Flan! Flan! Flan!

Frank Leon Roberts

Front Porch Storytellin'

Getting Myself Together

Greasy Guide

J-Notes

J's Theater

Jasmyne Cannick

Journey Back To Joy

Journey Into Light

Just be dat

Keith Boykin

The Larry Lyons Experience

Lee’s Space

Lynne d Johnson

Mama Junkyard's

The Mad Professah Lectures

Mandrake Society Radio

Mark Your Truth Here

Ms. World's Guide

Nalo Hopkinson

Negrophile

Noctuary: a record of what passes in the night

Notformi.ca

Novaslim

Old Gold Soul

On a Path

Opera and Cookies

Pam’s House Blend

Pica 12

Pink Mafia Radio

Pondering Negro

Prime

Professor Kim's News Notes
Prometheus 6

Republic of T

Rocka Candy

rod 2.0:beta

Seasoned Yet New in Da Life

Shavar's blog

Steven G. Fullwood

Street Writer

Taylor Siluwé

The Brotherlove

The LoveHater

The Ryan Chronicles

The Starr Report

The Unconquerable Soul

Troy

Water


INTERESTING SITES ALONG THE WAY

Albany Times Union
AntiViolence Project

AlJazeera Network

AlterNet

Alvin Ailey Dance Company

BBC News

Billy Porter

Broadway.com

City Limits

CSPAN

Dhani Jones

Epicurious.com

ESPN

Evidence Dance Company

Food Network

Garth Fagan Dance

Gay City News

GayHealth

Gotham Gazette

I Love NY Theater

Le Monde

LOGO

Los Angeles Times

MoveOn.org

National Black Justice Coalition
New York Blade

New York City Homepage

New York State Black Gay Network

New York State Homepage

New York Theatre

NY Times

NYC Bloggers

OutPOCPAC

PlanetOut

Playbill

TheaterMania

Toronto Globe & Mail

Village Voice

Washington Post

eXTReMe Tracker


REST AREA

©2005 Bernard J. Tarver
Content protected by Creative Commons.
Syndicate this site (XML).
Powered by Movable Type 4.0
� Ok-maybe I'll come back | Main | My Brother's Keeper �


November 1, 2007

Mojo Workin'

The educated, city folk among us will tell you everything happens for a reason. They easily cite scientific theory and logic and use cause and effect relationships as the basis for explaining the unexplainable.

Others put their stock in religion. "Let go, let God" is their way of placing faith in a higher power that is either merciful or vengeful, depending upon which religious doctrine you adhere to.

Somewhere betwixt and between the two is a whole other belief system entirely. Here the skillful manipulation of herbs, roots, bodily fluids, and minerals puts power and control over actions and outcomes into the hands of those who practice and believe in it.

"Hoodoo" (not to be confused with Voodoo) is an African-American folk magic system, with origins in the south, where one can goofer, hex, fix or lay down a trick for various reasons: from snagging a lover to breaking up someone's relationship, from drawing money and luck to exacting revenge on others.

This mysterious force and its role in the lives of four individuals forms the basis for a fascinating new play, Hoodoo Love, running now through December 9 at the Cherry Lane Theatre in New York's Greenwich Village.

Written by a dynamic new voice on the theatrical scene, playwright and actor Katori Hall, Hoodoo Love was originally produced as part of Cherry Lane's Mentor Project 2006. Hall revised and reworked her play to its current stage with assistance from her mentor in the project, noted playwright Lynn Nottage, who describes it as a "gorgeously haunting play" and Hall as "an inventive and soulful writer."

Hall sets this play in her native Memphis, Tennessee, during the depression when many southern Blacks were desperately trying to make their way north, away from Jim Crow and poverty. The story is centered on Toulou, a wide-eyed Mississippi girl who has fled the cotton fields and an unhappy home life to pursue her dream of singing the blues. What she lacks in worldly knowledge she makes up for in unbridled enthusiasm and hope.

Her hopes are also wrapped around a man in her life, Ace of Spades, a womanizing blues singer who regularly passes through town on his travels around the circuit of juke joints and dives across the south and midwest. He's got her nose wide open, among other things, but try as she might, she can't get him to settle down and make her the number one woman in his life.

To do that will require help and Toulou has it in the form of her neighbor, Candy Lady, a motherly figure and hoodoo woman who knows all about working roots, laying tricks and putting hexes on people. Having had about six husbands of her own, she knows all about collecting locks of hair and toenail clippings, or adding the right potion to someone's drink to get them to stick around.

But magic such as that often has to be seen to be believed and Toulou isn't immediately convinced. Complicating matters further is the arrival of her big brother, Jib. A man with a past who now calls himself a preacher, he has come to Memphis to see his baby sister and start a church there, although baby sis is skeptical. Jib is similarly wary of Candy Lady's use of such heathen methods. As she tells him, "If you want salvation, go to church." Her approach works if you want certain things to happen.

Hall has a brilliant ear for dialect and a manner of storytelling akin to poetry broken into four distinctly different voices. The play is not just a joy to watch, it is a pleasure to hear. Additionally, she created original songs used in the production. Hall is already being compared to August Wilson in her masterful use of the language, and while that's nothing to sneeze at, she deserves her own recognition for what she brings to the table.

Her characters are real people we soon care deeply about, even those we may grow to dislike, and this small ensemble brings them all vividly to life. Keith Davis's Jib is a scoundrel. All at once a smiling charmer while secretly scheming, he quotes and often misquotes Bible verse to suit his purposes. Kevin Mambo plays Ace of Spades with strength and determination mixed with pain and vulnerability, as the target of Toulou's mojo. Angela Lewis's Toulou is young and innocent, but never ignorant, and forced to grow up fast. Her transformation is believable and at times painful.

Highest praise, however, goes to Marjorie Johnson as Candy Lady. Fittingly the 2006 AUDELCO Award winner as Best Supporting Actor in this role, when she works her magic to help Toulou lure Ace of Spades, she casts a spell over the audience. It's a mesmerizing scene.

Director Lucie Tiberghien and set designer Robin Vest make effective use of the intimate space in the beautifully renovated Cherry Lane Theatre. Whether out of necessity or creative inspiration, actors make some entrances through the house, and in so doing, put the audience right into the story.

In my highest recommendation, I suggest you run--do not walk--to see this play.

Katori Hall talks about her play Hoodoo Love.

Hoodoo Love at the Cherry Lane Theatre LINK

Playwright Katori Hall LINK

Plays by Lynn Nottage LINK 1 LINK 2

Posted by bernie at November 1, 2007 10:42 PM


Comments

Post a comment










Remember personal info?