Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Making Art out of Truth – the Legacy of Ntozake Shange

Image Ownership: Public Domain

The recent passing of the feminist playwright, Ntozake Shange, has expanded my appreciation for artists who extend their voice to the most creative realm, fearlessly expressing truth through art and surviving waves of criticism that usually shadows great work conceived ahead of its time.

Even today – while there are many women who applauded Shange’s 1976 “For Colored Girls Who Have Considered …,” Obie Award-winning play, contrasted to the majority of critics having been men at that time – a number of millennials did not embrace the artistry and feminist commentary that the film conveyed when adapted by Tyler Perry eight years ago, which, in my opinion was his best art to date.

The positive reception from the twentysomething generation of the 70s in contrast to the indifference from those millennials of the 21st century brings attention to the generational mind shifts that have developed over three decades.

Looking at the social traumas addressed by Shange’s characters, and mirrored in Perry’s film are still experiences realized by today’s females, but, as I observed, the alarming indifference was as if some could not relate to the characters’ experiences, which was possibly due to the inability to bear the gravity of these experiences as visualized on film, thus their affinity to relate were numbed or blatantly negated in a non-conscious state.

As the Me Too Movement has found its voice, we are in a haze of female empowerment, and misogynistic conditioning that have some women thinking they are not women unless they can successfully compete in providing male pleasure at the expense of their souls.

In the voices of her characters, Shange arrested this concept, and should always be remembered for creating her masterwork in her twenties.  I believe "For Colored Girls ...," saved her life in having the courage to address various female realities and their ill encounters, leaving such women with no place to turn but within to find their esteem and embrace the tenets of self-love and respect. 

Monday, October 29, 2018


                     “Fiction, like sculpture or painting, begins with a rough sketch …”
                                     
                                                                         – John Champlin Gardner Jr.

Saturday, September 8, 2018

Worthy of an Award – Lahey V. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania


Photo Courtesy/Credit: ABC/Mitch Haaseth


It brought tears to our eyes, sitting at the table with a mixed generation, watching crossover episodes of two African-American actors guest-starring on each other’s show with veteran actor, Cicely Tyson cast as the maternal-elder, watching her daughter, (played by Viola Davis), defending Glynn Turman’s character with a closing argument, advocating for thousands of men and women who have been falsely incarcerated without due process or resources for bail.

This award-worthy episode on How to Get Away with Murder“Lahey V. Commonwealth,” personified [real] reality TV, based on innumerable cases of color, and a comparative reality when  the chances of seeing blacks on TV was as much an anomaly as seeing a black attorney in real life arguing before the supreme court.  Moreover a woman.

Viewing this episode from a historical angle with a conscious reminder of the days when blacks were a rarity on TV, made this a layered reality with a recollection of what the fight for civil rights was all about, reflecting on the accomplishments we have made as a country and the reformations that have yet to be made to provide all citizens equal humanity.

The brilliance of this episode was its scripted argument on the racial injustices that still prevail as it mirrored a dichotomous realization of the achievements we have made in witnessing a powerful cast of black actors and female producer, Shonda Rhimes, who has gained a monopoly on Thursday-night TV with creator, Peter Nowalk, and a diverse team of writers and directors helping to establish a legacy-making moment with this episode, and Season 4’s finale, addressing the outcome of Lahey V. Commonwealth.

This is the level that I feel we should strive for in producing great TV that stimulates dignity and pride through a reflective lens of America’s past, present and future.

Thursday, June 28, 2018


         “ … passion can write a lot of things.”
                                                     
                                                         – Alanis Morissette
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Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Links to Excellence – Sheku + Isata Kanneh-Mason


Courtesy of IMG Artists (UK)

I’d dread to think where we’d be without musicians, and society without music.  As society is increasingly divesting in the arts, we are consistently risking the ability to transform creative minds into mastered artists, as this brother and sister duo.

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Tuesday, March 20, 2018


“The most courageous act is still to think for yourself. Aloud.” 
                                               
                                                                                                      – Coco Chanel

Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Tiers of Possibilities


Having yet to see Black Panther as I’m writing this post, yet witnessing its rave centered on a world endowed with coveted resources, intelligent minds and ancestral wisdom, has enabled me to imagine this visionary film that provokes wondrous possibilities for us all.

Tuesday, January 16, 2018


"It is more beautiful to trust in God. The beautiful in this world is all from his hand, declaring the perfection of taste …           
        
              – Lew Wallace