Celebrity Actress, Pauletta Pearson Washington returns home to North Carolina starring at 2013 National Black Theatre festival with Roscoe Orman (Sesame Street, Willie Dynamite) and all star cast in Lorey Hayes’ award-winning “Power Play”, a play about Politics, Passion and The Power of God

Celebrity Actress, Pauletta Pearson Washington returns home to North Carolina starring at 2013 National Black Theatre festival with Roscoe Orman (Sesame Street, Willie Dynamite) and all star cast in Lorey Hayes’ award-winning “Power Play”, a play about Politics, Passion and The Power of God.

(L-R) Lorey Hayes, Pauletta Pearson Washington, Roscoe Orman, Lia Chang, Phynjuar and Marcus Naylor will perform at the National Black Theatre Festival in Winston-Salem, NC, for 4 Celebrity Stage Reading Performances of Lorey Hayes' Power Play, directed by André Robinson and produced by Voza Rivers/New Heritage Theatre Group.

(L-R) Lorey Hayes, Pauletta Pearson Washington, Roscoe Orman, Lia Chang, Phynjuar and Marcus Naylor will perform at the National Black Theatre Festival in Winston-Salem, NC, for 4 Celebrity Stage Reading Performances of Lorey Hayes’s Power Play, directed by André Robinson and produced by Voza Rivers/New Heritage Theatre Group.

Dynamic producing duo Executive Producer, Mr. Voza Rivers’ New Heritage Theatre and Ms. Debra Ann Byrd’s Take Wing And Soar will team up to bring Pauletta Pearson Washington (Star of Love, Loss, and What I Wore and wife of Mr. Denzel Washington – also a North Carolina Native) and Roscoe Orman (“Sesame Street”’s Gordon and star of Willie Dynamite) to the 2013 National Black Theatre Festival in Winston-Salem, N.C. for 4 Celebrity Staged Concert Reading Performances of Hayes’ POWER PLAY, a story about politics, passion and the power of God. Joining Washington and Orman in the cast are original cast members Lia Chang and Phynjuar, playwright Lorey Hayes and Marcus Naylor. The play is directed by Mr. André Robinson, producer/director of The Good Fellas of Baltimore and a producer at Belafonte Enterprises.
Lorey Hayes, Roscoe Orman, Pauletta Pearson Washington and Lia Chang. Photo by Andre Robinson

Lorey Hayes, Roscoe Orman, Pauletta Pearson Washington and Lia Chang. Photo by Andre Robinson

POWER PLAY will have 4 performances at Shirley Recital Hall at Salem College Fine Arts Center, Stadium Dr, Winston-Salem, NC, 27108, on Tuesday, July 30th at 8pm, Wednesday, July 31st at 3pm and 8pm, and Thursday, August 1st at 3pm.
Andre Robinson, Lorey Hayes, Harry Belafonte, Pauletta Pearson Washington and Roscoe Orman. Photo by Lia Chang

Andre Robinson, Lorey Hayes, Harry Belafonte, Pauletta Pearson Washington and Roscoe Orman. Photo by Lia Chang

POWER PLAY will also have a “Signed” performance for the deaf and hearing impaired. Playwright Hayes feels a “signed” performance is of the utmost importance – to allow all audiences to experience this unique opportunity. Hayes’ mother – Edna Brown’s best friend (Mrs. Mary Wright…Iron Mine, North Carolina) is deaf and has written two books about her experience. To purchase tickets or for information on group discounts please visit the website or contact the Festival Office at Phone: 336-723-2266 or nbtf@bellsouth.net.

POWER PLAY’s unique theater styled performance (Similar to Off Broadway’s hit play Love Letters), presented in October 2012, at New York’s Schomburg Center with producing partner City College was an overwhelming success, attracting sold out house and standing room only audiences.

Lia Chang as Carole Barbara and Roscoe Orman as Franklin Wright in Lorey Hayes' Power Play. Photo by Will Chang

Lia Chang as Carole Barbara and Roscoe Orman as Franklin Wright in Lorey Hayes’ Power Play. Photo by Will Chang

SYNOPSIS
Senator Franklin Wright is living the American Dream. Propelled to political stardom by a campaign manager who is Asian American and female, he stands on the threshold of making history: becoming California’s first African-American Governor. Or does he? It is a question Franklin must answer when, as campaign front runner, he finds himself thrust in the midst of a scandal that threatens to ruin the election, his career, his marriage and forces him to make a life and death decision.
Roscoe Orman and Pauletta Pearson Washington. Photo by Lia Chang

Roscoe Orman and Pauletta Pearson Washington. Photo by Lia Chang

The chilling fact is: the scandal is based on a secret his wife has harbored for 17 years.

POWER PLAY is about the women behind this powerful man who find themselves caught up in a whirlwind of personal and political intrigue that threatens to destroy them all.

The play examines friendship, love integrity, public scrutiny and the question we still face today; What are we voting for? A candidate’s private life or the record of his or her accomplishments and the depths of his or her commitment?

With political scandal an everyday occurrence that continues to occupy front page news and the minds of our nation, the producers felt it was a great time to take a fresh look at POWER PLAY, a play about a candidate’s dilemma and unselfish decision that helps us examine the criteria by which we choose and elect our officials. “How will confession play with swing voters? How important is winning?” Will informed voters allow character assassinations to inform their decisions?

Lorey Hayes, Roscoe Orman and Pauletta Pearson Washington. Photo by Lia Chang

Lorey Hayes, Roscoe Orman and Pauletta Pearson Washington. Photo by Lia Chang


POWER PLAY is an uplifting, inspiring play that celebrates the integrity of Black Men and takes a positive look at the courageous women who live “behind the glory”. POWER PLAY received critical acclaim in its 1996 National Black Theatre Production, produced by Tunde Samuels and Van Woods (Sylvia’s Restaurant and Enterprises) directed by the late Dr. Barbara Ann Teer and Adunni, winning the Audelco Award for Best Play and again for its 2005 Billie Holiday Theatre Production with an extended run directed by Artistic Director Marjorie Moon; earning Lincoln Center Library’s honor of inclusion in their prestigious Bound Edition of “Highlights from the 2005 New York Theater Season”.

DATES & TIMES: THEATER: TICKETS:
Dates: Tuesday, July 30th at 8pm
Wednesday, July 31st at 3pm and 8pm
Thursday, August 1st at 3pm

Place:
Shirley Recital Hall at Salem College Fine Arts Center
Stadium Dr
Winston-Salem, NC, 27108

Phone: 336-723-2266
Fax: 336-723-2223
Email: NBTF@BELLSOUTH.NET Website: www.NBTF.org

WHAT CRITICS SAY ABOUT POWER PLAY
“Fresh, risky and ultimately riveting”
David Hinckley, New York Daily News

“Captivating ….Powerful piece of theater… will have you laughing, shocked, entertained ….”
Linda Armstrong, Amsterdam News

“…. Leaves room for enough laughs to make 2 hours fly like 15 minutes.”
David Hinckley, New York Daily News

“Akin to a Eugene O’Neill play”
Claude Neil, Amsterdam News

“Reflects African Americans in a positive way, even if they have made mistakes and have a lesson to learn…”
Linda Armstrong, Amsterdam News

A TRUE REUNION
POWER PLAY was first showcased as a reading by producer Voza Rivers in 1990 featuring: Hattie Winston (“Becker”), Denise Burse (“Tyler Perry’s House of Payne”), Lia Chang, Dean Irby and Iris Little and subsequently chosen to kick off the 1991 National Black Theatre Festival’s inaugural Midnight Reading Series. Lia Chang was part of the 1991 cast. 1991 is the same year Pauletta Pearson Washington’s husband (Denzel Washington) was honored and the year she gave birth to their twins. Lorey and Pauletta are both North Carolina natives and both Mrs. Washington’s Father and Ms. Hayes are Alumni of North Carolina A&T University. Hayes and Orman had the great fortune of performing together in John Henry directed by Morgan Freeman.

Lorey Hayes as Susan Bradley and Roscoe Orman as Franklin Wright in Lorey Hayes' Power Play. Photo by Will Chang

Lorey Hayes as Susan Bradley and Roscoe Orman as Franklin Wright in Lorey Hayes’ Power Play. Photo by Will Chang


Playwright Hayes goes on to say, “Though POWER PLAY was first showcased in 1990, it is still timely today. Fortunate for the production, but unfortunate for our country that a candidate’s election still hinges on public scrutiny of their private lives.” Scenes from POWER PLAY have been featured regularly in the CBS, Fox, and ABC Diversity Showcases by Ben Guillory and Danny Glover’s Robey Theatre.

POWER PLAY AUDIENCE RESPONSE
“…celebrates the spirit and integrity of African American men”
“…is not about the powerful wielding power, it is about the vulnerability and sense of powerlessness that we all can experience regardless to our station in life…”
“…powerful commitment to integrity”
“…I laughed, I cried, I cheered”

COMPANY BIOS

Roscoe Orman

Roscoe Orman


ROSCOE ORMAN (Frank) Roscoe Orman’s film roles include the title role of Universal Pictures’ Willie Dynamite and also FX, Follow that Bird, Striking Distance, New Jersey Drive, Twilight’s Last Gleaming, The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland, 30 Days, Drive By, Jeremy Fink and The Meaning of Life. On television, he is best known for his many years as Gordon on “Sesame Street’ and has also been seen on : “Law and Order,” “Law and Order SVU,” “The Wire,” “Sex and the City,” “Kojak,” “A Man Called Hawk,” “All My Children” “Hard Time on Planet Earth, “Sanford and Son,” and “Cosby”. National Black Theatre Festival Audiences will remember Mr. Orman from his dynamic one man show Confessions of Stepin Fetchit and his performance in festival’s highlight production Do Lord Remember Me. Orman recently performed the role of Becker in August Wilson’s Jitney at Baltimore’s Murphy Fine Arts Center. A Bronx native, Orman was an early member of the Free Southern Theater in New Orleans and a founding member of Harlem’s New Lafayette Theatre, where he acted in and directed many plays, including Who’s Got His Own, We Righteous Bombers, The Duplex, The Devil Catchers, and The Fabulous Miss Marie. Additional stage work includes The Great MacDaddy, The Sirens, Every Night When The Sun Goes Down, The Last Street Play, Julius Caesar, Coriolanus, The Sixteenth Round, Driving Miss Daisy, Fences, The Talented Tenth and many others. He is a five time nominee and recipient of an Audelco Theatre Award for his performance in Do Lord Remember Me at Manhattan’s Sylvia and Danny Kaye Playhouse. As a voiceover artist, Orman has narrated many audio books, commercials, and documentary films for PBS, Discovery Channel, ESPN, National Geographic, and others. He is the author of two books, his memoir, “Sesame Street Dad: Evolution of an Actor” which was published in 2006, and his children’s book “Ricky and Moho” (which he also illustrated) published in 2007. In 2008 Roscoe was named “Chief Storyteller’ and national spokesperson for Audible Kids, the nation’s leading provider of digitally downloaded children’s literature.

Pauletta Pearson Washington

Pauletta Pearson Washington


PAULETTA PEARSON WASHINGTON (Lou) Pauletta’s return to the stage after raising her children has been exciting and fulfilling. She has been blessed to work with Jule Styne, Jerry Herman, Andrew Lloyd Weber, to name a few. Lincoln Center, Carnegie Hall, The Kennedy Center, Alice Tulley Hall, The Ahmanson, Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, on and Off-Broadway Theaters have been stages that Pauletta has performed and received highly acclaimed notices. Her studies include Juilliard, The North Carolina School of the Arts, and North Texas University. Her recent work includes Love, Loss ,and What I Wore, a limited presentation of Micki Grant’s Don’t Bother Me I Can’t Cope with Chapman Roberts. Pauletta just completed a run of Two Trains Running in Atlanta and prior to that: Regina Taylor’s Crowns at the Goodman Theatre. She is very excited to be a part of the production of POWER PLAY and share with a phenomenal cast of talent.
Lia Chang. Photo by Thom Sesma

Lia Chang. Photo by Thom Sesma


LIA CHANG (Carole Barbara) made her stage debut as Liat in the national tour of South Pacific with Barbara Eden and Robert Goulet, directed by Geraldine Fitzgerald, and last appeared onstage in Derek Walcott’s Marie Laveau at the Castillo Theatre (New Federal Theatre). She was featured as Sally and Joy in the Signature Theatre Company’s revival of Sam Shepard’s 1965 Obie award winning play, Chicago, directed by Joseph Chaikin at the Public Theatre. Off Broadway credits include: Jeff Weiss’ Obie Award winning Hot Keys (Naked Angels), Diana Son’s Raunchy Asian Women (Ohio Theatre), Lonnie Carter’s Gulliver opposite André De Shields ( La MaMa E.T.C.), The Confirmation (The Vineyard), Behind Closed Doors (MCC), Power Play (Billie Holiday Theatre), Marina Shron’s King of Rats at Soho Rep (New Georges), Two Gentlemen of Verona, Underground Soap, and Famine Plays (Cucaracha Theatre). Chang recently portrayed Sam Shikaze and Chuck Chan in readings of R.A. Shiomi’s Yellow Fever, with an all-female cast for Mu Performing Arts. Chang’s feature film credits include: Wolf, New Jack City, Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, and Taxman. Ms. Chang has had recurring roles as Nurse Lia on the daytime soap operas “One Life to Live” and “As the World Turns,” and guest starred on “New York Undercover”.

Lorey Hayes

Lorey Hayes


LOREY HAYES, PLAYWRIGHT is a Broadway, Television/Film Actress turned writer (an original cast member of For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide). Hayes is a 2011 Princess Grace Playwright Finalist for Haiti’s Children of God, her play with music that enjoyed a critically acclaimed 2011 run in New York as a co-production between Mr. Voza River’s New Heritage Theatre Group (Broadway’s Sarafina and Asinamali) and Mr. Rudy Shaw’s Caribbean Arts Repertory. Ms. Hayes is also the proud recipient of a 2011 Harlem Arts Alliance Community Arts Fund Award to create a new historic play. The play created under this grant is Hell in a Hand Basket, the Unofficial Story of Condolezza Rice, recently read at Harlem’s Dwyer Cultural Center sponsored by Frank Silvera’s Writer’s Workshop. The Dragonfly Tale, co-written with Robert Crear is the winner of the 2007 Alabama Shakespeare Festival’s Southern Writer’s Project and a finalist for the Eugene O’Neill 2006 Playwright’s Conference from more than 800 entries. Several plays have enjoyed acclaimed productions. As an actress, Lorey Hayes (an original cast member of For Colored Girls) starred on Broadway with Melba Moore in the late A. Marcus Hemphill’s Inacent Black as well as in the Negro Ensemble Company’s production of Home. She starred in London, England at the Royal Shakespeare festival as Eunice Evans in Miss Ever’s Boys. A regular face on TV commercials, Hayes is featured in the film Dream Girls and has guest starred in numerous television shows; including “Judging Amy,” “Family Law,” “Sister, Sister” and “All My Children.” NBTF Festival Audiences saw Lorey perform her one woman show Little Lorey’s Song (about growing up in the one traffic light town of Wallace, North Carolina) in 2003. She returned with the two character Lipstick, Chilli, Grits and Grace in 2007 to sold out performances.
Marcus Naylor

Marcus Naylor


MARCUS NAYLOR (Jimmy Day) is a five-time Audelco nominee and has appeared onstage in He Who Endures, Cool Blues (B) Charlie Parker (NFT), When the Chickens Came Home to Roost directed by Allie Woods, Waitin 2 End Hell directed by Woodie King (NFT); Fences (Denver Center), Homage 3: ILLMATIC (Urban Stages); Othello in Othello (NESE); Marc Antony in Julius Caesar (Shakespeare on the Sound); Cave Dwellers (The Pearl Theatre Company); No Dogs (Primary Stages), The Meeting (Crossroads Theatre); True West (Lincoln Center’s Clark Studio); and as Bobby in Rats, directed by Al Pacino. Regionally, he has worked at Berkshire Playwrights Lab, Kennedy Center, Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, The Cleveland Playhouse, Crossroads Theatre, Karamu House and Arena Stage. His television and film credits include: “Without A Trace,” “Law and Order SVU,” Only in America, Retribution (Showtime) The Meeting (KTOP Oakland), Slings and Arrows (Starz Network) Malcolm X, Soliloquy, The Assassin and upcoming: Reunion A Jazz Fantasy.
Penwah

Penwah


Phynjuar (Penwah) (Fifi) is a two-time Audelco award winning actor, a Grammy nominated singer, a comedian, a music producer, a gifted lyricist, a music historian, and a radio talk show personality. Phynjuar hails from Boston, Massachusetts and is classically trained. She recently appeared in Naughty by Nature’s FLAG video as a distraught gang member’s mother, and is noted for her award-winning portrayal as Pearl Bailey in Cooking With Pearl at the Harlem Arts Theater. Her film work includes title roles in Yes Madame directed by Magaly Colimon, and Hush directed by Reg E. Gaines (Bring the Noise, Bring the Funk), as well as Manslaughter and Lavender. On television, she guest starred as Mitzi Monkhouse, the mother of Myra Monkhouse on “Family Matters,” and has appeared on “Tyler Perry’s Meet the Browns,” “The Cosby Show,” “A-List,” “100 Center Street,” “Unsung,” “Stars of Tomorrow Today,” and “Sister Talk”. At the age of fifteen, she appeared in the original Boston Broadway Company of Hair With Donna Summer at the Wilbur Theatre Boston. Her other theater credits include Shakin’ the Mess Outta Misery (Vital Theater); For Colored Girls (American Theater); Testify (National Black Theatre); The Colored Museum directed by George C. Wolfe (City Center); Nothing But the Blues (Harlem Center Stage); Piano Bar (Inner City LA); Primitive World (Nuyorican Poets Café); C Above C above High (Nuyorican Poets Café); House on Fire (Theatre for the New City); and Tribes directed by George C. Wolfe (LA Theatre of the Arts). Phynjuar was the first female addition to super group Kool and the Gang; She has worked as a percussionist, vocalist and songwriter. Her voice can be heard in such classic recording as “Summer Madness” “Rhyme Tyme People” “Spirit of the Boogie” and Roy Ayres “Running Away”, in addition to countless television and radio voiceovers. She is also credited for discovering the likes of Wyclef Jean, world renowned visual artist Paul T Goodnight While grooming, raising and training “The Cosby Show” and “Family Matters” star Michelle Thomas, Phynjuar has traveled to all six continents and appeared in almost every major concert venue in the world.
Andre Robinson

Andre Robinson


ANDRÉ ROBINSON (Director) André Robinson has an extensive background as an actor, producer, director, executive producer, community activist, consultant, promoter, project manager and technical consultant on feature films, television and variety shows, Broadway and regional theatre plays and musicals, documentaries, concerts, conferences and other special events. He currently serves as a creative executive and producer for Belafonte Enterprises and executive producer of Carbon-Fibre Media, a graphic storytelling and new media production company. He produced and directed the reality series, “The Good fellas of Baltimore”; was associate producer of Friday (New Line Cinema); “Love and Action in Chicago” (HBO), technical director for Sony Music and executive director of the Black Filmmaker Foundation. Andre was also general manager of the art gallery and performance space, Linen Life Park Avenue and the production company, Favor International (Megafest); Executive Producer for Crossroads Theatre Company (It Ain’t Nothin’ But The Blues) and Artistic Director of The New Heritage Theatre in Harlem (Striver’s Row, Asinamali, Jonin’). He produced the Harlem Week Festival, the McDonald’s Gospelfest, the Rhythm and Blues Awards and many other live events and TV specials. Andre has produced and/or directed dozens of plays and musicals and continues to serve on several cultural organization and educational boards. He continues to consult for arts, community and cultural organizations around over the country.
Voza Rivers and Lorey Hayes. Photo by Lia Chang

Voza Rivers and Lorey Hayes. Photo by Lia Chang


VOZA RIVERS/NEW HERITAGE THEATRE GROUP (Executive Producer) is the oldest Black nonprofit theater company in New York City, originally established in 1964 by the late Roger Furman, a revered playwright, director, actor and lecturer who began his career in the 1940’s with the American Negro Theatre in Harlem. It was created to present entertaining, informative and quality productions and to preserve and institutionalize classic works of Black Theater. In 1983, Voza Rivers, an award winning music and theatre producer took over the company. Today, New Heritage Theatre Group serves the community through presentations of entertaining, informative and quality productions of performing arts events, stage readings, and documentary shorts and films. Through its umbrella organizations Impact Repertory Theatre, Furman Theatre Rep and New Heritage Films we reach out to the New York City and world community, giving training, exposure and experience to new and emerging artists. Our works reflect the historical, social, and political experiences of African and Latino descendants in America and abroad. We seek to bring attention to works by international writers, directors and performing artists who have achieved success in their respective country but lack exposure in the United States. Jamal Joseph serves as Artistic Director. Visit: www.newheritagetheatre.org
Debra Ann Byrd

Debra Ann Byrd


DEBRA ANN BYRD/TAKE WING AND SOAR PRODUCTIONS, INC. (Company Manager/Co- Producer) founded in 1999 by classically trained actress Debra Ann Byrd, is a women-led, New York State, 501c3 Professional Theatre Arts Corporation, dedicated to supporting women, youth and especially classically trained actors of color. In its brief history, TWAS has enjoyed many successes and is the 2009- 2010 recipient of the Lucille Lortel Award, presented in recognition of the theatre’s body of work in the community, audience development in Harlem – and in celebration of the International Exchange Program between TWAS and London’s Hackney Empire Theatre. Other TWAS honors include five AUDELCO Awards and 24 AUDELCO Award nominations for its mainstage productions of Richard III, The Darker Face of the Earth, Hamlet, Medea, King Lear, Pecong and Anthony and Cleopatra. Lorey Hayes’ Massinissa and the Tragedy of the House of Thunder (nominated for three Audelco Awards) was Take Wing And Soar’s 31st production and tenth main stage project, produced in conjunction with Mr. Voza Rivers’ New Heritage Theatre Group. For more information about Take Wing And Soar check out www.takewingandsoar.org.

ABOUT THE NATIONAL BLACK THEATRE FESTIVAL
Larry Leon Hamlin founded the National Black Theatre Festival® in 1989. His goal was to unite black theatre companies in America and ensure the survival of the genre into the next millennium. With the support of Dr. Maya Angelou, who served as the Festival’s first Chairperson, NBTF was born. The ’89 Festival offered 30 performances by 17 of America’s best professional black theatre companies. It attracted national and international media coverage. According to The New York Times, “the 1989 National Black Theatre Festival® was one of the most historic and culturally significant events in the history of black theatre and American theatre in general.” Over 10,000 people attended. It lived up to its theme: An International Celebration and Reunion of Spirit. The NBTF enables Black theatre professionals to express cultural values and perspectives inherent to the African Diaspora candidly, dramatically and powerfully. Staged components of the NBTF foster the creation and sharing of new works while educational components document and preserve the history and traditions of the genre. Intense week-long interactions focus on renewing their commitment to preserve professional Black theatre and to revitalize its genre. Held biennially, the NBTF attracts more than 65,000 people during the six-day event. The National Black Theatre Festival® (NBTF) is the international outreach program of the North Carolina Black Repertory Company, founded by the late Larry Leon Hamlin in 1979. The Festival, which runs from July 29 – August 3, 2013, was also founded by Hamlin and has been held biennially since 1989.

Actors Tonya Pinkins and Dorien Wilson are the celebrity co-chairs of this year’s 2013 festival. Pinkins is an accomplished Broadway actress who won a Tony Award for her performance as Sweet Anita in Jelly’s Last Jam and was nominated for her performance in Play On! Ms. Pinkins has also had a long television career, including roles on “As the World Turns,” “All My Children,” “Law & Order,” “The Cosby Show” and others.

Wilson is best known for his role as Professor Stanley Oglevee on TV’s “The Parkers” and his role as talk-show host Eddie Charles on HBO’s “Dream On.” He has had roles on “Sister, Sister,” “The Steve Harvey Show” and “Goode Behavior.” He has performed in such stage productions as Dreamgirls, The Tempest and To Kill a Mockingbird.

S. Epatha Merkerson (“Law & Order”) is coming to the festival will be honored during the opening gala. The lineup will be announced in June, and tickets will go on sale then.

One highlight will be the introduction of encore performances, bringing back productions popular at previous festivals. This year, the encore production will be 2011’s Knock Me a Kiss with Andre De Shields.

Check out the Lorey Hayes’ POWER PLAY Facebook page and twitter @TweetPowerPlay.

Check out the official NBTF website for updates and schedules.

National Black Theatre Festival Articles
North Carolina Native, Lorey Hayes Brings Celebrity Cast starring Pauletta Pearson Washington and Roscoe Orman to the 2013 National Black Theatre Festival in Award-winning POWER PLAY: A play about Politics, Passion and the Power of God
Winston Salem Journal: Actors Tonya Pinkins and Dorien Wilson to co-chair National Black Theatre Festival

Lia Chang: Harlem Nights with Lorey Hayes, Actress, Director and Award-Winning Playwright of Power Play and Massinissa

Conductor and percussionist Bobby Sanabria, Lorey Hayes and Mercedes Ellington at the Manhattan School of Music's Harlem Hothouses Concert celebrating the Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce in New York on October 26, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

Conductor and percussionist Bobby Sanabria, Lorey Hayes and Mercedes Ellington at the Manhattan School of Music’s Harlem Hothouses Concert celebrating the Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce in New York on October 26, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

On the final Friday in October, I met up with Lorey Hayes, a Broadway, film and television actress, who is also a director and an award-winning playwright, in Harlem at the Manhattan School of Music, for a spectacular concert tribute featuring MSM’s Grammy®-nominated Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra, led by the renowned percussionist Bobby Sanabria, and featuring the National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters Award Honoree, the legendary Cuban-born conguero, Candido.
On October 26, 2012, the legendary conguero Candido (now 91-years-young) performed with The Manhattan School of Music Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra now in its twelfth year under the direction of internationally renowned percussionist Bobby Sanabria. The Orchestra kicked off a year-long “Harlem Nights” Concert Series with “Harlem Hothouses,” a tribute to The Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce, in The Manhattan School of Music’s Borden Auditorium in New York. Photo by Lia Chang

On October 26, 2012, the legendary conguero Candido (now 91-years-young) performed with The Manhattan School of Music Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra now in its twelfth year under the direction of internationally renowned percussionist Bobby Sanabria. The Orchestra kicked off a year-long “Harlem Nights” Concert Series with “Harlem Hothouses,” a tribute to The Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce, in The Manhattan School of Music’s Borden Auditorium in New York. Photo by Lia Chang

The evening was a celebration of The Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce, with The Orchestra kicking off a year-long “Harlem Nights” Concert Series with “Harlem Hothouses” saluting the venues such as the Apollo and the Savoy where Jazz flourished, and we were all dancing in the aisles during the encore.
On

On October 26, 2012, the legendary conguero Candido (now 91-years-young) performed with The Manhattan School of Music Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra now in its twelfth year under the direction of internationally renowned percussionist Bobby Sanabria. The Orchestra kicked off a year-long “Harlem Nights” Concert Series with “Harlem Hothouses,” a tribute to The Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce, in The Manhattan School of Music’s Borden Auditorium in New York. Photo by Lia Chang

"On October 26, 2012, the legendary conguero Candido (now 91-years-young) performed with The Manhattan School of Music Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra now in its twelfth year under the direction of internationally renowned percussionist Bobby Sanabria. The Orchestra kicked off a year-long “Harlem Nights” Concert Series with “Harlem Hothouses,” a tribute to The Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce, in The Manhattan School of Music’s Borden Auditorium in New York. Photo by Lia Chang

“On October 26, 2012, the legendary conguero Candido (now 91-years-young) performed with The Manhattan School of Music Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra now in its twelfth year under the direction of internationally renowned percussionist Bobby Sanabria. The Orchestra kicked off a year-long “Harlem Nights” Concert Series with “Harlem Hothouses,” a tribute to The Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce, in The Manhattan School of Music’s Borden Auditorium in New York. Photo by Lia Chang

It’s been a little over a week since Hayes and I shared the stage at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, appearing in a Celebrity stage reading of Hayes’ Power Play, alongside Pauletta Pearson Washington, Roscoe Orman, Phyllis Yvonne Stickney and Jeff Wallner, under the direction of Darlene Gidney of Be Rich Entertainment. The Schomburg was abuzz with excitement. Ruby Dee, Denise Burse, Penwah Phynjuar, Micki Grant, Garland Lee Thompson, George Faison, Living Colour drummer Will Calhoun, André Robinson, Jeff Burns Jr., Constance C.R. White, Essence Editor-in-Chief, costume designer Karen Perry, Lawrence Evans and more, were among the standing room only audience.
The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Photo by Will Chang

The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Photo by Will Chang


Pauletta Pearson Washington, Ruby Dee and Roscoe Orman at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York after the reading of Lorey Hayes’ Power Play on October 18, 2012. Photo by Will Chang. Photo by Lia Chang

Pauletta Pearson Washington, Ruby Dee and Roscoe Orman at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York after the reading of Lorey Hayes’ Power Play on October 18, 2012. Photo by Will Chang. Photo by Lia Chang

The stage reading, produced by dynamic producing duo Executive Producer, Mr. Voza Rivers’ New Heritage Theater and Ms. Debra Ann Byrd’s Take Wing and Soar Productions, Inc. was a prelude to the 2013 revival production of Hayes’ Power Play, a story about politics, passion and the power of God. The pair teamed up last year for the overwhelmingly successful New York showcase production of Hayes’ Massinissa and The Tragedy of The House of Thunder, which received 3 AUDELCO nods, including Costume, Lighting and Sound Design.
Lorey Hayes (Photo by Will Chang)

Lorey Hayes (Photo by Will Chang)


Lorey Hayes is a 2011 Princess Grace Playwright Finalist for Haiti’s Children of God, her play with music that enjoyed a critically acclaimed 2011 run in New York as a co- production between Mr. Voza River’s New Heritage Theatre Group (Broadway’s Sarafina and Asinamali) and Mr. Rudy Shaw’s Caribbean Arts Repertory. Hayes is also the proud recipient of a 2011 Harlem Arts Alliance Community Arts Fund Award to create a new historic play. The play created under this grant is Hell in a Hand Basket, the Unofficial Story of Condolezza Rice, recently read at Harlem’s Dwyer Cultural Center sponsored by Frank Silvera Writer’s Workshop. The Dragonfly Tale, co-written with Robert Crear was the winner of the 2007 Alabama Shakespeare Festival’s Southern Writer’s Project and a finalist for the Eugene O’Neill 2006 Playwright’s Conference from more than 800 entries. Several plays have enjoyed acclaimed productions. As an actress, Hayes (an original cast member of For Colored Girls) starred on Broadway with Melba Moore in the late A. Marcus Hemphill’s Inacent Black as well as in the Negro Ensemble Company’s production of Home. She starred in London, England at the Royal Shakespeare festival as Eunice Evans in Miss Ever’s Boys. A regular face on TV commercials, Hayes is featured in the film Dream Girls and has guest starred in numerous television shows; including “Judging Amy,” “Family Law,” “Sister, Sister” and “All My Children.”
Lia Chang and Lorey Hayes at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York after the reading of Lorey Hayes’ Power Play on October 18, 2012. Photo by Will Chang

Lia Chang and Lorey Hayes at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York after the reading of Lorey Hayes’ Power Play on October 18, 2012. Photo by Will Chang


We chatted during the reception before the concert. Below are excerpts from our conversation.

Lia: It’s been quite a whirlwind for you since you flew in from LA at the beginning of October, to act in the Celebrity Stage Reading of your play Power Play, which we first did in 1991 at the National Black Theatre Festival in Winston-Salem, N.C.. The reading on October 18th at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture was a teaser to the 2013 revival production. What was your experience seeing your characters come to life again?
Lorey:
The experience was a humbling one. I must tell you that I am forever grateful to God for using me as a vessel. I tell everybody, I did not write this play. He chose me to have the words flow through. I listen to it and I am always amazed that it’s always fresh and new. I think, “Where did I come up with that?” It’s like it came from the ether. There’s no denying there is a higher power. Someone has put their hands on me and said, “I need to use you for my work.” When I saw those Power Play characters come to life, I realized that writing is like birthing children. I birthed this baby and in ’91, the baby was a newborn. And you were there; you were one of the newborns. And we went through the diaper changing stages and now these Power Play characters are getting ready to graduate from college and go out into the world. I’m just asking God to keep guiding me to make the right decisions as my Power Play Baby goes out into the world. This means for me the rewrites, and what I am going to focus on currently to keep it fresh and new, and to make it accessible on a global market. It’s not just New York, it’s not just local, and it’s definitely not just African American, it’s for all people. Pauletta said something really wonderful to me. She said, “The reason she decided to do this play when she came out of hiatus was not just because she wanted plays that had integrity, strong roles for women of color and all nationalities, but something to make young people, young teens, young adults that are developing, to understand the importance of moral integrity so they can make the right choices.” So I am very proud that I have been used by God in this way to bring Power Play’s story and characters to life.

Pauletta Pearson Washington, Lia Chang and Lorey Hayes at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York after the reading of Lorey Hayes’ Power Play on October 18, 2012. Photo by Will Chang.

Pauletta Pearson Washington, Lia Chang and Lorey Hayes at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York after the reading of Lorey Hayes’ Power Play on October 18, 2012. Photo by Will Chang.


Lia: There were a lot of people in the audience, a lot of people that you know personally. Who of the audience members excited you the most?
Lorey:
The people who are going to be the paying patrons/supporters for the production are the ones that I was most excited about. The people who came from my doctor’s office and the people that I met on the street. A young lady that came up to me and thanked me because I gave her some words of encouragement that changed her life and helped her to grow. Part of my mission is to inspire, to elevate and to motivate. Those are the people that I was most excited about being in our audience because those truly are the real celebrities. If the people who make up our daily world are not there, then we have no one to perform to, and then what is our work about? Those are the people that I am most proud of being in that audience.
October 18, 2012. Power Players backstage: Jeff Wallner, Phyllis Yvonne Stickney, Roscoe Orman, Pauletta Pearson Washington, Lia Chang, Lorey Hayes and stage manager Sean C. Turner at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York. Photo by Will Chang

October 18, 2012. Power Players backstage: Jeff Wallner, Phyllis Yvonne Stickney, Roscoe Orman, Pauletta Pearson Washington, Lia Chang, Lorey Hayes and stage manager Sean C. Turner at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York. Photo by Will Chang


Lia: It was exciting to have the reading at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, it’s such an institution. What is your connection?
Lorey:
Not only is the Schomburg an institution, the Schomburg is where I did my major research for Massinissa and The Tragedy of The House of Thunder. It is also where I had the send-off celebration for my friend and partner Walter Thomas, with whom I spent 15 glorious years together in Harlem renovating a brownstone. I was able to send him off from his human transition there at the Schomburg’s American Negro Theater downstairs. I felt like Walter was in the house for our Power Play reading. The spirits of my mother Edna and grandmother Janie, our Elders and Ancestors, those people that have really paved the way for all of us, having carried the weight of slavery on their backs. I felt there were a lot of ancestors there because the Schomburg is full of history; not just for African Americans, but people of all races, of all nationalities, all cultures that have come to this country. I think it is really important that we recognize and pay homage, to not just the Schomburg, but to the ancestors who brought us where we are today.
Lia Chang, Micki Grant, Lorey Hayes and Denise Burse at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York after the reading of Lorey Hayes’ Power Play on October 18, 2012. Photo by Will Chang

Lia Chang, Micki Grant, Lorey Hayes and Denise Burse at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York after the reading of Lorey Hayes’ Power Play on October 18, 2012. Photo by Will Chang


Lia: What is Voza Rivers’ history with Power Play?
Lorey: Voza
Rivers produced early readings of Power Play at New York’s B. Smith’s Restaurant with Hattie Winston, Dean Irby, Iris Little and Denise Burse. He went on to produce the play for the National Black Theater Festival’s Premiere Midnight Reading Series stage reading in Winston-Salem in 1991 (brainchild of Frank Silvera Writer’s Workshop’s Mr. Garland Thompson in collaboration with then Festival head the late Mr. Larry Leon Hamlin). Voza is the one that hired the van that took us all to North Carolina. I’m sure he and the festival may have been influenced by the fact that Phyllis Yvonne Stickney had the tenacity and the perseverance to put together her own show, find her own venue in North Carolina during the festival, and put up her one-woman show. I’m so proud of her for that. Women have to do it for themselves. We can’t sit back and wait. Phyllis is a pioneer and as someone reminded me “a real power player”.
POWER PLAYERS: playwright Lorey Hayes, executive producer Voza Rivers, Phyllis Yvonne Stickney, Roscoe Orman, Lia Chang, Pauletta Pearson Washington and Jeff Wallner outside the Schomburg Center in New York on October 18, 2012. Photo by Will Chang

POWER PLAYERS: playwright Lorey Hayes, executive producer Voza Rivers, Phyllis Yvonne Stickney, Roscoe Orman, Lia Chang, Pauletta Pearson Washington and Jeff Wallner outside the Schomburg Center in New York on October 18, 2012. Photo by Will Chang

Voza Rivers and Lorey Hayes at the Manhattan School of Music’s “Harlem Hothouses” Concert celebrating the Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce, in New York on October 26, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

Voza Rivers and Lorey Hayes at the Manhattan School of Music’s “Harlem Hothouses” Concert celebrating the Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce, in New York on October 26, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang.


Voza Rivers has a rare kind of energy that is not only inviting, he embraces people and culture with great integrity; He is responsible for unifying so many cultures and artists and is instrumental for bringing them together for their mutual good. That’s one of the many things I love about him. Voza produces HARLEM Week. He was the producer who brought Sarafina to Broadway and is responsible for launching and nurturing the careers of so many artists. He has earned a tremendous respect, not just in Harlem and New York, but around the world. Possibly the fact that he started in this business as a music producer taught him to work well with so many different personalities. He does it with a calm and grace that is so inspiring. I learn so much from Voza Rivers and I am just so grateful.
Lorey Hayes' Massinissa and The Tragedy of the House of Thunder  Pre- Production photo. From left to right: Tino Christopher (Hasdrubal), Elijah Black (Hamilcar Barca), Lawrence Winslow (Tyre Barca), Debra Ann Byrd (Dido Barca), Lodric Collins (Hannibal Barca), Dayo Olatokun (Massinissa) and kneeling Anja Lee (Sophonisba Barca) - the woman whose love changed the color of power of the world. Debra Ann Byrd originated the role of Dido Barca, Diane Dixon later appeared in the production. Photo credit: Carmen de Jesus

Lorey Hayes’ Massinissa and The Tragedy of the House of Thunder Pre- Production photo. From left to right: Tino Christopher (Hasdrubal), Elijah Black (Hamilcar Barca), Lawrence Winslow (Tyre Barca), Debra Ann Byrd (Dido Barca), Lodric Collins (Hannibal Barca), Dayo Olatokun (Massinissa) and kneeling Anja Lee (Sophonisba Barca) – the woman whose love changed the color of power of the world. Debra Ann Byrd originated the role of Dido Barca, Diane Dixon later appeared in the production. Photo credit: Carmen de Jesus

Lia: During our brief rehearsal for Power Play, you learned that Massinissa, the epic that you wrote and directed, (also produced by Debra Ann Byrd’s Take Wing and Soar Productions in association Voza Rivers’ New Heritage Theater- the same team that produced Power Play) garnered 3 AUDELCO nominations, for Costume Design, Lighting Design and Sound Design. What is you experience with Debra Ann Byrd and Massinissa?
Lorey:
I love Debra Ann. If I had six babies to birth, Massinissa was all six babies at one time. I started working on Massinissa when I was 17 years old. I learned the story of this man Hannibal who crossed the Alps on elephants. I was fascinated and had to tell the story. It was my mission. It was the most beautiful showcase production I have every witnessed in my life. It rivaled any Broadway play. It was so stunning. The reason for that is because of the team Debra Ann pulled together. Gail Cooper-Hecht, the costume designer was nominated for an Audelco. Her husband is from Lebanon. The Carthaginians are originally from Lebanon (Tyre). The play is set 200 years before the birth of Christ and the Carthaginians, who were from Tyre (modern day Lebanon) fled their country and came to Carthage (modern day Tunisia) Gail Cooper Hecht created the most incredible costumes you’ve ever witnessed. It was the same for the rest of the crew.
Dayo Olatokun as Massinissa and Anja Lee  as Sophonisba Barca in Lorey Hayes’  Massinissa and The Tragedy of the House of Thunder. Photo by Hubert Williams

Dayo Olatokun as Massinissa and Anja Lee as Sophonisba Barca in Lorey Hayes’ Massinissa and The Tragedy of the House of Thunder. Photo by Hubert Williams

We also got AUDELCOs nods for Lighting (James “Prez” Carter) and Sound (David D. Wright). One of our creative team who did not receive a mention but definitely deserved was Chris Cumberbatch whose set was outstanding. Ironically, Chris also designed the Power Play set for the 2005 New York National Black Theater production co-directed by the renowned late Dr. Barbara Ann Teer and Adunni Shirley Faison. In creating these projects, I do a dream book and I put in pictures, feelings and moods. All of the creative team are then able to see on paper what my vision of the play as a writer is. They then take that vision and they elevate it. The Massinissa and The Tragedy of the House of Thunder’s creative team took my imagination higher than I ever believed possible. Then the actors stepped into the world and created Carthage, Africa (that had been burned to the ground by the Romans; the earth plowed with salt so that nothing would grow). Carthage came back to life on stage before our very eyes. That is true team work and the ultimate collaboration.
Michael Raimondi as Cornelius Scipio and Dayo Olatokun as Massinssa in Lorey Hayes’ Massinissa and The Tragedy of the House of Thunder. Photo by Hubert Williams

Michael Raimondi as Cornelius Scipio and Dayo Olatokun as Massinssa in Lorey Hayes’ Massinissa and The Tragedy of the House of Thunder. Photo by Hubert Williams

Lia: Not only did you write Massinissa, but you also directed it. Was this your directorial debut?
Lorey:
No, I’ve directed many things before. In Fort Worth Texas, I directed 100 high school students in a musical called, Easin’ Down Broadway. I co-directed it because the project was so huge, and the task so monumental that we had to have two people on the directing team. It was an amazing experience. I actually got to direct For Colored Girls at the Jubilee Theatre (a play in which I was an original cast member). The For Colored Girls project – spearheaded by then Artistic Director Mr. Ed Smith was another spiritual awakening. I realized how powerful Ntozake Shange’s words still are today and how they changed the lives of so many people – women and men – for the better. I have directed many shows, full length readings for the stage and many readings. One of my greatest pleasures was directing a showcase production of works by writers I had taught in Dallas, Texas in my “Mind Gym” writing workshops for the Best Southwest Book Festival. Seeing my students (adults and teens) works come to life before their eyes and seeing the joy on their faces will live with me forever. I would always tell them, “just get out of the way and let God write through you”. When they witnessed their characters being birthed on stage you could almost feel them levitate.
Michael Raimondi as Cornelius Scipio, kneels over his dead father Dennis Jordon as Publius Scipio in Lorey Hayes’ Massinissa and The Tragedy of the House of Thunder. Photo by Hubert Williams

Michael Raimondi as Cornelius Scipio, kneels over his dead father Dennis Jordon as Publius Scipio in Lorey Hayes’ Massinissa and The Tragedy of the House of Thunder. Photo by Hubert Williams

The 40th Annual AUDELCO “Viv” Awards, A Ruby Jubilee will take place on Monday, November 19, 2012, in the Peter J. Sharpe Theatre at Symphony Space, 2537 Broadway at 95th Street in New York. Click here for the AUDELCO website and here for tickets.

Lia: The reading of Power Play was very successful, standing room only, and a standing ovation. What are your plans for the show going forward?
Lorey:
Again, I am just going to step aside and let God take the wheel. My plan is to go after the global market. Young, tenacious filmmakers have taught us the value of internet marketing, self-producing and alternative ways to provide content for a world hungry for inspirational works. Hollywood is not the only answer. “It’s a new world and a new day”. President Barack Obama’s historical re-election taught us that lesson. There are major backdoor opportunities that will make Hollywood come to us and my job is to keep working and fine tuning to make those opportunities into possibilities. Now that I understand a Higher Power is in charge, I will just let Spirit lead me, do what I am told to do, step out of the way and let God’s magic happen.

Check out the Lorey Hayes’ Power Play website, Facebook page and twitter @TweetPowerPlay.

For more information about Manhattan School of Music and a full roster of performances, including the year-long “Harlem Nights” concert series, please visit
http://www.msmnyc.edu
.

Percussionist and conductor Bobby Sanabria, Lia Chang and musician Patrick Bartley at  at the Manhattan School of Music's Harlem Hothouses Concert celebrating the Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce in New York on October 26, 2012. Photo by Lorey Hayes

Percussionist and conductor Bobby Sanabria, Lia Chang and musician Patrick Bartley at at the Manhattan School of Music's Harlem Hothouses Concert celebrating the Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce in New York on October 26, 2012. Photo by Lorey Hayes


Lia Chang is an actor, a performance and fine art botanical photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. She recently appeared in Lorey Hayes’ POWER PLAY.

Other Articles by Lia Chang:
Signature Theatre’s Production of Golden Child by David Henry Hwang has been extended through December 16, 2012
Photos: Yellow Fever Playwright Rick Shiomi Explores New Territory with An All-Female Cast
Photos: Maurice Hines, Jonathan Groff, Mercedes Ellington, Charles Randolph Wright at The Beechman for André De Shields’s I PUT A SPELL ON YOU
Photos: Tonya Pinkins, André De Shields, S. Epatha Merkerson, Billy Porter and George C. Wolfe at 54 Below
Emmy Award-Nominated Actor Meshach Taylor (“Designing Women”) Guest Stars on Criminal Minds as Rossi’s Former Marine Sergeant, Harrison Scott on November 14, 2012
Photos: Opening Night with Hold These Truths’ Playwright Jeanne Sakata and Star Joel de la Fuente, a Revelation as Gordon Hirabayashi; Performances Extended through November 25, 2012
Playing Lady Thiang in the Harbor Lights’ Production of The King and I is a dream come true for Christine Toy Johnson
Photos: Q & A with Mel Sagrado Maghuyop, The King in Harbor Lights’ Production of The King and I
Photos: Pauletta Pearson Washington, Roscoe Orman, Ruby Dee, Denise Burse, Phyllis Yvonne Stickney, Micki Grant, George Faison, Constance C.R. White, Will Calhoun and More at Lorey Hayes’ POWER PLAY
Manu Narayan Dazzles as Richard Roma in La Jolla Playhouse’s Revival of David Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross
Photos: All-Access Pass to Disney’s Aladdin at The Muny with Thom Sesma, Francis Jue, Robin De Jesus, John Tartaglia, Jason Graae, Curtis Holbrook, Eddie Korbich, Samantha Massell and Ken Page
Performing Arts Images from the Asian American Pacific Islander Collection on Display at the Library of Congress to Celebrate APA Heritage Month
Click here for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2012 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com

Lia Chang: Renee Goldsberry, Frances McDormand, Tim Blake Nelson, Duncan Sheik lend vocal talents for The 52nd Street Project 30th Anniversary Gala Celebrating Willie Reale

On Monday, May 9, 2011, Renee Goldsberry, Frances McDormand, Tim Blake Nelson, Duncan Sheik will lend their vocal talents to celebrate Willie Reale, the founder of The 52nd Street Project, at the 30th Anniversary Gala at ESPACE, 635 West 42nd Street in New York.

Hosted by Lewis Black, the evening will feature songs with lyrics written by Project kids and set to music and performed by adults. The kids are Nicolas Carrero, Edelys Tiana Guerrero, Genesis Hires, Haley Zoe Martinez and Malik Velazquez. Adult songwriters include J. Michael Friedman, Henry Krieger, Rob Reale and Duncan Sheik.

Willie Reale founded the The 52nd Street Project in response to a deepening need to improve the quality of life for New York’s inner-city children. Mr. Reale, an actor, playwright, 1994 MacArthur Fellow, and company member of the Ensemble Studio Theater (EST), used his company privileges to reach out to the children of the neighborhood by creating theatrical endeavors specifically for them. Countless professional theater artists have volunteered their time and talent, being matched up with kids in a series of unique mentoring programs for The 52nd Street Project. The Project’s mission is dedicated to the creation and production of new plays for and by kids between the ages of nine and eighteen that reside in the Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood in New York City. This was done with the cooperation and support of EST and its across-the-street-neighbor, the Police Athletic League’s Duncan Center. The Project is now an independent not-for-profit organization that creates over eighty new plays and serves over 115 children every year.

The evening begins at 7 pm with cocktails followed by dinner and the show. Tickets are $250 and $500, tables of ten are available for $5,000; $10,000; $15,000; $25,000. They can be reserved by calling John Sheehy at 212-333-5252 x16. For further information, visit: www.52project.org.

Espace
635 West 42nd St. btwn 11th & 12th Aves)
New York

Other Articles by Lia Chang
House of Payne’s Denise Burse on the 2011 NAACP Image Awards & Season 7
Multimedia: The 52nd Street Project Benefit Photos: Michael Cerveris, James Monroe Inglehart, Rebecca Naomi Jones, Matthew Morrison, Greg Naughton and Kelli O’Hara
Michael Cerveris, Matthew Morrison and Kelli O’Hara Lend Vocal Talents for 52nd St. Project Benefit
Ruby Dee, Alicia Keys, Sidney Poitier among honorees at Woodie King, Jr.’s New Federal Theatre’s 40th Anniversary Gala at Edison Ballroom on May 22
André De Shields & Alison Fraser Star in Reading of Michael Aman’s The Unbleached American at Theater Row on 5/9
Samrat Chakrabarti stars in Soham Mehta’s Fatakra, Shiva Shankar Bajpai’s Raju, and Rehana Mirza’s Zameer & Preeti at NYIFF
Victory Gardens appoints renowned director and playwright Chay Yew as its new Artistic Director
André De Shields stars in Chicago Premiere of Charles Smith’s The Gospel According to James at Victory Gardens 5/14-6/12
AEA celebrates Asian Heritage Month w/ Leviathan Lab’s Asian American Female Playwright’s Short Play Festival in NY, 5/12-13
Nicholas Galanin featured in SEEING INDIGENOUS Indigenous Art and Media Arts on Film at the National Museum of the American Indian in NY on 5/7
LUCKYRICE Festival 2011 in New York includes Daniel Boulud, Susur Lee, Anito Lo, Masaharu Morimoto, May 2-8, 2011
Vikas Khanna’s Holy Kitchens Karma to Nirvana premieres at New York Indian Film Festival on 5/7 at Tribeca Cinemas
32nd Annual Asian American & Pacific Islander Heritage Festival at Union Square Park in NYC on May 8, 2011
11th Annual New York Indian Film Festival (NYIFF), May 4-8, 2011
Up Close and Personal with Darren Pettie, Star of The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore
Photos & Video Disney’s The Lion King Las Vegas-In the Makeup Chair with Thom Sesma
Click here for the Lia Chang Articles Archive.

All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2011 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com.

Lia Chang Photo by Brianne Michelle Photography

Lia Chang Photo by Brianne Michelle Photography


Lia Chang is an actor, performance and fine art botanical photographer, and an award-winning multimedia journalist.

As a photographer and videographer, Lia collaborates with artists, organizations and companies in establishing their documentary photo archive and social media presence. She has been documenting her colleagues and contemporaries in the arts, fashion and journalism since making her stage debut as Liat in the National Tour of South Pacific, with Robert Goulet and Barbara Eden. Lia currently plays Nurse Lia on “One Life to Live”. She has appeared in Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and “New York Undercover”.

Selections of Lia’s archive of Asian Pacific Americans in the arts, fashion, journalism, politics and space are now in the newly created LIA CHANG THEATER PHOTOGRAPHY PORTFOLIO in the ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN PERFORMING ARTS COLLECTION housed in the Library of Congress Asian Division’s Asian American Pacific Islander Collection.

Lia’s portraits and performance photos have appeared in Vanity Fair, Gourmet, German Elle, Women’s Wear Daily, The Paris Review, TV Guide, Daily Variety, Interior Design, American Theatre, Broadwayworld.com, Life & Style, OUT, New York Magazine, InStyle, Timeout.com, Villagevoice.com, Playbill.com, Theatermania.com, thelmagazine.com, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, USA Today, The Boston Globe, New York Times and Washington Post. A former syndicated arts and entertainment columnist for KYODO News, Lia is the New York Bureau Chief for AsianConnections.com. She writes about culture, style and Asian American issues for a variety of publications and this Backstage Pass with Lia Chang blog.

Lia Chang: Encore Performances of Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre at Access Theater on March 19

Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli

Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli


Rachel Klein Productions’ morbid dance drama, The Tragedy of Maria Macabre, which premiered to a soldout house at Dixon Place earlier this month, returns for two encore performances on Saturday, March 19th at the Access Theater at 380 Broadway in New York at 6pm and 9pm. Advance tickets are $15 or $20 at the door (cash only.) Click here for advance tickets.
Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli

Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli


Upon dying, Maria Macabre is not granted eternal slumber, but instead a whirling, kaleidoscopic carnival of horrors: a morbid funhouse where humanity is stripped away and a permanent place in the gruesome chorus line is all but assured. The Tragedy of Maria Macabre is a ghoulish movement and visual based theater piece that uses dancers and physical actors to create a world of fantasy and spectacle. It is a work of theater, dance, and performance art.
Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli

Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli


The Tragedy of Maria Macabre stars Abigail Hawk (from CBS’s “Bluebloods” with Tom Selleck), Danielle Marie Fusco (Martha Graham Company, Joyce Soho) Eric Schmalenberger (the Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black, the Citizens Band) and RKP regulars: Elizabeth Stewart, Michael Porsche, Megan O’Connor, Preston Burger, Freddy Mancilla, and Brian Rubiano. Conceived and Directed by Rachel Klein (Circus of Circus at the House of Yes, Princes of Darkness at Theater for the New City, Hound at Planet Connections Theater Festivity). Story by Rachel Klein and Sean Gill. Featuring Music by Borut Krzisnik (Peter Greenaways’ The Tulse Luper Suitcases) Costume and Wig Design by Rachel Klein, Makeup Design by Anita Rundles, and Sound Design by Sean Gill. Stage Managed by Marina Steinberg. Choreography by Rachel Klein, Preston Burger, Danielle Marie Fusco, and the Ensemble.
Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli

Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli


The Tragedy of Maria Macabre
Access Theater
380 Broadway (between Walker and White, in Tribeca. A, C, N, R, Q, 6, J, M, 1 to Canal St.)
3rd Floor Theater
6pm, 9pm
Advance tickets are $15 or $20 at the door (cash only.) Click here for advance tickets.
Rachel Klein Photo by Beau Allulli

Rachel Klein Photo by Beau Allulli


Rachel Klein Productions (RKP) is a NYC-based theater company that communicates its artistic vision through visual storytelling techniques. Relying on innovative performances and lavish design elements, RKP’s ensemble of actors, dancers, circus performers, and performance artists convey a highly stylized representation of reality that is much more bold and often fantastical. RKP aims to create art that explores and elicits genuine human emotion, which is amplified through the actions and reactions of its characters, allowing the audience to simultaneously identify with the human condition and enjoy the artistic qualities of the performance.

Rachel Klein Productions has produced several full-length plays (both movement and text based) including Metro, Sir Sheever, Aenigma, and Go-Go Killers! and co-produced Hound, All Kind of Shifty Villains, and Stage Blood is Never Enough. The Rachel Klein Theater Dancers have throughout New York in different festivals, art gallery openings, and nightlife events including the opening number to Night of 1,000 Stevies (20th anniversary), the Highline Ballroom, La MaMa Moves! at La MaMa E.T.C. in 2009 and 2010, Dixon Place, the premier of Banzai! at the Red Lotus Room, Low Life @ HOWL Festival, (le) Poisson Rouge, the House of Yes, Rated X at Don Hills, the Hiro Ballroom, the Bushwick Site Fest at 3rd Ward, the Bushwick Open Studios Festival, the World Famous Bob’s Give Thanks!, Galapagos Art Space in DUMBO, the NY Downtown Clown Review, and Off-Broadway at the Bleecker Street Theater (45 Bleecker, Main Theater).


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All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2011 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com.

Lia Chang Photo by Brianne Michelle Photography

Lia Chang Photo by Brianne Michelle Photography

Lia Chang is an actor, performance and fine art botanical photographer, and an award-winning multimedia journalist.

As a photographer and videographer, Lia collaborates with artists, organizations and companies in establishing their documentary photo archive and social media presence. She has been documenting her colleagues and contemporaries in the arts, fashion and journalism since making her stage debut as Liat in the National Tour of South Pacific, with Robert Goulet and Barbara Eden.

Selections of Lia’s archive of Asian Pacific Americans in the arts, fashion, journalism, politics and space are now in the newly created LIA CHANG THEATER PHOTOGRAPHY PORTFOLIO in the ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN PERFORMING ARTS COLLECTION housed in the Library of Congress Asian Division’s Asian American Pacific Islander Collection.

Lia’s portraits and performance photos have appeared in Vanity Fair, Gourmet, German Elle, Women’s Wear Daily, The Paris Review, TV Guide, Daily Variety, Interior Design, American Theatre, Broadwayworld.com, Life & Style, OUT, New York Magazine, InStyle, Timeout.com, Villagevoice.com, Playbill.com, Theatermania.com, thelmagazine.com, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, USA Today, The Boston Globe, New York Times and Washington Post. A former syndicated arts and entertainment columnist for KYODO News, Lia is the New York Bureau Chief for AsianConnections.com. She writes about culture, style and Asian American issues for a variety of publications and this Backstage Pass with Lia Chang blog.

Other Articles by Lia Chang:
Marva Hicks to Star in Concert of Pat Holley’s R&B/Pop Musical, Me & Caesar Lee at Triad Theatre, 3/27, 4/3 & 4/10
Chay Yew’s Visible Cities at The Studio Theatre on Theatre Row on 3/21
Pretty as a Picture:Photographs by KEN SHUNG on view at The New York Public Library Tompkins Square Gallery-3/31
A night out with Gordana Rashovich, Flora Goforth in The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore
André De Shields Set for World Premiere of Charles Smith’s The Gospel According to James at Indiana Rep, 3/22-4/10
Photos:The Working Theater’s Off-Broadway production of HONEY BROWN EYES by Stefanie Zadravec at The Clurman
Andy Warhol, Romare Bearden, Alexander Calder, Lia Chang in Art & Healing Exhibit at Snug Harbor on SI
Click here for the Lia Chang Articles Archive.

Lia Chang: Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Premieres at Dixon Place on March 2

Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli

Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli


Rachel Klein Productions’ morbid dance drama, The Tragedy of Maria Macabre, premieres on Wednesday, March 2nd at 7:30 PM at Dixon Place (161A Chrystie Street) in New York.
Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli

Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli


Upon dying, Maria Macabre is not granted eternal slumber, but instead a whirling, kaleidoscopic carnival of horrors: a morbid funhouse where humanity is stripped away and a permanent place in the gruesome chorus line is all but assured. The Tragedy of Maria Macabre is a ghoulish movement and visual based theater piece that uses dancers and physical actors to create a world of fantasy and spectacle. It is a work of theater, dance, and performance art.
Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli

Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli


The Tragedy of Maria Macabre stars Abigail Hawk (from CBS’s “Bluebloods” with Tom Selleck), Danielle Marie Fusco (Martha Graham Company, Joyce Soho) Eric Schmalenberger (the Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black, the Citizens Band) and RKP regulars: Elizabeth Stewart, Michael Porsche, Megan O’Connor, Preston Burger, Freddy Mancilla, and Brian Rubiano. Conceived and Directed by Rachel Klein (Circus of Circus at the House of Yes, Princes of Darkness at Theater for the New City, Hound at Planet Connections Theater Festivity). Story by Rachel Klein and Sean Gill. Featuring Music by Borut Krzisnik (Peter Greenaways’ The Tulse Luper Suitcases) Costume and Wig Design by Rachel Klein, Makeup Design by Anita Rundles, and Sound Design by Sean Gill. Stage Managed by Marina Steinberg. Choreography by Rachel Klein, Preston Burger, Danielle Marie Fusco, and the Ensemble.
Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli

Rachel Klein’s The Tragedy of Maria Macabre Photo by Beau Allulli


The Tragedy of Maria Macabre
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
7:30 PM
Dixon Place
61A Chrystie Street btwn Rivington and Delancey. F to 2nd Ave, J to Bowery, B, D to Grand, 4, 6 to Spring
Tickets available at
https://www.ovationtix.com/trs/pe/8640235

$15 general admission. $12 Students and Seniors.
Rachel Klein Photo by Beau Allulli

Rachel Klein Photo by Beau Allulli


Rachel Klein Productions (RKP) is a NYC-based theater company that communicates its artistic vision through visual storytelling techniques. Relying on innovative performances and lavish design elements, RKP’s ensemble of actors, dancers, circus performers, and performance artists convey a highly stylized representation of reality that is much more bold and often fantastical. RKP aims to create art that explores and elicits genuine human emotion, which is amplified through the actions and reactions of its characters, allowing the audience to simultaneously identify with the human condition and enjoy the artistic qualities of the performance.

Rachel Klein Productions has produced several full-length plays (both movement and text based) including Metro, Sir Sheever, Aenigma, and Go-Go Killers! and co-produced Hound, All Kind of Shifty Villains, and Stage Blood is Never Enough. The Rachel Klein Theater Dancers have throughout New York in different festivals, art gallery openings, and nightlife events including the opening number to Night of 1,000 Stevies (20th anniversary), the Highline Ballroom, La MaMa Moves! at La MaMa E.T.C. in 2009 and 2010, Dixon Place, the premier of Banzai! at the Red Lotus Room, Low Life @ HOWL Festival, (le) Poisson Rouge, the House of Yes, Rated X at Don Hills, the Hiro Ballroom, the Bushwick Site Fest at 3rd Ward, the Bushwick Open Studios Festival, the World Famous Bob’s Give Thanks!, Galapagos Art Space in DUMBO, the NY Downtown Clown Review, and Off-Broadway at the Bleecker Street Theater (45 Bleecker, Main Theater).

Other Articles by Lia Chang:
André De Shields Set for World Premiere of Charles Smith’s The Gospel According to James at Indiana Rep, 3/22-4/10
Photos: De Shields, McClendon, Elisa, Glasco, Nemser, Phillips, Thompson at The Sovereign State of Boogedy Boogedy Reading
Photos: A.B. Cruz III and Lillian Kimura Receive 2011 AALDEF Justice in Action Awards
Photos: Chinese New Year Festival at The Huntington in San Marino
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Photos:The Working Theater’s Off-Broadway production of HONEY BROWN EYES by Stefanie Zadravec at The Clurman
Andy Warhol, Romare Bearden, Alexander Calder, Lia Chang in Art & Healing Exhibit at Snug Harbor on SI
Photos: David Duchovny, John Earl Jelks, Amanda Peet,Tracee Chimo opening night of Neil LaBute’s The Break of Noon
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STORIES FROM CHINESE AMERICA: The Arthur Dong Collection, Vol. 2 as 4 disc DVD Box Set
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Photo Call: BD Wong and the Cast of Heading East at the Asia Society
Multimedia: Promises, Promises’ Stars Kristin Chenoweth and Sean Hayes at Lord & Taylor Fifth Ave
Click here for the Lia Chang Articles Archive.


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All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2011 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachang@hotmail.com.

Lia Chang  Photo by Brianne Michelle Photography

Lia Chang Photo by Brianne Michelle Photography


Lia Chang is an actor, performance and fine art botanical photographer, and an award-winning multimedia journalist.

As a photographer and videographer, Lia collaborates with artists, organizations and companies in establishing their documentary photo archive and social media presence. She has been documenting her colleagues and contemporaries in the arts, fashion and journalism since making her stage debut as Liat in the National Tour of South Pacific, with Robert Goulet and Barbara Eden.

This year, selections of Lia’s archive of Asian Pacific Americans in the arts, fashion, journalism, politics and space will become part of newly created LIA CHANG THEATER PHOTOGRAPHY PORTFOLIO in the ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN PERFORMING ARTS COLLECTION housed in the Library of Congress Asian Division’s Asian American Pacific Islander Collection.

Lia’s portraits and performance photos have appeared in Vanity Fair, Gourmet, German Elle, Women’s Wear Daily, The Paris Review, TV Guide, Daily Variety, Interior Design, American Theatre, Broadwayworld.com, Life & Style, OUT, New York Magazine, InStyle, Timeout.com, Villagevoice.com, Playbill.com, Theatermania.com, thelmagazine.com, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, USA Today, The Boston Globe, New York Times and Washington Post. A former syndicated arts and entertainment columnist for KYODO News, Lia is the New York Bureau Chief for AsianConnections.com. She writes about culture, style and Asian American issues for a variety of publications and this Backstage Pass with Lia Chang blog.

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