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Virginian-Pilot Review: Virginia Stage Companyβs stellar βBlues for an Alabama Skyβ returns for rare second production
Tarina J. Bradshaw as Angel Allen in Virginia Stage Companyβs production of βBlues for an Alabama Sky.β (Sam Flint)
Pearl Cleage is a sly one when it comes to teaser titles, titles that bear an important but oblique relationship to her showβs content. βFlyinβ Westβ β recently done at Generic Theater β has little to do with birds and naught to do with planes; it is set in 1860s-1870s Nicodemus, Kansas, among Black βExodusterβ farmers. βBlues for an Alabama Skyβ β the current Virginia Stage Co. offering β has little to do with Alabama, set, as it is, in 1930 Depression-era Harlem New York. (An βAlabama Skyβ refers metaphorically to brilliant stars seen between buildings in NYC.) The character who uses the phrase is a recently arrived Alabaman (itβs the heyday of the Great Migration) who precipitates an urban tragedy with his country conservatism. Cleageβs βBourbon at the Border,β eschews the obvious topic of rum runners and Prohibition, instead taking a 1995 perspective on 1964 Freedom Summer racial violence.
βBlues for an Alabama Skyβ is so good that VSC is doing a rare second production, the first in season 1999-2000. And this production is so good that it, again, epitomizes what regional theatres can accomplish with a stellar all-equity cast (masterfully directed by Jerrell Henderson), even in a play replete with third-rail topics: sexual orientation, race, abortion, feminism. All of these were part of 1930 Harlem, and remain, as we see, flaming hot potatoes.
How does Cleage, an avowed feminist and advocate for Black justice, make these topics not just palatable but exhilarating?
She creates fresh characters with universal and specific needs and dreams, setting them down among the famous and near-famous of the period. Langston Hughes and Josephine Baker are mentioned enough to rate as full-fledged offstage characters. (Thereβs also a wall-hung picture of Baker that our male lead touches for luck, like a mezuzah.) The showβs linchpin character is Angel Allen (sweet and tart Tarina J. Bradshaw). She belies her name by being a boozer, former hooker, now-unemployed showgirl and sometimes gangsterβs moll. She specializes in bad decisions but sheβs a survivor and loveable (to the audience and the friends she frequently abuses). Chief among them is Guy Jacobs (small but mighty James T. Lane, in a supernova acting turn).
Jacobs is a confident βnotorious homosexualβ (his own epithet). He and Allen were childhood friends in Georgia before migrating North. He, too, has been desperate enough to turn tricks, but he has now parlayed his costuming talents into a better career in Harlem and, as he dreams, soon in Paris (working for Baker, his idol). When Allen cusses out her gangster at his Cotton Club (heβs had the nerve to marry a fellow Italian woman), Jacobs also loses his job there, straining his and Allenβs finances. βYou gonna save me again, Big Daddy?β asks Allen. βEvery chance I get,β he replies.
But Allen decides to guarantee her future by taking up with Leland Cunningham (Kendrix Brown, particularly good at silent reactions). Heβs the aforementioned Alabaman who happens by to help Jacobs carry a dead-drunk Allen home at the playβs start. Cunningham is fascinated by her because she resembles his wife who died during childbirth, and the son did, too. It takes Cunningham forever to figure out that Jacobs is gay and then begins a stream of insults against him. Cunningham is, to put it mildly, no suitable partner for Allen, but he asks her to marry when he learns she is pregnant with their child. Brash decisions will ensue, especially when Baker finally responds to Jacobsβ overtures for work in Paris.
Across the hall from Jacobs and Allen lives Delia Patterson (the endearing Rachel Fobbs), a social worker determined to improve Harlemitesβ lives via family planning. In Cleageβs feminist world, there are admirable βrace womenβ as well as βrace men.β Patterson is fated to be mated with Dr. Sam Thomas (the prodigiously talented Gregory Warren), a βrace manβ physician who spends every waking moment delivering babies or repairing gunshot wounds and every half-sleeping moment carousing. His motto for the latter is βLet the good times roll!β said often (perhaps to excess) in Cleageβs script.
There were minute issues at the April 19 preview performance. The tricky timing of the climactic violence (blackout/sound of a shot fired) still needs work and there were slight wardrobe malfunctions such as Allenβs hunched-up skirt revealing her slip. But these are infinitesimal issues within an exquisite rendition of this admirable play. The set β a colorful mural painted above and below the door-free, side-by-side apartment spaces β provides more magical names from the era: Cotton Club, the Apollo, Cab Calloway. These are names to conjure with, as is the showβs soundtrack, of the ever-evolving blues.
It is the least poetic figure, Cunningham, who conjures the playβs title: βI was missing that Alabama sky where the stars are so thick itβs bright as day. So, I looked up between the buildings and I thought I was dreaming. Didnβt even look like Harlem. Stars everywhere, twinkling at me like a promise.β
But the denizens of heartbreaking Harlem are both displaced (i.e., migrants) and misplaced. Black ghosts abound, created back South and/or in Harlem. Jacobs says wistfully, βHarlem was supposed to be a place where Negroes could come together and really walk about, and for a red-hot minute, we did.β He thinks the moment has passed and, like other Black artists, he will seek it out in Paris.
Donβt miss this contemporary chance to time travel.
As Jacobs might say, βBon voyage, mes cheris!β
By Dr. Page Laws
A Letter of Welcome from the Director
Virginia Stage Company's latest, "Blues for an Alabama Sky" on Coast Live
A Letter of Welcome from Playwright Pearl Cleage
Diving Deeper into BLUES FOR AN ALABAMA SKY
BLUES FOR AN ALABAMA SKY | A Word from the Director
Before you make your plans to fall into the overwhelming layers and beauty of the Blues that makes up The Harlem Renaissance, share in some of the evocative thoughts of the director bringing this captivatingly tragic tale of identity, struggle, and survival to life.
Jerrell L. Henderson shares his thoughts on the shape of Blues for an Alabama Sky in the rehearsal room, to the stage.
Blues for an Alabama Sky written by Pearl Cleage comes to The Wells Theatre April 17 - May 5, 2024. Sponsored by Capital Group and supported by the generous partnership of The YWCA of South-Hampton Roads.