
SITE TOOLS
|

|
|
Dedicated To His Craft
By Elizabeth McMillan
Writer, producer and director, Woodie King, Jr. remains unrivaled in terms of the
number of projects he has shepherded to both Broadway and Off-Broadway stages including
the critically-acclaimed For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow Is
Enuf. As founder and executive director of the New Federal Theater (NFT) at the Henry
Street Settlement in New York, King has brought minority playwrights, actors and directors
to national attention with hordes of awards to prove it. Twenty-nine years of such
accomplishments has made him the mentor to an entire generation of African-American
theater professionals. Because of his passion and dedication, King has carved an indelible
mark as one of the most significant figures in the history of Black Theater.
MOSAEC talked with King about his passion and dedication to his art.
|
|

Courtesy Woodie King
Woodie King, Jr.
|
|
|
|
|
|
How
did you become interested in the theater?
In the mid-50s, Sidney Poitier was nominated for an Academy Award for a
film called The Defiant Ones. I loved the movie. I saw it two or three times. So I read
his background then began going around to small theaters in Detroit looking to study and
for work. After graduating drama school, I eventually got work as an actor then went on to
start a theater company called Concept East in Detroit.
|
|
|
Was
this the time when Black Theater was starting to flourish?
Not in 1956 or 57 there was no Black Theater. If you were in a play, you
were in a white play. Or it was a Black cast doing a white play in the local communities.
But there were very few plays written by Blacks for Blacks especially in Detroit. It
didnt start to flourish until the early to mid-60s.
Compare the
influence of Black Theater in the 1960s and now.
Theater in the mid-60s came at the ascendancy of the Civil Rights
Movement. So many artists took on the plight of Black people because of that. There was
nothing else to do but to be a part of it or not at all. Black consciousness was at its
height for the first time in the country and Black Theater was a part of that.
Today, Black Theater is based on individual artists that break through the system like
August Wilson, George C. Wolfe, Amira Baraka, or Ron Milsner. These are writers whose work
relates to Whites as well as to anyone who is interested in good theater.
So what
motivated you to start the New Federal Theater?
We wanted to create a theater for people who had not had a voice. My
original theater company had a hit play in Detroit that toured. When it ended up in New
York, I had the opportunity to present it at the St. Marks Church in the Bowery. After
encouragement from Bertham Peck [Henry Street Settlements executive director], I
started the New Federal Theater in 1970 nine or ten years after I moved to New York.
How
essential has community outreach been to New Federal Theater?
It has to be a part of what were about. Every summer we do a seven
or eight weeks program with young people placing them in professional theaters as interns.
This way they can become familiarized with the happenings in theater around the New York.
Even if they do not study theater in college, we hope they will support theater and their
ethnic heritage.
How does it
feel to be one of the few Black Theaters to have survived since the Black Theater
Movement?
Being a part of it I know Im not the only one. I dont feel
like a survivor. I feel the weight of the struggle. Since were all going through the
same struggle and need, we communicate and share ideas. Its about loving Black
people and wanting to recreate positive images on the stage.
What is the future
of Black Theater?
Black Theater will always exist whether theres no funding at all.
Itll exist in churches, community centers, and Black universities. As long as
theres Black people there will be Black Theater. M
August 1999 |
|
|
|
|