| Wanda’s Picks |
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| by Wanda Sabir | |
| Wednesday, 05 December 2007 | |
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![]() If you missed the American Book Awards Sunday, Dec. 2, because you were at the San Francisco 8 event at the African American Cultural Complex, don't worry. You can catch it on CNN or Peralta College television. Al Young, poet laureate for the state of California, gave an outstanding address, and the winners of the coveted award for literature, ranging from memoir and fiction to literary criticism, was wonderful. Marcus Books was in the house turning over Black dollars. It was unfortunate that they'd been robbed earlier in the day, and when they arrived at Laney College at 3:30 p.m., the police hadn't yet arrived at the store to take a report. Jimmy Milton Slater Tuesday, Nov. 27, Comrade Jimmy Slater (b. Sept. 3, 1946) made his transition, and Saturday, Dec. 1, we celebrated his return to the ancestors at a wonderful event hosted by his family, daughter and son-in-law along with grandchildren and many guests. BJ recalled Jimmy's arrival in Oakland after successfully working to get the first Black mayor elected in Cleveland, Ohio. Here he registered voters and helped with the Bobby Seale for Oakland Mayor campaign. Melvin Dixon spoke about his friend's co-founding of the Commemorator newspaper when Huey P. Newton was killed, while Tarika Lewis played "African Village" on acoustic violin. Steve McCutchen spoke of meeting Jimmy for the first time in 1972 at the West Oakland Community Center. His daughter shared a dream she had just as her father was making his transition, where she told him not to worry, that the family would take care of her mother and sister. Jimmy's grandchildren sang original songs, composed for the program. It was one of the most serene and peaceful and loving tributes to a person's life I have ever witnessed. I hadn't realized the kind man, whom I'd see as I walked the Lake often, parked in one of Parks and Rec's trucks, was so African-centered. His family and children know who they are. When we arrived at Roselawn Cemetery in Livermore and I asked if the family had a plot there, Neico told me that her brother was buried there. Benjamin was killed last year in one of many random, senseless homicides. Jimmy is survived by his wife of 35 years, Cynthia A. Slater, daughters Neico S. Slater-Sa Ra and Rashidah K. Slater, son-in-law Kokahyi Sa-Ra, a brother, grandchildren and many other relatives and friends. 17th Annual PEN Oakland Josephine Miles National Literary Awards This Saturday, Dec. 8, 2 to 5 p.m, at the Rockridge Branch Library, 5366 College Ave., Oakland, there will be the annual literary event honoring, once again, writers whose work covers the breadth of literary genres. One winner is Harriet A Washington, author of "Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present." She will be at Marcus Books, 3900 MLK Jr. Way in Oakland, the evening before. Call (510) 652-2344 for the time. It is too bad, given the assault on our community historically and in the present, African people can't call a truce and stop all the nonsensical violence that has shut down Algiers, Louisiana, and has people like me afraid to pull into her driveway at night in Oakland, California. Fundraiser for George Cables Saturday George Cables is such a sweet man, whose musical accomplishments are so understated. After a long wait on the donor list, the amazing pianist and composer finally has had a kidney transplant and is recovering from surgery - freedom from dialysis a welcome reprieve, I'm sure. I spoke to George a few times while he was having dialysis. We both like Black films and would talk about some of our favorite movies - that is, between his great stories about the Jazz Mobile in Harlem and his work with so many jazz greats. It was wonderful this summer when the Healdsburg Jazz Festival saluted George Cables at the closing afternoon concert. It was a blast! This Saturday, Dec. 8, 1-3:30 p.m., Bay Area fans have an opportunity to celebrate George's good fortune at a benefit at Yoshi's in Jack London Square, 510 Embarcadero West, Oakland. For information, call (510) 238-9200 or visit http://www.healdsburgjazzfestival.org. If you can't make it and want to send George a monetary gift, contact Jennifer Felix at Healdsburg Jazz Festival. Guests include Bobby Hutcherson, band members Gary Bartz, Jeff "Tain" Watts, Mary Stallings, Eddie Marshall, Glenn Richmond, Babatunde Lea, Denise Perrier, Peter Barchay, Mel Martin and many others. East Side Arts Alliance 1st Anniverary Open House and Art Sale EastSide Arts Alliance is such a cool space. Located on International at 22nd Avenue in Oakland, the vibe is mellow and as laid back as its co-founders, Greg and Elena. Congratulations are certainly in order for an organization which is an example of the best in art as social activism, celebrating its first anniversary in the new space at 2277 International.
I remember when the two of them worked for La Peña Cultural Center, another great East Bay organization. Greg is well-known for his wonderful art shows and EastSide is perhaps best know for the Malcolm X Jazz Arts Festival in May each year. Visit www.eastsideartsalliance.org or call (510) 533-6629. They just hosted the "100 Families Oakland Project" and will be celebrating the art show with student performances. EastSide is also gearing up for its New Year's Eve party, which I rode on into 2007 and plan on repeating for 2008. Why not? Howard Wiley, David Murray and Faye Carol are headlining the show this year. Ms. Carol is the only newcomer. Murray and Wiley, both on tenor saxophones, were off-the-hook awesome last year, so buy your tickets now. There was vegetarian fare and everyone was there, like Raymond Saunders, Mildred Howard and Bobby Seale. Sheila Walker, conductor for ‘The Color Purple' After two months in San Francisco, "The Color Purple" is closing Dec. 9, so if you have been waiting to go, save yourself the price of airfare to Los Angeles, where it's headed next week. Get your tickets now; the show is well worth the discounted $49.50 for all seats in the house. Call (415) 512-7770 or visit ticketmaster.com.
![]() Sheila Walker, conductor for “The Color Purple” Photo: Wanda Sabir I love this show. There are so many places where this work touches its audience that I don't have enough room to share what it meant to me to see Alice Walker's novel translate so well to the stage musically and lyrically. Where the film did a disservice to the development of characters, such as Mister - Albert to Shug, whose rage made them erupt on innocent bystanders like Celie, Nettie's big sister - was a place I wanted to dwell for the joyful ride into redemption. "The Color Purple" is the hope we look for when we travel through the fire hoping to emerge free. It's the Sankofa on the other side of the terror and pain - Maafa. Rereading Alice Walker's book, watching the film once more and then seeing the play twice - and I'm hoping one more time before it leaves - I am captivated by the production. I know these people. They are my family. The cast is so phenomenal, especially Jeanette Bayardelle as Celie and Felicia P. Fields as Sophia. These are two powerful Black women whose characters suffer. Sophia suffers because she is strong and powerful and, unlike Celie, she never bows until beaten almost to death. Then there's Celie, whose lost spirit returns home once she realizes her sister Nettie still loves her. "The Color Purple" is a story that illustrates the power of love. Love doesn't hurt its beloved. As I watched in awe the first night, I watched the sister conducting just in front of me. And then I walked up and watched when the finale came and people were on their feet, the cast smiling and singing and waving at us. I stayed at the front of the theatre and watched the orchestra perform - they are exceptionally good, all of them - then listened to the shop talk afterwards before introducing myself to the conductor, Sheila Walker, who said sure when I asked her if I could interview her later on in the run. We were all set to talk when my companion and loved one and friend, Smokey Zakat Sabir, died that morning. I still miss her. The house is so empty without her. She is buried under the tree in the back yard. (To read her obituary, visit wandaspicks.com. Click "blog.") Sheila and I spoke about her climb to the top of the game through tenacity and lots of work. Sheila Walker's from Dallas and has been conducting since she was a child, through high school and into college, where her degree in music education from the University of North Texas also includes voice, piano and conducting. Yes, the sister can do it all, like claim the position as musical director and conductor and it was hers. Wanda Sabir: When I saw you at the play, I was so excited to have an opportunity to interview you. There are so few women conductors, particularly of Broadway plays. I don't know how many African American conductors there are, but I just wanted to know how you did it, and what brings you to this particular production. Sheila Walker: "Let's see. I've always wanted to conduct. Even as a kid, I did a lot of church work. It always seems to start in the church for a lot of African American people. I started very early playing piano and conducting, at first junior choirs and later on got to where I was conducting at my school and having the choir director have me assist them. When I got to college, I took conducting classes as well as classical piano and voice there. All those things combined into music education. "I got into a high school for performing arts and was the choir director and conductor. I still wanted to do musical theatre, so I did it on the side in regional theatre and I worked my way into doing summer stock. That's where you sort of get that opportunity to go on tour. The first tour I got was out for a year and then I decided to move to New York and was there for about 15 years. "During that time I did a couple of Broadway shows, but most of the time I was getting shows and going out on the road, and then I got back to Dallas, my home in 2002. Although I went to London to supervise the production of "Ragtime" there in 2003 and did some other guest artist work. "I decided to stay off the road for a bit and, in 2006, right after the Tonys, Rhonda LaChanze Sapp won the award for the role of Celie in "The Color Purple" and I was there to visit her, but I also knew Linda Twine, who was the musical director. So I saw the show, saw them and they said, ‘There is going to be a Chicago production of this; you need to get your name in the pot.' I said, ‘Oh I would love to,' because I had seen excerpts of it on the Oprah show and I knew several people I had worked with who were in the show. I said to myself, this is the show I need to do, and my sister said, ‘This is the one you need to claim.' "My sister Sonja is the muse in my life. She is so supportive. We went to visit New York to talk to Linda, and before I knew it she'd called me around Thanksgiving and told me, ‘I need you to send all your information to them.' We had a conference call and a little before Christmas I had the job. The wheels started turning at that time. I moved to Chicago at the end of February when we started the rehearsals and from there the show proceeded. "This is how I got there. It's kind of in a nutshell. It's a long (process); you have to work in the trenches at regional theatres, have people put their confidence in you as a musical theatre director. You really do have a big responsibility to the show. After the director leaves, you're still there putting the show together. Not only putting it together - if you are the musical director and the conductor, you continue to maintain the show. "Make notes about the music, keep the orchestra together or whatever type of group you are conducting. In some instances, you're a player conductor if you have a smaller ensemble. I've toured with those kinds of groups too. It's been everything from a small group of about four or five to a group of about 28-30. And it's been from Texas all the way to Japan and back. It's a wonderful thing to be able to do what you love doing. That's my (advice) to everyone. Enjoy what you are doing and you'll do it really well." WS: You said your sister told you to claim it. Why did you want this particular show? Was it something to do with this relationship between the two sisters, their relationship? SW: "Oh yes! You hit right on it," the conductor says with a smile and laughter in her voice. "My sister and I are so close. Every night when I see Nettie coming back to Celie and the music is playing and I'm conducting - the music is so sweeping and it wraps up your emotions, it's so well done - you see them looking at each other like they haven't seen each other for years and years. "I haven't been that way with my sister because we see each other whenever we can. There have been times when I lived in New York when there have been months and months before I'd get to see her and it was such a joy. We talk all the time, basically every day. There are times when we go for a couple of days and she'll call me and say, ‘What's the matter, how come you haven't called me?' "So I was attracted to that story. The other thing is that it was intriguing when I heard ‘The Color Purple' was becoming a musical. I'd read the book, seen the movie, I wondered how they were going to do this. There are such dark elements in this story. Many times you think of musicals as uplifting, delightful. You may have some challenging moments, but this was such a dark story. "But, when I was able to see it, I just couldn't believe it. This was really what it was intended to be, to go to the next level. Certainly the music attracted me to it, more than anything. Meeting the composers - Stephen Bray, Allee Willis, Brenda Russell - it was just a delight. They are as nice as they are talented and that says a lot in this business. They've gotten so many awards individually and then collectively, they have been acknowledged so much for the work that they have done with ‘The Color Purple,' I'm just so glad to be a part of the music staff they have worked with this show." WS: You're right, the music is really sweeping, and you're right, it moves you emotionally through all the various stories, which are very sad, even though Celie does get through it. Goodness gracious, it takes a while to get through it. SW: "Right. What else can happen to this woman? She does have to spend a long time - it's to Jeanette Bayardelle's credit that she shows us a little girl, a young woman and then an older woman. You can see it in the way her body moves. You can see it in the way her voice sounds. You can see it in the makeup they've created. All these things create the illusion on stage that makes it believable to the audience. "That's why the story rings so true. It's so authentic from all those people who have put it together, from hair, make-up, costumes, lighting and the actors themselves and the choreographer and the choreography and of course the composers and the music. Every element, most importantly the direction - Gary Griffin, who did the direction, who had the vision to do it. It comes off so well because at this point, it's a well oiled machine." WS: I was thinking of the way Jeanette portrays Celie when she comes into her power. I'm like wow, where did that voice come from?! Sheila laughs in agreement. WS: When she leans back as if pulling up her roots or chains and tossing off her burdens, then slowly rises, voice coming from a place so far removed from the house where she was a slave to an idea more than a man, that she was unworthy of love. SW: "I go with her. You don't know when she's going to stop. You just get the feel. She let's you know when she's going to let that note go. It soars at the very end. The whole piece sets up for that. It shows a lot about her character and its development.
"The mousy kind of sound - at the very beginning she is timid and shy and in the end she is empowered. The song is the 11 o'clock number. It shows the empowerment of journey up to then now that she is going to take control of her life. It's the icing on the cake, Nettie coming back to her at the very end. "It's a wonderful story that ties up the loose ends. I think this is why the audience loves it. Everybody has redemption in the end. It shows a bit of redemption and forgiveness and love and that's why she sings, ‘God is inside me and in everything else' at the beginning of the song, ‘The Color Purple.'" WS: It was really nice hearing the song "The Color Purple." The purple itself, as a color, is a color but it is also a metaphor. Purple as in bruised beyond repair and purple as in lavender and violets, a soothing balm. You've got the book and the film, which is really pretty to look at, but I was telling a friend of mine that with regard to the characters in the film, Steinberg really wasn't able to develop them as well on the screen so that the audience knows where Mister comes from. The way he is portrayed in the musical, the play, we don't linger in the stuff - the pain. We even feel sympathetic about a Mister who is just a bitter man. He's angry because his dad would not bless his union with Shug, so he married another woman and made her life hell and then continued doing the same with Celie. His father came out of enslavement and he wanted his son to do better, so he didn't get a chance to live his dream. He was mad and he had a right to be angry. He didn't have a right to ruin Celie's life though. I don't even remember that. In the film the father doesn't have any dignity, so one doesn't get the same kind of impact when he tells Mister what to do. On stage one can see Mister as a young man trembling at his dad's feet. It's the same with Harpo, except Harpo is with the woman he loves, which is a key difference. SW: "That's so true. As a writer you would think about those things." WS: I love the chorus in the form of the Church Ladies. SW: "They are my Greek Chorus. They keep the story moving and even say a few things we might be thinking or saying as an audience. They are the conscious of everybody else. They say things we might not say out loud, which is why we laugh so hard. And we know church ladies like that even though they are way out there, and they work together as a unit, which is wonderful. "Two of them come from Broadway and already had had the experience of working on the show. The third gal had to work her way into the situation and I'm telling you. It's like they have always been together. The unfortunate thing is that you work on the road and you do this for a while and people start leaving a show. They do it for a while; after a year, people are giving their notice to leave. The road is a tough job. "But though you lose valuable people, there are always people out there chomping at the bit to get this opportunity, and with a show this popular and so few all Black productions out there for African Americans, this is an opportunity to showcase such talent. So though you miss the family, you know other family is coming in as time goes on." WS: There are so many Black folks working in this production! And there are so many Black folks coming to see the show! Black dollars are circulating and flipping multiple times before leaving the community. Maybe in some times, the venues might be owned by African Americans, which keeps the Black dollars flipping it even better. SW: "Yes, yes. I wish the best for this production and I wish it is successful like it has been up to this point. You see, I know God has his hand on all of this, and it's a great message and there are great people involved." WS: I read some of the reviewers, who, because they're mostly white men, had a little trepidation about going to see the musical, then said the music wasn't remarkable, that you couldn't necessarily hum or sing any one of the songs after you left the theatre, like that of say a Rogers and Hammerstein musical. We're coming to see the play on Tuesday, 27 of us, and then I'm coming again. And for my daughter and me, this is our second time seeing the play. ‘Cause we just loved it. It's so beautiful. It speaks to our hearts. It talks about our people and what's going on with our people, then and now. It addresses the trauma and the healing and the forgiveness. SW: "I think you pegged it right when you said many of the male Caucasian writers who are reviewing this play may not have a connection to the play because all they see are African Americans in the play, and many times they have a tendency, if it doesn't have a European influence, to say that it is not as good, and they compare it to their own background, their own influences. "We don't see it that way. It's the difference between somebody seeing it through rose colored glasses or the glass being half empty of half full. I understand that people have to review a piece and sometimes people will go to a performance because it has a good review or they're stay at home because it doesn't have one. But I think word-of-mouth is much stronger with this piece than any reviewer can make or break this piece in each city. "So many people flocked to Chicago to see it from around the country, and that grapevine will travel so that when the show lands in a friend's neighborhood, they'll know this is the one to see. I remember when "Ragtime" was on Broadway. I was a member of "Ragtime," but not on Broadway. Prior to Broadway we did LA production. That's where I met and worked with Brian Stokes Mitchell, who was with us until he moved on to Broadway, and we went on with our LA company to Vancouver and Chicago. "I remember the reviewers said the same thing - that the music wasn't that outstanding - and the lyrics, because you know sometimes they don't see that story. Ragtime was about Coalhouse Walker, a Black protagonist. How many times have you had that in a story? They couldn't see themselves in it and many times this happens when you have that kind of journalist not looking at the work as a whole and in an objective way. "I know the music moves people. You can see too many tears falling among those in the audience when I turn around and look when the cast is singing ‘The Color Purple.' I don't pay any attention to those type of comments." Bay View Arts Editor Wanda Sabir can be reached at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it Visit her website, www.wandaspicks.com, for an expanded version of Wanda's Picks and for exciting "web exclusives." |
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