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RACIAL TENSION, POLITICS, RELIGION AND INTERRACIAL LOVE IS EVIDENT IN AAPACT'S LATEST PRODUCTION OF ACCLAIMED PLAYWRIGHT ED BULLINS' MOST CONTROVERSIAL PLAY THE TAKING OF MISS JANIE.
The African American Performing Arts Community Theatre proudly presents its production of The Taking of Miss Janie, written by the award-winning playwright Ed Bullins. The play stars some of South Florida's finest actors, Erika Robel, Reiss Gaynard, Matthew McCullough, Kevin Johnson, Christina N. Alexander, Dyani Batcheller, Nick Volker, Cary Hart and John Wendell. Directed by Teddy Harrell, Jr. Performances will run from March 30 through April 23, 2006 at the Carrie P. Meek Senior and Cultural Center at the Charles Hadley Park Black Box Theatre, 1300 NW 50th Street, Miami, Florida. Regular evening performances are 8pm on Fridays and Saturdays. Matinee Performances are Sundays at 3 pm.On Thursday, March 30, 2006, AAPACT offers a Preview Performance of The Taking of Miss Janie to the General Public at 8 pm. Admission $5.00. Please call (866) 390-4534 or email to aapact@yahoo.com to RSVP. A Special Talk-Back session is being sponsored by The Florida Humanities Council and moderated by Dr. Dorothy Jenkins Fields, Founder of The Black Archive History & Research Foundation of South Florida, Inc. on Friday, March 31, 2006 immediately following that evenings' performance.
Showtime is 8 pm. This Performance is free to the first 50 people to reserve tickets. All others, admission is $15.00. Again, please call (866) 390-4534 or email to aapact@yahoo.com to RSVP. The Taking of Miss Janie is a theatrical drama that displays the relationship between a black revolutionary and a white liberal woman whose rape becomes the play's core symbolism. Set at a party in California; the play follows the lives of nine young college students trying to make sense of the confusion around the drastic changes and movements of the 1960s. Janie (Robel), wide- eyed and bushytailed happens upon a brand new world on the Southern California college scene when she meets Monty (Gaspard) a smooth, black revolutionary poet. Janie is welcomed into a world unlike anything she has ever experienced. She meets Monty's roommates Rick (McCullough) the aggressive, radical who dispels pure hate for Janie and Len (Johnson) the intellectual-artistic-politically-aware brother. Monty's sometime girlfriend Peggy (Alexander) is a strong but tender black woman all the while dealing with Monty's lust for her thirsty for-sex girlfriend, Flossie (Hart). Janie has her skeletons as well, having aborted children from her boyfriend Lonnie (Volker). Rick's temper is tested when he meets Len's girlfriend Sharon (Batcheller) a jewish girl who is fighting her own demons, while getting a wake up call from Mort (Wendell) a beatnik bum.
The Taking of Miss Janie is one of Bullins most memorable and thought-provoking plays, which stirred strong feminist disapproval. The audience will feel the characters frustration, anger, and pain as the relationship between Janie and Monty which develops into more than Janie can control. Karen Feldscher, writer for NU Magazine wrote that Ed Bullins has been called "one of the most powerful black voices in contemporary American theater". America's greatest living playwright. Prolific. Influential. Gifted. Legendary theater critic Clive Barnes has said "he writes like an angel." You've probably never heard of Ed Bullins. But those who know something about African-American theater, especially during the 1960s and 1970s, surely have. They regard him as a founding father. Bullins, who taught at Northeastern University since 1995 and currently holds the title Distinguished Artist-in-Residence, has written more than a hundred plays. Having a healthy measure of accolades already come to him this former Black Panther has produced many works including a trilogy of playsA Son, Come Home, The Electronic Nigger, and Clara's Ole Man which earned him the 1968 Vernon Rice Drama Desk Award. In 1971, he earned an Obie Award and the Black Arts Alliance Award for both The Fabulous Miss Marie and In New England Winter. The Taking of Miss Janie garnered him an Obie Award and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award in 1975.
Official Opening Night Performance on Saturday, April 1, 2006. Showtime at 8 pm. Meet and greet the cast of The Taking of Miss Janie. Gala Ticket price is $25.00. Please call (866) 390-4534 or email to aapact@yahoo.com to RSVP. Special Free Industry Performance on Monday, April 17, 2006 at 8 pm. AAPACT invites all South Florida actors, directors, producers, technical theatre professionals, writers and other artists to see The Taking of Miss Janie and meet and greet playwright Ed Bullins. Kindly call (866) 390-4534 or email to aapact@yahoo.com to RSVP. Advance tickets are $20.00 and at the door is $25.00. The cost of the Saturday night Official Opening Performance is $30.00. Student rate with valid ID is $15. Senior rate with valid ID is $15. Rates for groups of 30 or more $10 per person. Tickets can also be purchased on-line at www.aapact.com through PAY PAL.The African American Performing Arts Theatre Company was founded in 1999. The company is composed of local black actors, directors and stage technical professional who strive to enhance and promote cultural awareness and education through the performing arts to inner city youth and theatergoers in the surrounding Miami-Dade County community. AAPACT is a not-for-profit 501(3) c organization, all contributions are tax deductible.
Visit them on the World Wide Web at http://www.aapact.com .
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