|
Showing 1 - 1 of
1 matches in All Departments
The 2014 winner of the Yale Drama Series "The play does not have a
tragic ending, though you will be certain that it must. But it is a
tragic story. It is the tragedy of lives lived without hope of
deliverance. . . . I will leave you to read the play and determine
how on earth we get to a satisfying ending to this tragic tale of a
woman without a chance. But that ending is the genius of Nabers's
work, her faith in the ability of people with no chance, to find
one."-Marsha Norman, from the Foreword The year is 1979 and a
serial killer in Atlanta is abducting and murdering young black
children. Against a backdrop of fear and uncertainty, playwright
Janine Nabers explores the emotional battleground where an
African-American single mother wars with her teenage daughter, each
coping in her own way with personal tragedy and loss. The
volatility of their situation is intensified when a severely
damaged and devastatingly handsome stranger becomes an integral
part of their lives. Serial Black Face is the eighth winner of the
DC Horn Foundation/Yale Drama Series Prize, selected by Pulitzer
Prize-winning playwright Marsha Norman. At once startling,
engrossing, suspenseful, and exhilarating, Nabers's powerful drama
employs a real-life nightmare, the Atlanta Child Murders of the
late 1970s, to incisively examine human frailty and the prickly
complexities of a mother-daughter relationship. A stunning
theatrical work, both thoughtful and profoundly moving, Serial
Black Face is richly deserving of this year's prize.
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.