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In the southern community that is represented in Regina
Taylors musical Crowns, the word on the street is our crowns have been
bought and paid for, all we have to do is wear them. And these words, like a
proclamation from the Almighty, literally enframe and crown the stage of Arenas
Kreeger Theatre in Washington, DC. This is the story of Yolanda, a street-smart kid from
Brooklyn sent by her mother to her grandmother in Darlington, South Carolina, after her
beloved brother Teddy is shot in the head and killed by a so-called friend.
In this one-act multiple scenes play that evolved first from the
photographs of church-going African-American women by Michael Cunningham and subsequently
from the accompanying oral histories by Craig Marberry, playwright Taylor captures a cut
of the cultural heritage of Black Americans that reaches through slavery in the United
States back to Africa. Although Yolanda is looking for answers concerning the loss of her
brother, these gospel-singing, Sunday-go-to-meeting folks are so unhip that even her new
school peers laugh at her cornrows and baseball cap worn backwards. Little by little,
through down home stories and events, her grandmother and women friends, all wearing hat
creations that make them stand up tall and confident (kudos to costume and hat designer
Emilio Sosa), reach out to Yolanda who eventually shows her acceptance by embracing the
word of the Lord through a river baptism.
Lively word play and banter garner center stage attention in Crowns,
including made-up words like hattitude, rap numbers sung by Yolanda, and anecdotal
teasing. An older woman tells the story of her younger sister who hated to pick tobacco
because she said it hurt her back. The punch line, delivered with I-know-better attitude,
was she was too young to have a back. The anecdote, which is funny in its
bittersweet delivery from the older sister who had performed more years of backbreaking
work, reverberates against Yolandas story. Yolanda says as the play opens that her
brother had her back. The irony, of course, is Teddy couldnt protect himself,
let alone his little sister, and that Yolanda was too young to have a back as bulls
eye for New York hoodlums.
One other use of words by Regina Taylor, who also serves as the
artistic director of this production, is the projection of scene titles. In lieu of a
curtain, words such as Prologue, Morning, Morning Service, Jumpin
the Broom, Funeral, Recessional separate the scenes. In most instances,
the spoken text cues the audience that a scene change, or new oral history, is about to
commence, and, therefore, the projected words unnecessarily draw attention away from the
actors.
Working from a set that might be described as the Lords hat shop
(since only angels could reach the pedestals on which most of the handsomely designed hats
perch), the cast of six women and one man provide a hand-clapping, foot-stomping set of
performances. Desire DuBose punctuates her portrayal of Yolanda with convincing teenage
body language showing how cool she is from a New York perspectiveshe drags on an
imaginary joint, she jabs her leg at an unseen assailant with a kick boxing move, she
petulantly balls her fists and pounds the air when things dont go her way. Lynda
Gravatt as the preachers wife reigns as the Hat Queen who lays out the rules about
not touching her hat and how to hug a woman wearing a large brim. She says, Id
lend my children before Id lend my hat. My children know their way home!
With aplomb, John Steven Crowley plays all the mens roles from
red top-hatted griot preacher to the angry husband of a woman who keeps sneaking new hats
into their overcrowded home. He also performs hip-hop with Yolanda and jumps with the
percussionist who is stationed stage right. In fact, David Pleasant, the percussionist and
collaborative arranger of some of Linda Twines original music, might as well be
considered part of the cast. His performance in Were Marching to Zion is so
physically jubilant that he steals some of the attention from these excellent actors who
consistently deliver the playwrights message that African Americans earned the money
to pay for their crowns, but at a great cost.
For most scenes, the action moves along spiritedly and the variety of
subject matterranging from an undertaker figuring out how to accommodate a dead
woman wearing her favorite hat in the coffin to the confession by the Darlington women
that it took a civil rights movement to get hats off their headsholds the attention.
Since the playtime runs just under two hours without an intermission, some cutting would
benefit the overall enjoyment of this uplifting holiday offering.
Washington, December 21, 2003 - Karren L. Alenier