Artists • Educators • Scholars • Students • Theatre Lovers

Dedicated to the Exploration and Preservation of the Theatrical Visions of the African Diaspora

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Home Program of Events

24th Annual Conference
BLACK THEATRE NETWORK

Empowering the Profession:
Best Practices in Black Theatre & Performance

Los Angeles, California
July 30 – August 2, 2010

Friday, July 30

10:00am – 1:00pm BTN Executive Board Meeting
2:00pm Registration
2:30pm Warm-up & Welcome
Framing the Conversation- The First Power
Facing Challenges to our Physical and Fiscal Lives
3:00-4:00pm Out for Us: Telling True Tales
Presenter: Tom Bardwell, M.A., Ed., Cambridge Cares About AIDS, Cambridge, MA.
This interactive workshop will provide participants an opportunity to learn how to implement the Theatre of the Oppressed (TO) as an innovative strategy that combines community mobilization and the identification of key health disparities with HIV positive Black gay and bisexual men, and other men who have sex with men (MSM). The presenter will share lessons learned from Boston, Massachusetts pilot cycles of the Out for Us Story Telling Series, a project of Cambridge Cares About AIDS.
4:15- 5:15pm Full Frontal Marketing: How to get a BUTT in every seat!
Presenter: Glenn Alan 
Designed to expose theatre marketing ideas in a real life setting and a fast changing world; this workshop aims to present concepts of strategic marketing within arts and theatre and its marriage with the creative arts world.  The facilitator will take you through the basics of redefining your market niche, creating a compelling message and developing a new plan of innovative marketing strategies
5:15- 6:30pm Happy Hour
Silent Auction Hotel Lobby/ Round Table
 Dinner on your Own
8:00 pm BEST OF LA- Grand Performances
Lula Washington Dance Theater
One of L.A’s treasures, Lula Washington Dance Theatre, celebrates 30 years of influential community service with an evening of new and revival works. Free, outdoor concert at California Plaza in Downtown L.A.
http://www.grandperformances.org/en/gp/homepage.html

Saturday, July 31

 8:00am Registration
 9:00-9:30am Warm up and Welcome
Acting Warm up / Improvisation
9:30-11:00am WORKSHOP
Etuding the Script
Presenter: Darryl Davis, Ph.D Candidate, Wayne State University
This workshop explores the process of etuding in rehearsal, a process that yields substantial benefits to character development and ensemble cohesiveness. Scripts will be provided to workshop attendees in an effort to allow them to follow along in marking of the text as well as observe fellow attendees walk through the process. (Number of hands-on participants limited)
11:15am-1:00pm Luncheon and Keynote Address
Adilah Barnes, Executive Director- Los Angeles Women’s Theatre Festival
Adilah Barnes is one of few veteran actors in Hollywood that have mastered the art of self-marketing and utilizing her many creative skills, while staying true to herself and maintaining integrity. In addition to extensive credits on stage, television and film, Ms. Barnes is an award winning author and Co Founder of the prestigious Los Angeles Women’s Theatre Festival; an annual, multi-cultural festival that showcases female artists in theatrical performances, dance, music, spoken word, and comedy that has produced well over 400 artists globally and is in its fourteenth year.
1:15- 2:45pmPanel #1
Crossing Ethnic Lines on Stage—Does Race Matter?
Panelist:  Robert Michael James, MFA Directing Candidate, Minnesota State University
Because of character specifics the theatrical community is perhaps the last remaining professional field where hiring based on racial consideration or other prejudices are not illegal. It is time to bring the issue into focus and provide a line of reasoning through which the theatre community can better judge when or if the practice is justified or inappropriate.
 Staging Respectability in New York City: Intimate Apparel and Dr. May Edward Chinn
Panelist: Dr. Marta Effinger-Crichlow, New York City College of Technology, CUNY
An examination of how black women are depicted in two dramatic narratives set in early twentieth-century New York City. More specifically, it considers the extent to which black female characters embrace and/or reject guidelines of respectability in Lynn Nottage’s Intimate Apparel and Laurence Holder’s Dr. May Edward Chinn. The panelist offers teaching tools to college-level instructors, who are encouraged to use the play setting to stimulate discussions about race, gender, class and sexuality.
 The Scottsboro Effect: Langston Hughes and the Radical Left
Panelist: Catherine Vtris, Ph.D. Candidate, Tufts University
As a result of the CPUSA’s involvement in the Scottsboro trial, a number of prominent African-American intellectuals moved toward the left.  The radical shift in Hughes’s politics followed soon after the Scottsboro trial, and is represented in his jazz agitprop play Scottsboro, Limited.  The case of Langston Hughes, and of Scottsboro, Limited, illustrates the complex relationship between the Communist Party and the African-American intellectuals they courted.
3:00- 4:00pm The Business of Performing Arts
Presenter: Kathlyn Zaheerah Sultan, MA Candidate, Columbia College Chicago
This workshop examines the process of establishing and maintaining a business in the performing arts. Issues that are addressed include; establishing a performing art business, the selection process and best practices for your board of directors, current situation or SWOT (strengths, weakness, opportunities and threats) analysis for your company, creative financing and the importance of networking.
4:15 -5:15pm BTN Business Meeting
TCAP Connection –
reflective questions
5:30-7:00pmHollywood Happy Hour
Baron Kelly, Michelle Shay, Charles Robinson and others discuss working in the business.
 Dinner on your own
8:30pmBEST OF LA
 Viver Brasil presents Alaafia/Harmony
Ford Theatre ($35)
Members of L.A.’s Viver Brasil dance company have steeped themselves in Afro-Brazilian culture, working with leading practitioners from Bahia, Brazil, and producing vibrant Ford evenings. Peace, as expressed in the tradition of the Yoruban community, is at the center of this year’s performance.
http://www.fordamphitheater.org/en/events/details/id/86
 8:00pm Rehearsals for Sunday Performance- TBA

Sunday, August 1

8:00-10:00am Registration
8:30am Salute  to the Ascendants
An annual celebration and remembrance of departed members, friends, and theatre personalities.
9:00amPERFORMANCE Kwanzaa Musical
African American Drama Company- Youth Theatre-
Phillip E. Walker, Director
A lyric Kwanzaa craft produced by San Jose’s African American Drama Company (the nation’s most extensively toured fine arts organization) and performed by The Third Theatre Troupe the San Francisco Bay Area’s hot new children’s theater group.
10:00-11:30amThe use of Ritual Poetic Drama Within the African Continuum (Ritual)
Presenters: Olisa Enrico Johnson and Donzell P. Lewis, MFA Candidates, Virginia Commonwealth University
This workshop explores the power of a holistic pedagogic methodology. Using the drum; artists connect to their creative Dance power/Music power/Word power, through improvisation, creation and Rite of Passage Journey. Participants will focus on the aspects of Ritual that connect the artist/participant to their individual/unique content and their authentic voice.
11:40am–1:15pmBTN AWARDS BRUNCH
2010 Recipients:
  • Kathryn Ervin and Phillip Walker – BTN Lifetime Membership Awards
  • Adilah Barnes and Buddy Butler – Winona Fletcher Awards
  • Daniel Banks & Adam McKinney, DNAWorks – President’s Pathfinder Award
1:30-3:00pmPanel #2 - Ritual Performance
 Appropriations, Parodies, and Constructs of Blackness in Contemporary African Theatre and Performance
Panelist: Connie Rapoo, Ph.D. Lecturer, University of Botswana
The making of innovative theatre and performance in Africa happens through syncretic formations that blend “traditional” ritual theatre with modern aesthetics, intercultural performances, Theatre for Development (TfD) and diverse entertainment genres of the African Diaspora.  These practices go beyond colonial reversal and colonial mimicry to underscore the power of Black performance and popular theatre to incorporate, reinvigorate, and transform various identities.  The panelist seeks to tease out how African theatre and performance artists utilize theatrical conventions, cross-Atlantic cultural traffics, and musical genres to re-present black culture and identity.
 Carnival & Cultural Transportation
Panelist: Andre Harrington, Assistant Professor, CSU San Bernardino &
Christine Menzies, Associate Professor, CSU Northridge
The carnivals of Trinidad and other Caribbean islands have generated similar large-scale festivals in cities that have received significant Caribbean immigration since World War II.  These contemporary ‘Caribbean’ carnivals, in North America and the British Isles, share a common heritage with those of South America, most notably Brazil. This presentation examines, relates and exhibits the current observations and trends of carnival performance past & present.
 The Emergence of Carnival as a complimentary Theatre in Nigeria: An Appraisal of the Unilag-AfriCaribbean Festival
Panelist: Cornelius E. Onyekaba, Department of Creative Arts, University Of Lagos
This study takes a cursory look at the meaning of organization and uses of carnivals as a complimentary form of theatre with a special emphasis on the University of Lagos-AfriCaribbean Festival. It traces the origin of carnivals from the pro-western as well as the pan-African perspectives; with a strong bias for the African origin of Carnivals.
3:15-4:45pmS. Randolph Edmonds Young Scholars Papers & Awards Presentation
Reception immediately following presentations

Ms. Anna Clauson (1st Place – Division I)
California Polytechnic State University
Ntozake Shange’s for colored girls and The Evolution of Sexual Violence in the Black Community

Mr. Gregory Olsen (2nd Place – Division I)
California Polytechnic State University
The Secret Identity: An Exploration of the Validity of Colorblind Casting Portraying the Black Experience  
  

Mr. Isaiah M. Wooden (1st Place – Division II)
Stanford University
Calling on ghosts to (w)Right the Present:  History, Race and Sexuality in Robert O’Hara’s Antebellum

 Ms. Cynthia Lytle (2nd Place – Division II)
Universitat de Barcelona
Making the Familiar Strange: Debbie Tucker Green and the Act for Social Change

5:00-6:30pm BTN Business Meeting
TCAP Connection –
reflective questions
 Dinner On Your Own
8:00pmPERFORMANCE SHOWCASE
An evening Highlighting Performances for Young Audiences and Others who need Education

James Baldwin; A Soul On Fire - Charles Reese
NEW BLACK MATH- Sacramento State Touring Theatre
Things My Fore-Sisters Saw - Leslie McCurdy
The Making of A Mulatto - Juliette Fairley

 

Monday, August 2

 8:00am  Registration (Continental Breakfast)
 9:00-10:00am Black Theatre: Glad To Be In The Service of Higher Education
Presenter- Regina Turner, Ph. D. Indiana University, Purdue University
This session demonstrates the types of scripts that can be used to create a marriage between theatre in higher education and the African American community; explore some of the music produced by this idea, and discuss ways the scripts may be used to strengthen the idea of theatre’s value, necessity, and power.
10:15-11:45amHaMapah / äîôä : Performing Mixedness
Presenters: Daniel Banks, Ph.D. & Adam McKinney, DNA Works, NY
Selected excerpts from HaMapah / äîôä a multimedia dance journey tracing African, European, Native American, and Jewish heritages. In Hebrew, HaMapah / äîôä means “the tablecloth” or “the map." HaMapah / äîôä weaves contemporary dance, archival material, personal interviews, songs, and video set to traditional, contemporary, and classical music.  The session will investigate performance as a catalyst for arts-based community dialogue.
12:00-1:00pmLUNCH  On Your Own
1:00- 2:30Panel #3 - Classroom Translations

Hip Hop and Theatre in the Classroom: A New Way of Teaching
Panelist- Eleisa Jordan, M.A, The City Theatre, Austin, TX.
A trial study was conducted with a group of special education students that integrated music and performance as well as modified literature to teach and evaluate TAKS (Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills) testing material. The presenter examine the results and positive effects of using Hip Hop Theatre as a teaching tool in a special education setting as well as its application to mainstream classrooms.

 “Barely There”:  Professor as Performer, Performer as Professor
Panelist: Nicole Anderson-Cobb, Ph.D, Roosevelt University
Presents a portion of the panelist’s solo show “Barely There: Why Faculty Fade” which examines the complex role of college educators as performers---specifically college educators of color.  The paper examines acting, theater and performance as a critical vehicle for giving voice to the experiences of women and minorities in higher education.
 A Pedagogical Approach to The Jazz Age: African American Visual and Performing Artists of the Harlem Renaissance, 1915-1936.
Panelist- Anthony Hill- The Ohio State University
The presentation demonstrates and explains how the works of performing and visual artists of the Jazz Age may engage students from diverse cultures such as Asians, Hispanics, blacks, and whites within a college classroom.
 2:45-4:15pm BRIDGE CONVERSATION- BEST PRACTICES  (Round Table)
Facilitator- David Catanzarite, Watts Village Theatre
Members of Watts Village Theatre and others discuss the perils and possibilities in current practice.
4:30pm BTN Business Meeting/Executive Board Installation
A- Planning BTN 2011
B- TCAP finalize
5:30pm Adjournment
7:00pmReception at ATHE
Please join us at the Hyatt Hotel and Conference Center For a Town Hall Meeting!
Your BTN Badge is your admission!

 

 

Black Theatre Network - A non-profit organization
A Diverse Group of Artists • Educators • Scholars • Students •  Theatre Lovers Dedicated to the Exploration and Preservation of the Theatrical Visions of the
African Diaspora
Luther Wells, President. •  President@blacktheatrenetwork.org