“A
novelist writes a novel, and people read it. But reading is a solitary act.
While it may elicit a varied and personal response, the communal nature of the audience
is like having five hundred people read your novel and respond to it at the
same time. I find that thrilling.” – August Wilson
Born this week in
1945, Wilson was an African-American playwright whose work was highlighted by
the series of ten plays, The Pittsburgh or Century Cycle, for which he
received two Pulitzer Prizes for Drama.
Each of the10 plays is set in a different decade of the 20th
Century, depicting the comic and tragic aspects of the century’s Black
experience.
I had the good fortune to first meet
this wonderful playwright in 1987 while he was writing, directing and producing
theater in St. Paul, Minn., and shortly after he wrote the amazing Fences, for which he won both the
Pulitzer and a Tony. In the early ‘90s,
I heard him talk about the next in the series, The Piano Lesson, for which he won a second Pulitzer and the New
York Drama Critics Award.
Wilson had the remarkable ability to
make everything he said and wrote crackle with enthusiasm and life and any
aspiring writer or actor who listened to his talks would always walk out fired
up about writing or acting and ready to get busy trying to emulate what he had
just shared. It was after hearing him
that I wrote my one and only play, The
First Day, and then got started in acting in community theater.
Wilson said his aim was to sketch
the Black experience in the 20th century and "raise consciousness through
theater.” He was fascinated by the power
of theater as a medium where a community at large could come together to bear
witness to events and currents unfolding.
“I think my plays offer white Americans a different way to look at black
Americans.”
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