Dorothy Dandridge reached the dizzying zenith of her film career in 1954 when she earned an Academy Award nomination starring in "Carmen Jones." She was young, achingly lovely, and gifted with an extraordinary singing voice. Yet in the waning days of Jim Crow, opportunities to sustain her Hollywood career were pitifully few. She passed up the featured supporting role in The King and I, a big mistake. Two more starring roles in the next 11 years, a sputtering cabaret career, and a failed marriage followed. Soon she was drinking, bankrupt, dependent on anti-depressants -- and dead at age 42.

The downward spiral of Dorothy Dandridge was dramatized last week at the National Black Theater Festival in Yesterday Came Too Soon. Meanwhile, across Winston-Salem, there were numerous tributes to African-American heroes and heroines of the past and their tribulations in White America. Paul Robeson and the victims of the Tuskegee experiments were also included in the proud, tragic cavalcade.
But all around town, there were multiple affirmations of enduring achievement amid adversity -- powerful manifestations that times had changed since the days of Dorothy Dandridge. For the better.

A Far Cry from the '50s

Star power at the 2003 NBTF is turning into producing power, possibly opening new horizons of opportunity for black theater professionals. With the encouragement of the Neil Simon Estate, an all-black version of Barefoot in the Park was showcased at the festival, starring Kim Fields, the actress who grew up on the long-running "Facts of Life" television series. Now that she's grown up, Fields is co-producing Barefoot.

Although this version incorporates snips of poetry written by Fields, a pair of a cappella songs written and performed by co-star Tony Grant, and a few shake-and-bake flavorings for the black audience, the rest of the script is purely Neil Simon.

"It's not an adaptation," Fields insists. "It's Mr. Simon's work. The only things that we have to adjust are things like making the rent different for what the rent is today in New York and that kind of thing."

That's a far cry from "Carmen Jones," which required a whole new libretto from Oscar Hammerstein II so that Dandridge could portray Bizet's Carmen opposite Harry Belafonte on the silver screen. Then they dubbed their singing voices!
There are precious few Broadway precedents for all-black casts standing in for all-white characters created by a white playwright. As it happens, Fields has it in her genes: her mom was in the cast of the fabled all-black production of Hello, Dolly! starring Pearl Bailey. That show was Fields' intro to live theater.

While she acknowledges the groundbreaking possibilities of an all-black Barefoot, Fields' prime mission isn't to bring the production to Broadway. It's to bring playwrights like Neil Simon to a black audience -- and simply to play the role of Corie Bratter.

"Black theater has gotten into such a groove, if you will, of a lot of the same kind of shows, which are incredibly successful and very, very good," Fields explains. "But I'd like to broaden the scope a little bit more. Every black show doesn't have to be musical or the broadest of comedies. Sometime down the road I'd love to do Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Yes, I'd love to be able to bring Tennessee Williams to black people. But at the same time, I have very selfish reasons: I'd love to play Maggie the Cat at some point in my career!"

[END]

 

Writer: 
Perry Tannenbaum
Date: 
August 2003
Key Subjects: 
National Black Theater Festival, National Black Theater Festival