新澳门六合彩内幕信息

Live Topic: Puppetry in 鈥楾he Bluest Eye鈥

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Student actors flank puppet.
In rehearsal: Jasmine Washington, left, and Anna Rita Moukarzel in “The Bluest Eye,” 2018. (Luke Younge)

Margaret Laurena Kemp, an associate professor in the Department of Theatre and Dance, will be featured this weekend in a livestreamed program about the use of puppets in 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis鈥 award-winning production of The Bluest Eye, which she co-directed.

Adapted from the late Toni Morrison鈥檚 first novel, The Bluest Eye foreshadowed the author鈥檚 rise to fame as 鈥渁 beloved novelist of black life,鈥 as described in a New York Times headline upon her death in August 2019. She won a Pulitzer Prize in 1988 for Beloved and was the first African American woman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, in 1993.

AT A GLANCE

Margaret laurena Kemp headshot
Kemp
  • WHAT: 鈥淩ehearsing Truth and Reconciliation: Casting Puppets in The Bluest Eye
  • WHEN: 1 p.m. PDT Saturday, Sept. 5, as part of Dragon Con, a multimedia pop culture convention
  • WHO: Margaret Laurena Kemp, associate professor, Department of Theatre and Dance
  • WHERE:
  • ADMISSION: Free

The Department of Theatre and Dance staged The Bluest Eye in Main Theatre in May 2018, marking the first time the play had been performed with puppets. Students had visible roles, too, manipulating the puppets and giving them voice.

Race, class, gender

Set in an Ohio town in 1940-41, Morrison鈥檚 novel revolves around a Black girl named Pecola Breedlove whose family is in turmoil, who wants to be loved and who prays to have blue eyes like Shirley Temple鈥檚, believing their beauty is the only thing standing between her and being happy like the white girls at school.

鈥淭his show will come to life on stage by melding the work of an African American writer and an application of South African puppetry,鈥 Kemp said in advance publicity. 鈥淭hese approaches will underscore the myth and magical realism that is ingrained in the narrative as a path to unpacking the themes of race, class and gender that are the core of this work.鈥

Puppet creator Janni Younge took on co-director duties as a Granada Artist in Residence in the Department of Theatre and Dance. She and Kemp had met earlier in South Africa, where Kemp attended one of Younge鈥檚 workshops.

On her , Younge says: 鈥淭he puppetry highlights the formation and fragility of self. It forms a layer of meaning, literally building the self as if it is held and supported (or not supported) by a community at large.鈥

Kennedy Center commendations

The 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis troupe reprised its work in February 2019 at the University of Oregon, in a regional event that was part of the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival. The Bluest Eye earned four commendations, the first national awards for a Department of Theatre and Dance production.

The play earned two awards for distinguished achievement, one for the ensemble performance and one for the directors. The judges presented a special award to Younge and the creative team for their puppet design, and honored Karola L眉ttringhaus, a doctoral candidate, for costume design for the puppets and puppeteers.

Two students flank pupper, who holds a book.
In rehearsal: Tiffany Nwogu, left, and Rose Kim with Pecola in 鈥淭he Bluest Eye,鈥 2018. (Nicholas Yoon/新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis)

鈥楾ruth and reconciliation鈥

Younge鈥檚 directing credits include a revival of Ubu and the Truth Commission, with puppets and actors 鈥 a play that Kemp saw in South Africa and which provided inspiration for her talk this weekend, 鈥淩ehearsing Truth and Reconciliation: Casting Puppets in The Bluest Eye.

The play proved to be an enlightening journey for the ensemble. 鈥淥ur students believed in the mission of this exploration ... to figure out a way to explore contemporary theatre/narratives that might not be a part of the students鈥 own cultures,鈥 Kemp said. 鈥淭hey had to invent a way to do this that was respectful to another culture and that did not engage in cultural appropriation.鈥

Kemp鈥檚 talk Saturday (Sept. 5) will be part of Dragon Con, a multimedia pop culture convention being held virtually. Paulette Richards, a scholar of African American puppetry, is due to interview Kemp about the challenges and rewards of her rehearsal process for The Bluest Eye, racial equity in college theater programs and using puppets to mediate W.E.B. DuBois鈥 double consciousness. See box for details.

Connecting with Toni Morrison

Kemp went through Morrison鈥檚 agent to secure permission for 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis鈥 unique production of The Bluest Eye. 鈥淜nowing that Toni Morrison was aware of what we accomplished and knew the reasons why we performed the work the way that we did, is tremendously gratifying,鈥 she said, reflecting on her connection to the author before her death.

For the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis production, based on Lydia Diamond鈥檚 2006 adaptation, a full-length play, Kemp added scenes from the novel to bring the play to life for visual and live-action storytelling, in place of large chunks of narration.

鈥淭his was another reason I thought puppets would work,鈥 Kemp said. 鈥淲e could make the narration live-action. This is most impactful in Pecola鈥檚 rape scene and in the final scene of the play.鈥

Michael French, arts marketing specialist, contributing to this report.

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