Tough lessons in CTC’s play about community destructionPosted in Articles, Arts, Audio, History, Media Archive, United States on 2012-03-16 01:13Z by Steven |
Tough lessons in CTC’s play about community destruction
MPR News
Minnesota Public Radio
2012-03-15
Nikki Tundel, Reporter
St. Paul, Minn. — A century-old story of discrimination is the basis for a world premiere production opening Friday in Minneapolis.
“Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy” is the Children’s Theatre Company’s adaption of the real-life events of a forbidden friendship during the social segregation of 1912.
It’s a dark tale. But it’s one the theater company believes should be shared – especially with school children.
Actress Traci Allen was a bit wary when she first heard of Minnesota’s Children’s Theatre Company.
“I’m thinking of puppets and, ‘Hello, boys and girls,'” Allen pantomimed before a recent rehearsal.
Her preconceived notion didn’t last long. Today, she is the lead in the CTC’s “Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy.” The children’s play wrestles with various adult themes, from economic turmoil to mortality.
Twenty-six-year-old Allen plays 13-year-old Lizzie. When afternoon rehearsal begins, she’s mourning the death of her grandfather in a song.
The story chronicles the forbidden friendship between Lizzie, who is black, and Turner Buckminster, who is white. It highlights the challenges they face in socially segregated 1912.
“Is there transition music there?” asks CTC artist director Peter Brosius, who directs the play.
The production is based on a Newbery Award-winning book [by Gary D. Schmidt], which in turn is based on the real-life history of Phippsburg, Maine. When the small coastal town was hit by an economic downtown, community leaders looked to the nearby island of Malaga to solve their financial woes.
“The idea,” said Brosius, “Was that the population that was on Malaga, which was a black and mixed-race population, should be removed from that island and that both the coastline and Malaga be turned into a resort. What happened, in fact, was the island was evacuated, people’s homes were moved.”…
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