Harlem Duet
By Djanet Sears
2/5
()
Identity
Relationships
Love
Family
Race
Love Triangle
Star-Crossed Lovers
Family Secrets
Forbidden Love
Time Travel
Absent Parent
Power of Music
Magical Realism
Tragic Hero
Tragic Mulatto
Self-Discovery
Drama
African American Culture
Betrayal
Mental Health
About this ebook
A rhapsodic blues tragedy, Harlem Duet could be the prelude to Shakespeare’s Othello and recounts the tale of Othello and his first wife Billie (yes, before Desdemona). Set in contemporary Harlem at the corner of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X boulevards, the play explores the space where race and sex intersect. Harlem Duet is Billie’s story.
Djanet Sears
Djanet Sears is an award-winning playwright and director and has several acting award nominations to her credit for both stage and screen. She is the recipient of the Stratford Festival's 2004 Timothy Findley Award, as well as Canada's highest literary honour for dramatic writing: the 1998 Governor General's Literary Award. She is the playwright and director of the multiple Dora Award winning production of Harlem Duet (Scirocco Drama, 1997), which was workshopped at the Joseph Papp Public Theatre in NYC, where Djanet was the international artist-in-residence in 1996. Her other honours include the 1998 Floyd S. Chalmers Canadian Play Award, the Martin Luther King Jr. Achievement Award, the Harry Jerome Award for Excellence in the Cultural Industries, and a Phenomenal Woman of the Arts Award. Her most recent work for the stage, The Adventures of a Black Girl in Search of God (Playwrights Canada Press, 2003), was shortlisted for a 2004 Trillium Book Award and enjoyed a six-month run in the fall/winter of 2003/2004, as part of the Mirvish Productions season. Her other plays include Afrika Solo, Who Killed Katie Ross, and Double Trouble. Djanet is the driving force behind the AfriCanadian Playwrights' Festival, and a founding member of the Obsidian Theatre Company. She is also the editor of Testifyin': Contemporary African Canadian Drama, Vols. I & II, the first anthologies of plays by playwrights of African descent in Canada (Playwrights Canada Press, 2000 & 2003). She is currently an adjunct professor at University College, University of Toronto where she teaches playwriting.
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Book preview
Harlem Duet - Djanet Sears
HARLEM Duet
Harlem Duet by Djanet SearsHarlem Duet
first published 1997 by
Scirocco Drama
An imprint of J. Gordon Shillingford Publishing Inc.
© 1996 Djanet Sears
12th printing, 2020
Scirocco Drama Editor: Dave Carley
Cover design by Terry Gallagher/Doowah Design Inc.
Cover illustration by W. Edwards
Author photo by Tim Leyes
Production photos by Cylla Von Tiedemann
We acknowledge the financial support of the Manitoba Arts Council, The Canada Council for the Arts and the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP) for our publishing program.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, for any reason, by any means, without the permission of the publisher. This play is fully protected under the copyright laws of Canada and all other countries of the Copyright Union and is subject to royalty. Changes to the text are expressly forbidden without written consent of the author. Rights to produce, film, record in whole or in part, in any medium or in any language, by any group amateur or professional, are retained
by the author.
Production inquiries should be addressed to:
John Rait, A.C.I., 205 Ontario Street, Toronto, ON M5A 2V6
All other enquiries should be addressed to:
Playwrights Union of Canada
54 Wolseley St., 2nd Floor, Toronto, ON M5T 1A5
ISBN 978-1927922-67-5 (epub)
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Sears, Djanet
Harlem duet
A play.
ISBN 1-896239-27-7
I. Title.
PS8587.E23H37 1997 C812’.54 C97-901003-9
PR9199.3.S383H37 1997
J. Gordon Shillingford Publishing
P.O. Box 86, RPO Corydon Avenue, Winnipeg, MB Canada R3M 3S3
To Winnifred, Quisbert, Rosemarie, Terese, Celia, Mark, Milton, Sharon, Donald, Qwyn, Kyla, Vanessa, Djustice, Donny, Sherie and Danielle.
Acknowledgements
The Ancestors, Babara Ackerman, Lillian Allen, Anji, Arcadia Housing Co-op, b current, Maxine Bailey, Bob Baker, Barbara Barnes Hopkins, Bonnie Beacher, Tyrone Benskin, Ellen Bethea, Laura Bennett, Paul Bettis, Allen Booth, Marty Bragg, Yvonne Brewster, Talawa Theatre, Candace Burley, Steven Bush, Niomi Campbell, The Canada Council for the Arts/U.S./Mexico Artists Residency Program, The Canadian Stage Company, The Chalmers Family, Clarissa Chandler, David Collins, Maria Costa, Julie Crooks, Carolin Crumpackr, Charlotte Dean, Michelyn Emmelle, Oni Faida Lamply, Shirley Fishman, Cheryl Francis, Peter Freund, Michael Holness, Nalo Hopkinson, Doug Innes, Starr Jacobs, Astrid Janson, Herbert Johnson, Monica Lee Johnson, Jeff Jones, The Joseph Papp Public Theatre, Shelby Jiggets, Ricardo Khan, Crossroads Theatre, James King, Martin Luther King, Pia Kleber, Pat Kogan, Leslie Lester, Roy Lewis, Kate Lushington, Alisa Palmer, Alicia Payne, Soraya Peerbaye, ahdri zhina mandiela, Clem Marshall, Marva, Sharon Massey, Judy McKinley, Monique Mojica, National Endowment for the Arts, New York University: Bobst Library, Mark Nicholson, Nightwood Theatre, Ontario Arts Council, O.F.D.C., Andrea Ottey, Mark Owen, Jonathan Peck, Janis Pono, Teresa Przybylski, John Rait, Otis Richmond, Dawn Roach, Diane Roberts, Richard Rose, Viveen Scarlett, The Schomberg Center for Research in Black Culture, Lorraine Scott, Alison Sealy-Smith, Quisbert, Winnie, Rosie, Therese, Celia & Milton Sears, Satori Shakor, Barb Singer, Tarragon Theatre, Kunle Vristosw, Leslie Wilkinson, Lionel Williams, Nigel Shawn Williams, Myra L. Taylor, Neil Thelse, Lisa Tobias, Toronto Arts Council, Iris Turcott, Karen Tyrell, Gloria Wade Gayles, Inquisition
, Donna Walker-Collins, Winsom, George C. Wolfe, Ollie Woods, and Malcolm X.
Production Credits
Harlem Duet premiered on April 24, 1997, as a Nightwood Theatre production, at the Tarragon Extra Space, Toronto, Canada, with the following cast:
BILLIE Alison Sealy-Smith
OTHELLO Nigel Shawn Williams
MAGI Barbara Barnes Hopkins
AMAH/MONA Dawn Roach
CANADA Jeff Jones
Double Bass Lionel Williams
Cello Doug Innes
Directed by Djanet Sears
Set and costume design by Teresa Przybylski
Lighting design by Lesley Wilkinson
Music composition and arrangement by Lionel Williams
Music and sound design by Allen Booth
Assistant Director: Maxine Bailey
Stage Manager: Cheryl Francis
Assistant Stage Manager: Andrea Ottley
Dramaturgy by Diane Roberts and Kate Lushington
This production of Harlem Duet won four 1997 Dora Mavor Moore awards, including Best New Play (Djanet Sears); Best Direction (Djanet Sears); Best Female Performance (Alison Sealy-Smith); and Best Production (Nightwood Theatre).
Nightwood Theatre is Canada’s oldest professional feminist theatre company. Founded in 1979, Nightwood Theatre has produced and developed many critically acclaimed plays, including Ann-Marie MacDonald’s Good-night Desdemona (Good-morning Juliet), Monique Mojica’s Princess Pocahontas and the Blue Spots, and Susan G. Cole’s A Fertile Imagination.
Djanet Sears
Djanet Sears is a Toronto playwright, director and actor. She is the author of the highly acclaimed Afrika Solo, which has toured extensively and was broadcast on CBC Radio’s Morningside. Afrika Solo was published in 1990 by Sister Vision Press. Harlem Duet, originally workshopped at New York City’s Joseph Papp Public Theatre, was produced by Toronto’s Nightwood Theatre and premiered at the Tarragon Theatre in April, 1997.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Production Credits
Djanet Sears
nOTES oF a cOLOURED gIRL
Harlem Duet
ACT I
Prologue
Scene 1
Scene 2
Scene 3
Scene 4
Scene 5
Scene 6
Scene 7
Scene 8
Scene 9
Scene 10
ACT II
Scene 1
Scene 2
Scene 3
Scene 4
Scene 5
Scene 6
Scene 7
Scene 8
Scene 9
Scene 10
nOTES oF a cOLOURED gIRL
32 sHORT rEASONS wHY i wRITE fOR tHE tHEATRE
by Djanet Sears
1
Carved from that same tree
in another age
counsel/warriors who
in the mother tongue
made drums talk
now in another tongue
make words to walk in rhythm
’cross the printed page
carved from that same tree
in another age
Khephra
Talking Drums #1 (Khephra 125)
2 Two years ago I found myself speaking with esteemed writer and Nobel laureate, Derek Walcott, about an upcoming staged reading I was directing of his play, A Branch of the Blue Nile. Toward the end of our conversation I politely requested an opportunity to ask him, what I termed, a stupid question. His eyebrows seemed to crawl up to his hairline, but he didn’t say no. Not that I gave him a chance. Swiftly managing to kick all second thoughts out of my mind, I boldly asked him to tell me why he wrote. He retreated to the back of his seat, and after several long moments of pondering, he replied, I don’t know.
He said that writing really wasn’t a choice for him. From as far back as he could recall, he had written. He described it as a type of organic urge. He didn’t know why he wrote, but when he experienced this urge, he felt compelled to act on it. Be it on