"Can I Touch It?" Playbill, Company One Theatre
"Can I Touch It?" Playbill, Company One Theatre
"Can I Touch It?" Playbill, Company One Theatre
Welcome to Company One Theatre’s production of Francisca Da Silveira’s can i touch it?,
presented in partnership with the City of Boston’s Office of Arts and Culture.
Whether you are new to Company One Theatre or you’ve experienced our productions
for the past 23 years, we are so happy you have joined us for this extraordinary new play
by one of America’s most exciting playwrights.
can i touch it?
A NATIONAL NEW PL AY NETWORK
Company One Theatre builds community at the intersection of art and social change in ROLLING WORLD PREMIERE BY
service to our vision of a Boston defined by justice, equity, and artistic innovation. We work
in four interdependent programming areas: live performance, the development of new plays
and playwrights, arts education in the Boston Public Schools, and community connections.
FRANCISCA DA SILVEIRA
Founded in 1998, Company One has situated itself as a home for social justice and DIRECTED BY
artistic excellence by connecting Boston’s diverse communities. By establishing a
dedicated space for marginalized and progressive narratives to thrive, and working with SUMMER L. WILLIAMS
partners and collaborators across the city, C1 has become a local leader in the ongoing
conversations that continue to define the era of social change in contemporary America. DRAMATURGY BY
Beyond the work onstage, our hope is that our plays open up new connections for our AFRIKAH SMITH
audiences to engage with each other, whether by attending our post-show conversations,
or by taking part in direct social and political action with our community partners. We PRESENTED IN PARTNERSHIP WITH THE
don’t just want you to sit back and enjoy the show—we want you to be an active part of
our community. CIT Y OF BOSTON'S OFFICE OF ARTS AND CULTURE
As part of C1’s commitment to uplifting Theatre As Public Art, ALL of our public events
this season are Pay-What-You-Want. That means that the people of Boston can see this
work for free! We hope you’ll join us again next season for more productions with no
financial barriers to entry in incredible public venues like the Boston Public Library and location
the Strand. boston, ma, 2019
We could not be more excited to introduce you to local playwright, Fran Da Silveira and the along dudley street in that blur between roxbury and dorchester
world premiere of can i touch it? Fran’s love of the neighborhood is on full display here as she
the heart of the community
considers what lies ahead for Shay, her beauty supply shop and the city she calls home.
we'll get into how problematic that word has become
We invite you to witness this production as your full self. And we invite you to come back,
to share space and ideas. Together.
setting
an african beauty store
With love and hope,
they all look the same wherever you go right?
This production of can i touch it? is produced with support from the
National New Play Network and the Rolling World Premiere Program.
About NNPN
Company One is a proud Core Member Theater of the National New Play Network (NNPN), an
alliance of professional theaters that collaborate in innovative ways to develop, produce, and extend
the life of new plays. Since its inception in 1998, the National New Play Network has been driven by
the belief “...that the next generation of new play development should be decentralized, dynamic, and
collaborative in scope and practice, and that there should be a pipeline for sharing new work between
an
regional theaters.”
With growing initiatives such as the New Play Exchange (NPX) and the Rolling World Premiere Pro-
gram, NNPN is committed to diverse stories, artists, audiences, institutions, and leadership. Viewing
new plays to be vital to our communities because they reflect, chronicle, and question the ideas, issues,
offering
and stories of our time. FRANCISCA DA SILVEIRA
COMES HOME
About the Rolling World Premiere Program
A Rolling World Premiere (RWP) is when three or more theaters partner to mount the same new play
within a 12-month period, allowing the playwright to develop a new work with multiple creative teams Fran is sitting in an airport, one leg into a lengthy trip home to see family back in Cape Verde. We’re
in multiple communities. Where the playwright is part of the process, working on the script and making talking on a scratchy phone line, interrupted periodically by fellow travelers and announcements over
adjustments based on what is learned from each production. the PA system. But the energy and joy of our conversation is unmitigated, having just completed the
first few weeks of rehearsal with the team in Boston. “I feel like I live in anticipation. I live in excitement
Company One is proud to partner with mission-aligned theaters Cleveland Public Theatre and …I live in fear! It comes with the territory,” she notes with a laugh. Fran grew up along Dudley
(Cleveland, OH) and Rogue Machine Theatre (Los Angeles, CA) as RWP partners for can i touch it? Street, and when she returned to the city after college she began a long relationship with Company
One Theatre, first as an Education Associate, then as a dramaturg, Literary Manager, and now, finally,
About Cleveland Public Theatre
as a playwright. She returns home — to C1, to Upham’s, and to the Strand — with a play as local as it
Cleveland Public Theatre (CPT) was founded in 1981 by James
Levin, with the mission to raise consciousness and nurture com-
is universal. Because where aren’t folks fighting for fair housing, for thoughtful redevelopment, and for
passion through groundbreaking performances and life-changing whatever slivers of space we can carve out for our own peace and self-care?
education programs. CPT develops new, adventurous work; and Ilana M Brownstein: I’d love to hear about your family’s deep connection to the neighborhood right around
nurtures Northeastern Ohio artists whose work is inventive, the Strand Theatre.
intelligent, and socially conscious.CPT’s acclaimed education
Francisca Da Silveira: We immigrated to this part of Boston when I was four years old. It feels like more Cape
programs engage communities in devising new works that speak
Verdeans live in Boston than they do in Cape Verde — here, Rhode Island, New Bedford. I think originally
Learn more: cptonline.org to contemporary issues, and empowers participants to work for because of the whaling industry. I’ve lived in Roxbury and Dorchester all my life, with the longest stretch living
positive change in our community. off of Marshfield street in Roxbury. I am the youngest of 12. And there's six years between me and the second
youngest, so by the time I was becoming a human with thoughts and ideas and a personality, everyone else was
About Rogue Machine more grown-up, and my mom would take me everywhere, on all of her errands, after church, on the weekends.
Rogue Machine Theatre was founded in 2008 as a performing arts She did not drive or speak English. So I was also the one doing a lot of the translation work, like for her doctor's
organization to serve the greater Los Angeles community in devel- appointments. We would take the #15 bus to Dudley Station, and then take the #1 to Boston Medical and I
oping and nurturing emerging playwrights, introducing important would be her translator. We were just always together. I feel like we walked the entirety of Dudley Street every
contemporary works to Southern California and engaging diverse single weekend, trying to hit all of the errands.
audiences by presenting vital, invigorating productions. Rogue
IMB: I knew that you were the youngest, but I didn't know about you having to be a translator for your mom.
Machine seeks to be a theatre of ideas and imagination, a theatre
You’ve been really chewing on language and writing your whole life, it seems.
which mirrors and examines contemporary culture, a theatre which
Learn more: nurtures contemporary playwrights, and a theatre whose work FDS: Yeah, I say the reason I got into college was my college essay, which was actually about the language
roguemachinetheatre.net continually engages the community and creates a dialogue which barrier between my parents and I. They never learned English while they were here — and they were here for
resonates after the curtain closes. 16 years before going back to Cape Verde. They did the kind of jobs where they didn't need to, but my dad
learned Spanish for his work. If it had not been for them NOT learning English, I would probably would’ve lost
a lot of my Cape Verdean. Everywhere else in life I just spoke English, even with my siblings. There were also
certain things that I could not say in my Creole, so it created a little bit of a barrier between us. I don't know
To learn more about NNPN and the Rolling World Premiere program, visit nnpn.org.
for sure, but that's probably why I got into college for theatre, and eventually playwriting! for how huge the economic gap is, but we are still figuring out how to grapple with this, even as modes of
activism change. I do know that there are so many organizations around Boston in each of the neighborhoods
IMB: And they went back to Cape Verde?
that are pushed to their limits right now. Shining lights on eviction, affordable housing, community centers and
FDS: They left when I turned 18. As I was packing up to go to NYU, they were packing up to go to Cape Verde. I historic buildings that are being torn down and redeveloped. The artivist in me wants to know what all of these
was like, oh, where's my stuff gonna go? Like, you know, your childhood things. I'm very fascinated by the idea of fights are, in detail. But what's scary is that I feel it's actively impossible, or at least very difficult. How do you
people who still have childhood bedrooms! I never had that — my sister picked up all of my stuff and brought it to even wrap your head around all that’s happening in the neighborhoods so you can begin to think about what
her house after I’d already left for college. They were like, we're done! We have succeeded in our intention of why remediation might look like?
we came here, which was to give our children better educations, and I was the last one. I was the only one that
IMB: I'm curious, when you think about the folks who are going to come to the show, is there anything you
completed undergrad, and then grad school, so I think they felt comfortable leaving me because I was on a path
really hope that they walk away talking or thinking or wondering about?
that felt good to them. In a way I did feel a little bit abandoned, but in another way, it taught me a lot of resilience.
It's taught me how to take care of myself in ways that I think that a lot of young adults don't learn until after FDS: I hope for curiosity and vigilance. Maybe this is just because this is something that I do whenever I'm in
college, if they go to college. I'm grateful for it a lot of the time. And my siblings are still here in the US. Boston and I drive by, like, a construction site, wanting to know more. What is this development company,
what is going to be here? One of the most fascinating parts of this rehearsal process has been researching the
IMB: All of that keen observation and listening that you had to do, how does that show up now in your
Boston Planning & Development Agency website (bostonplans.org) and looking through all of the projects
playwriting voice?
that are at various stages of approval, reading transcribed comments and watching videos from community
FDS: I’m a very observant person in my playwriting and my dramaturgy and my everyday life. I like to listen meetings, because all of that stuff is public. Honestly, that's not something that I knew, that it was all public.
and watch the way that people interact, listening or not listening to one another. I find it fascinating. It's only I hope people go on their own journeys, because the opinion on gentrification is not monolithic. And I hope
once I've gathered all that information that I'm able to formulate an opinion, or tell stories. I was a very quiet that people take this play as an offering, my offering to Boston. As a conversation starter, and an invitation. It's
child on all of those trips with my mom, always listening and watching. not a play that gives answers, though certain characters give their own answers. Which, you know, audience
members may or may not agree with! I hope that people might want to engage in that dialogue with each of
IMB: What is it like for you these days to return to Dudley and Upham’s, after forging your artistic life beyond Boston?
the characters if they could.
FDS: Well transparently, part of me is always sort of looking around to see, am I going to recognize people,
or is an older aunt or uncle going to recognize me, and want to stop and talk and ask after my parents? And
I'm like – with my broken Creole – do I want to try to have that conversation! But it's also really nostalgic,
especially thinking about all of these memories of place.
IMB: This area is really wrestling with the impact of gentrification on the housing market. You and I were
talking the other day about the difference between, “oh great, I get to have a nice coffee” and “oh crap, people
don't live here anymore.” Knowing that the play is asking its own questions, I wonder how you are thinking
about the city’s current challenges in this regard?
FDS: The housing market right now is crazybananas. I was on Zillow the other day and looking at houses on
Hancock street, which is off of Upham's. There were houses that were going for like $1.4-1.6 million. Triple
decker houses. My mind was blown, who can afford this? Definitely not the people that were able to afford
these houses 10 or 15 years ago. And now triple deckers are being broken up into condos, with each unit going
for $500,000-$600,000. This area has a history with immigrant families where somebody buys a house,
they live on one floor, and then they rent out the other two floors, most likely to other family. And it's, you
know, sort of affordable. That's what my family did – renting I mean. And that's not really going to be possible
anymore. Immigration is not done, people are still wanting to come here. Like where are people gonna go? All
the construction that's happening around the city. Things are going up – new, new buildings, new condos. Some
of what has come is really nice, with access to things that typically might only be in whiter areas, like groceries
IMB: I feel like the play, as much as it’s about the neighborhood, is maybe also a love letter to the Strand Theatre.
and shopping centers and things like that. And sure, it’s nice to have those things, but it doesn't stop there. I
was recently at South Bay Center, and that area totally shocked me. It's like, oh great, we have a movie theatre FDS: I do, I love the Strand. I have been walking by the Strand ever since I was little on those errands with
now and a bunch of different stores and there's oh my god a JP Licks. Who doesn’t want ice cream? But it my mom. I was always fascinated by the building, particularly because it was never open. The shutters were
doesn't just stop there. I’m afraid things will continue to change at a rate that is unsustainable for the longtime always down. And when they weren't down, I would try to peek in to see through those big glass doors. I'd gone
residents who could have benefited from it, had they been included. there for like The Nutcracker or whatever as a kid, but when I was 18, it was the summer right before I was
headed to NYU. I was really hype, like I thought that I was A Thespian already! And, I was walking by there
IMB: I appreciate that the characters in the play acknowledge and wrestle the real human push/pull of
one day and the shutters were up and the doors were open — magically! — and I was like, I am a theatre maker
gentrification. The play is set in 2019, and a lot has changed — not just the pandemic, but so much of the
from Boston, of course I have to go in here! It was an End of Summer Celebration hosted by a few different
economy, and the way that people move through the world in terms of activism and expectations. Looking
organizations, with performances. There was a man named Chris Cook who made a speech at the beginning.
back at where we were in 2019, what are your thoughts about how the central conflicts in the play help
He was from the City of Boston. I remember going up to him afterward, so amped up, so excited, full of all
illuminate where we are now?
these ideas. I really wanted to do something at the Strand. It’s lived with me from that moment. The idea that
FDS: That setting is important to me because, yes, 2022 is different, but not as much as we sometimes want if I took the extra step, that because it was a City building, things could be possible there. Much later, when
to believe. I don't mean that to sound cynical. Moreso like we’re rooted in the reality that in the last three I was on staff with Company One, and we were producing Josh Wilder’s play Leftovers at the Strand in 2018,
years, despite all of the conversations that have been happening across sectors in terms of accessibility and it was amazing to see the space lit up, filled night after night with a play that felt like it reflected what people
affordability and anti-racism — that did not solve gentrification. There are just as many, if not more plans for in Boston were dealing with. So when we were first talking about producing can I touch it? I was like, it must
development across the city that now might be called “affordability projects,” which has a really nice ring to it, be at the Strand! It just felt right, like all of the pieces were coming together, and because of Company One’s
a really progressive connotation. But what does that mean exactly? How many Section 8 units allow a project partnership with the City. And wow, I still am a little bit in the shocked phase! But the joy that I get now,
to be called “affordable?” Does that reflect the need of the community? There’s certainly a lot more attention talking about the play, inviting people to a play in their home neighborhood, and being able to say, “you know,
in the media on newer development projects, especially because Mayor Wu has been more vocal about the the Strand, you know, across from Citizens in Upham’s!” People know it, everyone knows it. Being able to
sort of plans she’s hoping to implement to address the housing crisis in Boston. Maybe there’s more visibility make that invitation to my community feels so special. ♦
"Further down, there was a — is it still there?
— a laundromat, right across the street from
where the commuter rail stop is. That's where
we would go to do laundry since we didn’t
A WALKING TOUR
& Civic
was a Black child, and much earlier than I should for how the actors and team and I have made this
have, I understood that the world did not value play. It is very much talking to the people who will
my life the same way that it did my classmates. feel me, who will directly connect to this, who are
Action
My white classmates. That my word didn't hold as embedded in and understand this culture. That's
much weight. And really I have spent a lifetime who I'm talking to first and foremost when I do my
The Path to Production with that understanding, and locating my research work. And I'm open to everyone else listening in on
in critical sites of empowerment. You know, like that and getting what they can get from it as well.
where are the spaces? I understand it in the way the COMPANY ONE
IMB: I love that. That's so similar to how Inda talks
world sees me. But I also recognize that I too hold
Company One Theatre is thrilled to bring Francisca Da Silveira’s can i touch it? THEATRE STANDS
about her writing. What she draws from, who she
power. I’m trying to better identify how I can use
to life in its premiere production. We offer gratitude and honor for the artists speaking with, for, and to, and all the other folks
that power responsibly. I've spent much of my life
who have been part of its development and growth:
learning as much as I can — not just in an academic
IN SUPPORT OF
who might come into that space. I know that we
certainly will have folks as attendees of the show
JAN 2020 — THE FIRE THIS TIME FESTIVAL sense, but really drawing from the wisdom of my STUDENT ARTIVISTS
who are going to be meeting this material from a
Director: Kimille Howard ancestors and my elders. That is my approach
wide variety of personal experiences, just as the
Cast: Denise Manning, Mary Hodges, Ure Egbuho, Stuart Green to a lot of things that I do in life, but especially in
folks on our artistic and production team have. But
how I approach this work. I draw wisdom from my
for people who discover that the play hits close
NOV 2020 — NATIONAL NEW PLAY NETWORK ANNUAL SHOWCASE children and other children, even before I became
in some way — whether that's about actual lived
Director: Nicole A. Watson 23 years
a mom. ago,even
Because Company
the weeOnebabeTheatre was founded with mentorship and support for youth
has something
events or things that are emotionally adjacent to
Assistant Director: Jasmine Brooks to
as teach
a coreifvalue,
we payandattention and wewe’ve
since 2009, listen.partnered
And so with the Boston Public Schools on year-
the events of the play — how do you hope people
Stage Manager: Imani Champion Ilong
bringteaching
all of that into and
artist my work
theatrewithintegration
the awareness residencies.
navigateOurthiseducation programs
play, as audience create
members?
Cast: Mary Hodges, John Keabler, Denise Manning, Ireon Roach that there are those who haven't even been born
opportunities for students to exercise their imaginations, develop collaboration
yet that we have to think about in what we do in this MWN: It’s so cultural. In a Eurocentric Western
skills, work on
Stage Directions Reader: Vaughn Ryan Midder
creative problem
moment, because itsolving, and embrace
will definitely empathy,
have an effect on cultural
framework, responsiveness,
“an audience” and ownership
is a very of entity,
particular voice
MAY 2021 — COMPANY ONE INTERNAL WORKSHOP as they
what they grow into leaders
experience, or whoand changemakers
they get to be. within and there'
their s certain expectations
communities. in terms of
When students how “an
choose to
Director: Summer L. Williams take advantage of those audience”
backs. conducts itself. Black audiences don't
IMB: I know you’re deeplyopportunities,
influenced by Dr. we Linda
have their
Dramaturg: Jess Malone always abide by those rules. It's not bad manners.
In May
James Myers,of this year, students
a Black from Bostonand
clinical psychologist Latin School presented original poetry about their
Assistant Director: Jasmine Brooks It's not bad behavior. It's an awareness of a cultural
Professor Emeritus at Ohio State who specializes
own neighborhoods, exploring how they might be perspective perceived by
Stage Manager: Angela Dogani thatothers. After
recognizes a student
that received
we're all connected,
in psychology
publicized and culture,
backlash healing
for a poem thatpractices,
elicited and
feelings
Cast: Jazzmin Bonner, Rob Cope, Chris Everett, Khai Tyler andofsofragility in some
there's not a sharpmembers of theperformer
divide between
community, Company One staff reached out to BLS and English
audience.teacher
There’s Catherine
no “fourth Arnold
wall” in to
Black,
see or
OCT 2021 — COMPANY ONE PUBLIC WORKSHOP how we might act in solidarity with the students. In African-based
response, weperformance
were invited traditions. I believe
to visit a group of
Director: Summer L. Williams
classes with playwright Francisca Da Silveira, C1 Education Program Manager Nicole Olusanya,
Dramaturg: Ilana M Brownstein
Stage Manager: Angela Dogani WANT TO LEARN MORE ABOUT
and C1’s Director of New Work Ilana M Brownstein. Students read aloud their poems, as well as
scenes from can i touch it?, and together we discussed opportunities for future connections.
Cast: Sabine Jaques, Beyoncé Martinez, Glen Moore, Kaili Y. Turner
Stage Directions Reader / Producer: Afrikah Smith HOW THE PLAY CAME TO LIFE?
We were so inspired by the bravery and artistic voices of these students, and knew that their
work belonged here in dialogue with Fran’s deeply local play. Jermaine Garcia-Cameron wrote
We look forward to the many artists who will carry this play to its future
productions at Cleveland Public Theatre, Rogue Machine Theatre, and beyond! theSCAN THEas anQR8thCODE
poems below WITH
grader during YOURschool
the 2021-22 PHONE'S
year. More student poetry can be
Special thanks to the staff and member theatres of the National New Play CAMERA TO VISIT OUR DRAMATURGY BLOG!
found in the lobby of the Strand during the run of this production.
Network for the support of this play, and of its Rolling World Premiere.
IMB: It’s taken a minute, but finally here we are! intersections of race, gender and class. She wrote
MY HAIR
It’s so strange — as a company, and as an individual
— to be emerging back into the realm of in-person
Understanding an Afrocentric World View: Introduction
to an Optimal Psychology, which the American DORCHESTER
BY JERMAINE GARCIA-CAMERON
theatre. This project feels like a big step for so many
reasons. We get to shake the dust off, and do it with a
Psychological Association notes as innovative and
influential: “Optimal psychology was inspired by
BY JERMAINE GARCIA-CAMERON
timely work by a powerful writer, in partnership with James Myers' questions regarding the mindsets
soOde
manyto my black
beautiful hair... How is this play and
collaborators. needed to uphold white supremacist views, and a "Why is Dorchester such a bad place"? I can tell you that too often people presume that it
itsMy hairmatter
subject is Nappysitting with you these days? need to explore African and Eastern worldviews that is. But I can also tell you that it's not so bad if you really know about it. I am a good primary
Hair isI'mdistressed traditional western psychology had overlooked.” source, so let me explain to you what it meant for me to grow up in Dorchester.
MWD: really grateful to Company One for the
Hair dryto be a part of this experience. And to MWD: Exactly, I work within what that optimal
invitation In order to see my Dorchester, you need to follow me down a path through my
Hair
Inda forhurts
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it, because out the great worldview, or as I specifically call it, an Afrocentric childhood. If you do, you will learn that Dorchester is full of life. You will discover that,
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it takeswhento livethewith this of
sizzle kinda of
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at the skin on myAudiences
neck don’t necessarily when you walk down Blue Hill Ave, you can smell the greasiness of the fried chicken
Especially to live with this kind of material for the need the academic jargon, that's cool! It’s just being cooked inside Crowns Chicken. And I, your primary source and guide for this
And tears drip drop drip drop til they can't anymore
length of time that she's had to. I encounter this understanding that this is very much rooted in the
Hairastight, straightened andI was
all done up I culture that I come from, and is the framework trip, can guarantee that every last bite of that greasy, salty, crispy fried chicken is worth
piece a mother. But before a mother, every last penny you've got in your pocket.
Hair
was braided
a Black child, and much earlier than I should for how the actors and team and I have made this
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have, up that the world did not value play. It is very much talking to the people who will
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my life nice
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with the stone sign that reads "Senator Bolling Circle" right at the spot where you enter the
inSo that sites
critical one may influence theYou
of empowerment. opinions of others
know, like that and getting what they can get from it as well.
neighborhood.
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where are the spaces? weeks later it in the way the IMB: I love that. That's so similar to how Inda talks
I understand
world
Hairseeslooksme.Nasty
But I also recognize that I too hold
about her writing. What she draws from, who she
You'll learn that if you keep walking straight down from that sign, take a left and
power. I’m trying to better identify how I can use
Hair Frizzy speaking with, for, and to, and all the other folks cross the busy streets of Blue Hill Ave it will be right smackin there: Crowns Chicken. I
that power responsibly. I've spent much of my life grew up eating this food. Me and my friends, whether it was 8 am in the morning or 11
Hair all puffed up like a birds nest who might come into that space. I know that we
learning as much as I can — not just in an academic at night, we'd order a 5-piece with some cheesy fries. You need to understand that a lot
certainly will have folks as attendees of the show
Days,butDays
sense, reallylater Hairfrom
drawing matted
the wisdom of my of my friends didn't have a lot of money, and a lot of my friends couldn't go home to a
who are going to be meeting this material from a
Hair fallsand
ancestors outmy elders. That is my approach wide variety of personal experiences, just as the hot steamy meal ready at their dinner table at night because their mom or dad (mostly
toMind
a lot of things that
stressed andI overthinking
do in life, but especially in
folks on our artistic and production team have. But single parents) were working overtime paying down debt and saving money to provide a
how I approach this work. I draw wisdom from my
About what others might think
children and other children, even before I became
about my hair
for people who discover that the play hits close roof over their child's head. So the people that DID have some money would buy food
Eyes stare at Hair as if something as maliciousin some way —has
as a crime whether
been that's about actual lived and share a piece of chicken—don't forget the cheesy fries—with everybody else and
a mom. Because even the wee babe has something
events or things that are emotionally adjacent to
tocommitted
teach if we pay attention and we listen. And so those were the best times and memories. ...me and my friends living a good life in the
the events of the play — how do you hope people
Hair all
I bring hides behind
of that into my a mask feeling
work with the insecure
awareness
navigate this play, as audience members?
middle of Dorchester. After we finished we'd have grease stains and cheese stains all
that
When thereHair
are those who haven't
is stripped even beenmask
of its colorful born its feels scared over our shirts and it was the funniest thing in the world. I remember one time I had a
yet that we have to think about in what we do in this MWN: It’s so cultural. In a Eurocentric Western cheese mustache and we all almost cried, we were laughing so hard, because they said I
After a while mind just doesn't care
moment, because it will definitely have an effect on framework, “an audience” is a very particular entity,
Hairtheynotexperience,
Scared. or who they get to be. looked like a baby Steve Harvey, even though I wasn't bald.
what and there's certain expectations in terms of how “an
Repeat, Repeat, Repeat. audience” conducts itself. Black audiences don't After school on Fridays my mom would order 3 boxes of stuff crust cheese pizzas that
IMB: I know you’re deeply influenced by Dr. Linda
always abide by those rules. It's not bad manners. would sit outside untouched until around 1 in morning because we would be having so much
James Myers, a Black clinical psychologist and
It's not bad behavior. It's an awareness of a cultural fun that the pizzas would get totally cold, but we always ate it anyways. You'd think it'd be
Professor Emeritus at Ohio State who specializes
perspective that recognizes that we're all connected, quiet around that time, but nope, you could hear the joyfulness of kids laughing and giggling
in psychology and culture, healing practices, and
and so there's not a sharp divide between performer and the spanish music bumpin' so loud you'd think your ear drums would pop.
and audience. There’s no “fourth wall” in Black, or
Jermaine Garcia-Cameron is a student African-based athlete who performance
enjoys playing traditions.
for I believe On Saturdays, aka "ball day", we would walk up to Labambas, a corner store near the
basketball court, and order a bunch of snacks before we headed to the court and the guy
the Wolf Pack — the Boston Latin School football team. In his free time named Pablo who used to work inside Labambas would give us discounts and free snacks
he loves to read books, lift weights at his local gym, and write poems. He because he knew us since we were little. Afterwards we'd spend hours playing basketball and
takes pride in learning new things everyday. In the coming year he plans on I would always get hurt by the bigger kids there. For some reason it was only on that day
joining the school’s writing club and Youth-Can club. that we played basketball. I would go home with cuts all over my knees from tripping on
my untied shoelaces (to this day I still don't tie my shoes). So maybe it's true: You can take
the kid out of the Dot, but you can't take the Dot out of the kid. But really, I don't see why
anyone would want to.
classes, newsletters, & resources
ARTIST RESOURCE DESK | City Of Boston
Are you a working artist in Boston? The City of Boston Office of Arts and Culture
offers a monthly newsletter highlighting opportunities for artists locally and beyond.
Sign up to learn more about grants, jobs, calls for art, workshops, spaces, and much
more. boston.gov/departments/arts-and-culture/artist-resource-desk
Building Bridges: BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY | Kirstein Business Library & Innovation Center:
The Kirstein Business Library & Innovation Center, located in the Central Library
RESOURCES FOR BUSINESS OWNERS, branch in Copley Square offers help for small businesses, financial empowerment, and
resources for grants, patents, and research. Visit bpl.org/services-central-library/
ASPIRING ENTREPRENEURS, AND SUPPORTERS. kblic/ and sign up for upcoming Small Business Workshops & Events.
Here’s a list of resources for local business owners, aspiring small business support
entrepreneurs, working artists, and small business supporters.
SMALL BUSINESS SUPPORT | LISC BOSTON
Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC) is a national non-profit organization,
groups & organizations dedicated to connecting communities with resources. Since opening in 1981, LISC
Boston works to share resources, best practices, and innovations with the communities
BLACK ECONOMIC COUNCIL OF MASSACHUSETTS (BECMA) they serve, and increase the odds that small businesses will succeed, grow, and
We are excited to partner with the Black Economic Council of Massachusetts advance in wealth- and income-building opportunities in traditionally underserved
(BECMA), a nonprofit dedicated to closing the racial wealth gap and advancing neighborhoods.
the economic well-being of Black businesses, organizations, and residents across
Massachusetts. Turn the next page to the community partners section to learn more Visit lisc.org/boston/our-work/economic-opportunity/small-business-support to
about BECMA. learn more about the resources and support LISC Boston offers,
GREATER BOSTON CHAMBER OF COMMERCE (GBCC) SUPPORT SERVICES | Small Business Strong
The Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce was founded over 100 years ago, Small Business Strong is a non-profit organization empowered to help women- and
and today represents the collective voice of the business community. Providing minority-owned small businesses navigate the devastating impact of the COVID-19
opportunities for members and small business owners in learning & development, pandemic. Small Business Strong provides expedited, pro-bono resources to small
economic inclusion, and policy & impact, the Greater Boston Chamber of businesses ranging from access to capital to consulting, business restructuring,
Commerce's mission to make meaningful change, and make Boston a place to thrive.
To learn more about what Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce offers and how to
become a member, visit bostonchamber.com. Program notes by Afrikah Smith & Ilana M Brownstein
community TO FIND LINKS, ACTIONS,
partners
AND RESOURCES ONLINE,
SCAN QR CODE WITH
YOUR PHONE’S CAMERA:
COMPANYONE.ORG
Kadahj Bennett in the -lm version of HYPE MAN, Boston Magazine's "2021 Best Virtual Theater Production"