Friday, July 17, 2020

Read Harder A Play By An Author Of Color Or Queer Author

Read Harder A Play By An Author Of Color Or Queer Author This list of recommendations for a play by an author of color or queer author, for the 2020 Read Harder Challenge, is sponsored by TBR: Tailored Book Recommendations. TBR is Book Riot’s subscription service offering Tailored Book Recommendations for readers of all stripes. Been dreaming of a “Stitch Fix for books?” Now it’s here! Tell TBR about your reading preferences and what you’re looking for, and sit back while your Bibliologist handpicks recommendations just for you. TBR offers plans to receive hardcover books in the mail or recommendations by email, so there’s an option for every budget. Visit mytbr.co to sign up today. Theatre, while predominantly a visual and auditory art form, is often overlooked as a literary one. Unless were talking about Shakespeare, its less common to encounter play scripts as pieces of full-fledged literature. This is left mostly to the realm of dramaturgy, a small profession that analyzes plays at a textual level, but most often to the benefit of production. Plays are a key component of my reading habits, though, and with good reason. Theyre fully formed worlds that nevertheless leave a lot in the subtext. I can often read them in one intense, fully-engrossed sitting. Its fun to imagine what the stage setting would look like. Lastly, its fascinating to see what a writer can do, how complete a story they can tell using only dialogue and stage directions. This year, the Read Harder challenge includes plays by authors of color and queer writers. Here is just a small sampling of such theatre makers. The Thanksgiving Play by Larissa FastHorse When a group of well-intentioned white teachers come together to create a Thanksgiving pageant that does not gloss over the holidays problematic (and violent) history, the audience both laughs and cringes. Larissa FastHorse, a member of the the Rosebud Sioux Tribe, Sicangu Lakota Nation, has penned an incredible play that finds its humor in Americas deeply discomfiting history. How I Learned to Drive by Paula Vogel Paula Vogels Pulitzer Prize winning opus is finally coming to Broadway, so what better time to familiarize yourself with this authors work? Following the relationship between the protagonist Lil Bit and her Uncle Peck, this play spans decades between scenes through theatrical depictions of memory, uncertainty, and repression. Yellow Face by David Henry Hwang David Henry Hwang inserts himself into the action (through the character DHH) of this play, which investigates the controversy surrounding a real-life colorblind casting of Miss Saigon. Containing bits of autobiography, albeit heightened to an extreme level, Hwangs play is a treatise on race, and who gets to tell their own stories in American media. TopDog/Underdog by Suzan-Lori Parks Two brothers, named Lincoln and Booth, are more or less predestined to have a contentious relationships all their lives. In this intense yet funny two-person play, Suzan-Lori Parks crafts a memorable depiction of sibling rivalry, and the way it becomes nearly impossible to escape the influence of the past â€" yours, your familys, and the worlds. Were Gonna Die by Young Jean Lee Everyone and everything dies, so why not sing about our lives? That seems to be the thesis statement of Young Jean Lees play with music, Were Gonna Die. It is an episodic script, telling various stories from both the playwrights life, as well as secondhand tellings of things that have happened to people around her. Included with the play script is a CD with some of the music, as well as chord sheets, encouraging readers to learn the songs themselves, and celebrating, in a sense, that were gonna die. The Motherfucker With the Hat by Stephen Adly Guirgis Jackie is a recently paroled drug dealer, returning home from prison with every intention of staying clean. In this play, which is as delightfully profane as its title suggests, Guirgis paints a narrative of equal parts pathos and hilarity. The Amen Corner by James Baldwin Although better known for his novels and essays, James Baldwin had a not-insignificant career in playwriting as well. In The Amen Corner,  which takes place in Baldwins Harlem, a preacher is visited by her estranged husband, whose sudden death thereafter uncovers secrets from the preachers life that she had sought to outrun. Fefu and Her Friends by María Irene Fornés First produced in 1977, Fefu and Her Friends was groundbreaking in a number of ways. Noted both for its large ensemble cast of all women, as well as the intimate, environmental staging of its second act, the play is a feminist text explores how women act when men are not around. Although the notion of seeing women interacting with each other onstage may seem less radical now, in its time Fefu was a revolution. Its worth nothing that theres so many queer and POC playwrights out there right now, many of whom dont have books readily available for purchase, but who are being produced all over the country. The American theatre has a notorious reputation for being very white and very male, but many contemporary playwrights are adding to the shifting, more equitable state of the industry. Find all the Read Harder 2020 content here.