And Stilj l_ Rise Angelou exposes the soul By SHERIDAN HILL Managing Editor Make no excuses that would allow you to miss Maya Angelou's musical which is world-prcm iering this week in Winston-Salem. Get put of a meeting, send the kids to the neighbor's (take them if they're teenagers or older) hock your jew airy if you must, but get yourself $own to the Arts Council Theatre fxiighl > Precious few performances ?Sept. 10-15 only) remain of Angelou's production, which explores and celebrates the soul in a rare combination of song, poetry, dance and theatre. ; And Still I Rise will satisfy the ftiqst demanding appetite for enter tainment and touch the heart with its profundity. It's about being human. It's about looking back on your life, remembering your childhood; days when you were small and the world feas large "and the sky was dark and sweet like licorice, and the ?ars were marshmallows." : The central characters, who are about to meet their maker, are flayed by Ja'net DuBois o( Good Times fame, Clifton Davis, star of television's Amen , and Larry Leon Hamlin, who plays the gatekeeper. The three, along with ten high ly talented performers including members of the North Carolina Black Repertory Theatre, boldly expose the pain and the glory of being African-American, Pow, I I /TV, Liiyc tsucari I Frighten Me At All; Now Ain't We Bad; reminisce romantic passion, Oh, To Be Young and Happy, Memory of Love, and, before it's all over, they Get Right With God. Hamlin, founder of both the North Carolina Black Repertory Theatre and the National Black Theatre Festi val, has once again successfully stretched his energy and talent: he serves as production man ager and assistant casting director as well as a key figure in the production. the stage presence of the seasoned professional she is. She has also developed her abilities as a singer and dancer for this part Davis proves himself a talented dancer and singer as well as a first class actor. As the young Zebediah, To be a member of this audi ence is to join the cast in a celebra tion of life, and a triumphant state ment of individuality, which Angelou puts forth with clarity and power "people see one small side of me, and thfey think they know (L-R) Larry Lson Hamlin, Ja'nst DuBois, and Clifton Davis, tha principal p)ayars In tha musical, wars axhubarant as thsy took a curtain call Sunday. ? I2iifcoisj>lays the 70-year-old Annabelle with a powerful sense of the character's inner direction, and Davis is sensuous and vivacious, moving with tremendous grace; as the elderly man, he is cranky and numorous. The statements about women are powerful: "Nature can turn a baby to a female . . . But only a woman can make herself a woman. And once she's a woman, the whole world knows who she is." And Still I Rise was derived from Angelou's now famous poem of the same name. You may write me down in history with your bit ter, twisted lies You may trod me in the very dirt But still, like dust, I'll rise. me: they don't know me.M Hamlin says he hopes to clear $20,000 from the production: pro ceeds will benefit the 1993 Nation al Black Theatre Festival. Other members of this tremen dously talented cast and crew include: Dauna L. Brown of Greensboro; Michael A. Coward of Washington, N.C; Robin Stamps Doby of Greensboro; Lawrence Evans of Mississippi; Matema Hadi of Oakland, California; John Henry Heath of Winston-Salem; Junious "Lenny" Leak of Greensboro, Robin Littlejohn of Winston Salem; Carlotta of Winston-Salem, and Kenneth Mallette. Defoy Glenn of Michigan is the assistant director, Laurin de Teige Poydras of Louisiana is the music director, Mabel Robinson of Savannah, Ga. is the choreogra pher, Angela Simpson Holloway of Hampton, Virginia is the stage manager, John L. Bright is the sound engineer, and Arthur M. Reese is the sceneographer. I? -LJMMM?? ? ?L-JHJLJ (i--R) Cartotta, Dauna L. Brown, and Larry Laon Hamlin |oln tha raat of the cast tp sing God*a pralae In tha closing song, Thank You Lord. Angelou on play: 'I'm over the moon' Yesterday, Maya Angelou took time out of a busy week to answer questions about the world premiere of And Still 1 Rise . * Chronicle: Are you pleased with the show? ? Angelou: I "m over the moon. Jt's a sell-out: that's exciting. It's Wonderful to see people trying to git tickets and being turned away. That's thrilling. It means a lot to me, just what people get from the play. I talked tp my own pastor, who said that tte felt that every couple ought to aee And Still I Rise , just to see ttow they have to go through cer tain experiences together and gome experiences alone. Certain spiritual people say this is a gift from God. ! The president of the universi ty (Wake Forest) and my col leagues feel it's a gift to the city and to this state. It means a lot to t i i me to feel that everybody, black and white, see a connection for themselves in the play. I couldn't ask for more. I wouldn't know how to ask for more. Chronicle: How is it that And Still I Rise became the one poem you developed into a full play? Angelou: The poem for years has had its own life. It's amazing. I hear it in some of the strangest places. There's a mostly men's college in Indiana, and 90 percent of student body is white, and a few years ago the senior class took as their motto for the year, And Still I Rise. So there were these huge chaps (athletes) walk ing around with bulging pectorals, and across their chests were the words And Still I Rise. In airports, little black chil dren come up to me and say, "Hi, Maya," and quote it, "you can trod me in the very dirt, but still, like dust, HI rise." That's the essence of the human spirit; no matter what hap pens to us, somehow miraculously we rise. Chronicle: The songs in the production are a big hit. Had you written songs before? Angelou: I have written songs for B.B.King, with Quincy Jones, and I had a song performed by Roberta Flack, And So It Goes, that was number seven on the charts. , Chronicle: Did you have dif ficulty getting this script into pro duction on Broadway? Angelou: I had the avenue open to produce it on Broadway 12 years ago, but didn't agree with the terms and put the script way in a dresser drawer. I did another version of it off-Broadway, but it has just sat in a drawer for 12 years. I can't speak to the difficulties of getting work performed, because I have earned and been given a name which will open doors, but to be young and black ? to be young, gifted and black ? is very hard. All of us, black white, native American, Hispanic, Asian, should reach into the com munity and help the young person realize the dream, once we've made a litde bit of an indentation. O, 1W2 (3/21 - 4/19)1 Focus on friends, hop?, wishes, money and love. You'd got ju?t about every thing you wont. Assume position of if asked. TAURUS (4/20 - S/20): Bo coreful not lo try ond oocomplish too much at onco. Do ono project ot o Irm. Don't stretch yourself loo thin whon it comes lo attention ond Him ipftod bttWMn homo ond work. (ft/31 ? 6/20)1 Treat gravely serious situation wHhoirof humor, lighMwortodnoss Your altitude WiH break the iooond< tense nature ouwn (4/31 - 7/23): Someone doit lo you looks for ap proval. Offer proiso and reinforce efforts lo continue m forward motion. Gain inspiration through other s oooom* plishments HO (7/23 ? 4/22)1 Good laugh coming your way Don't hold amotions bode. Carry hoppinosi A | guJ - * fl irpo omr s Hrli. rftrionoi i vwurn win coma from inside (ft/23 - 9/22)1 tyevs on communicotion with thoso in lri>onthsnssi ond M^cilt wii bo notioed ond co Bod lo olsniun, Pisces play* role In necognix Rtnowrwd Psychic Elizabeth Msffao and associates... are now on the line for your personal readings. Prominent media personality and educator, Elizabeth and her associates take an individual approach to astrology and find the "person in the horoscope". 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CAPRICORN (12/22 ? 1/19): Take core of affairs of the heort Either see way to resolve conflicts or sever ties ond seek new companion Keep emo tions ot bay when making decision. AQUARIUS (I /-HI - 2/1 ?) Will begin to see significant other in reolistic light What friends ond family hod professed earlier will start to come true Capricorn involved PIS as (2/19 ? 3/20): Emphasis on mode rot ion, family har mony Too much push and lock of sleep will result in irritability, illness Take vitamins and precautionary methods 30th Anniversary Sale 1 Dozen Boxed Red Roses Cash & Carry 1 Dozen Boxed Carnations Only Only $ 799 Cash & Carry Offers Are Good at Both Locations George K. Walker Florist, Inc. "Florist with the Personal Tbuch " 823 S. Marshall Street \ 546 S. Stratford Road 723-2938 724-1666 8:00 - 5:00 9:00 - 6:30 Craft and Art Classes begin September 16. Sign up for a class with a friend, and save 10% Call 723-7395 today for a class catalog. SPfcNTOOTH CENTER FOR VISUAL ART T& TwO* Pl*CL to CaUCU Winston-Salem. NC 23 27101 919-723-7395 Faust By Charles Gounod Sung in French (with English supertitles) September 2St, 27, 29, 1 992 FOR TICKET INFORMATION CALL PIEDMONT OPERA THEATRE: 725-2022 The September 25th performance is sponsored by Decision Point Marketing, Inc. Performance talk by Lesley Hunt 15 minutes before curtain. I Admission -- SFrv*A rpomh^rs *,t* iri^ntr nprl ?^nlor odi ilts $<1 ( ??<;. W- '! f - !? M Purchase a film ticket and see the Annie Lelbovltz 1 970- 1990 and Joyce Scott exhibitions for free. Galleries will be open prior to the film's screening. Southeastern Center (or Contemporary Art 750 Marguerite Drive Winston-Salem, NC 27106 I (919)725-1904 SECCA J n The Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA) continues Its film/video series entitled See for Yourself. The series generates questions about dominant culture values. Blood In the Face Is a compelling, darkly humorous look at the radical right In America. Wake Forest Professor of Sociology, Dr. Ian Taplln will lead the question and answer session afterwards. Recommended for mature audiences. Blood in the Face - Tuesday, September 15 - 7:30 p.m.