While itâs widely celebrated as a major work of American theater, Ntozake Shangeâs For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide / When the Rainbow Is Enuf is rarely professionally performed onstage. Thatâs changing beginning in October when the choreopoem will be revived at New Yorkâs Public Theater, the stage where For Colored Girls premiered over 40 years ago in 1976 before heading to Broadway.
âShe wanted a rainbow of women on that stage, and I gave her that,â Shangeâs director, Leah C. Gardiner, tells the New York Times. âAnd it saddens me to the core that she wonât be able to see that.â
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Thatâs because Shange died last October at the age of 70. But Gardiner says she thinks the famed artist would have been pleased by what the new staging of her work will entail.
As the Times explains:
the creative team for the new production will be made up entirely of women of color. Such a collaboration is a rare opportunity in the careers of Martha Redbone, who is composing the showâs original music, and the choreographer Camille A. Brown (âChoir Boyâ).
Both Redbone and Brown said they were introduced to For Colored Girls by their families as children.
Redboneâs mother loved the work and presented her with a poster that Redbone hung in her bedroom. Brown said she viewed the same poster hanging on an uncleâs wall.
Doing justice to the classic is a tall order that both take seriously.
âIâm extremely terrified, because it is such a beloved show,â Brown told the Times, sharing that as part of her choreography, she planned to include hip-hop and other modern dance that were not around when For Colored Girls premiered.
Show director Gardiner told the Times that both she and Shange also thought about the ways in which For Colored Girls connected to the zeitgeist of #MeToo, and how the âmovement has created space for reclamation of the âblack girlâs song,ââ or black womenâs âself-ownership: owning our bodies, owning our hair, owning our skin.â
As Shange wrote of her work in 2010, the year director Tyler Perry released his film version of For Colored Girls, according to the Times:
ââFor Colored Girlsâ was meant for women of color. âFor Colored Girlsâ still is a womenâs trip, and the connection we can make through it, with each other and for each other, is to empower us all.â
âItâs an absolute weapon, this play,â Gardiner said. âItâs a political weapon. But so are all plays.â
For Colored Girls starts previews at the Public Theater on Oct. 8.
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