HomeArts-TheaterLIVE VIRTUAL CONVERSATIONBLACK THEATRE: RADICAL LONGEVITY

LIVE VIRTUAL CONVERSATION
BLACK THEATRE: RADICAL LONGEVITY

Published on

The Billie Holiday Theatre and Manhattan Theatre Club present Black Theatre: Radical Longevity, a conversation where Detroit-born luminaries Tony-nominated playwright Dominique Morisseau and NYT best-selling author Dr. Michael Eric Dyson (“Entertaining Race: Performing Blackness in America”) come together once again to discuss the role of Black Theatre amid the health, racial, and economic pandemics.

Playwright, NYU Associate Professor and fellow Detroiter Michael Dinwiddie will moderate this marquee virtual event on Sunday, February 6th at 5p.

This event will be streamed live on The Billie Holiday Theatre and Manhattan Theatre Club’s Facebook page. Register for this free event today

Latest articles

Once Upon a Time in Harlem Received Critical Acclaim at 2026 Cannes Film Festival

By Mary Alice Miller It is extremely rare for a film to screen at the...

‘Once Upon a Time in Harlem’ has its day at the Cannes Film Festival, 50 years after it was shot

By  JAKE COYLE CANNES, France (AP) — David Greaves was 26 when his father, the pioneering...

One Brooklyn Health Expands BKHI Survey Access Through MyChart to Advance Health Equity

Brooklyn, NY — One Brooklyn Health (OBH) is expanding its commitment to health equity...

Voter Participation Requested for This Year’s Impactful Primary Election

By Mary Alice Miller Many of us know That Voter who only votes in the...

More like this

Once Upon a Time in Harlem Received Critical Acclaim at 2026 Cannes Film Festival

By Mary Alice Miller It is extremely rare for a film to screen at the...

Key Notes on Weston, Coltrane, Miles, Melba and other Jazz Centennials…

"In 1926, as the Harlem Renaissance surged and the music was transforming American culture,...

The Bishop Gallery Brings Basquiat Home to the Broadway Triangle

By Enoch NaklenMultimedia JournalistStanding at the intersection of Williamsburg, Bushwick, and Bed-Stuy, the Bishop...