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Chad Cooper Productions premieres Black Lives Matter, Too: All Lives Matter In Brooklyn at Medgar Evers College

 Medgar Evers College, Saturday, April 23

Theatrical Moves to Manhattan for June 28, 29,30 and July 1 Run

             Chad Cooper’s much-anticipated production of Black Lives Matter, Too; All Lives Matter, launched its New York City tour, Saturday, April 22,  at 7:00pm at Medgar Evers College, 1650 Bedford Avenue, in Brooklyn, New York.  For ticket information, call: 1.888 977.2282 ext.100.

“This drama is for everyone,” says Mr. Cooper. The title is plucked from the headlines; the storyline depicts controversies of today within the timeframe of yesterday, bringing Harriet Tubman, Medgar Evers and Emmett Till to life for the court to assess damages due for crimes committed against them.

In fact, justice is given a front-seat in court as attorneys pursue their notions of due process, a judge balances what should matter and a jury of whites and blacks ponder the value of lives lost and why they will always matter.

Comic relief, particularly in the jury room, and Cooper’s gospel arias performed by his actress/recording artist wife, Alicia Robinson Cooper offer a break in the intensity of Cooper’s thoughts about Black Lives, All Lives and the specters of recent victims of injustice, like Eric Garner who is mentioned in the script.

Mr. Cooper’s promotional notes declare, “It’s more than a play, it’s a movement.”  Which suggests to this writer that Mr. Cooper can easily exchange these characters for others in our troubled history keeping the same courtroom.  “As long as there are injustices to human rights and lives are  reduced to insignificance, justice will always be on trial,” said one actor.

Following are excerpts of writer Margo McKenzie’s interview last Saturday with Chad Cooper.  There will be more on this important play as it moves to Manhattan in June.

Margot McKenzie/OTP: You plucked the title, Black Lives Matter, from the newspaper headlines. So, what’s the message you want to get across with the couching of Black Lives Matter in the context of some powerful, historical moments in black history?

Chad Cooper:             I was inspired to write “Black Lives Matter, Too” as I sat in a Cracker Barrel Restaurant in the Richmond, Virginia area and I learned that a young man had been gunned down as he sat in a car with his wife and child.  I had heard of several incidents like that before, but this one made me cry. Then I thought about all of the marches we’ve watched for year.  I think everything has its season, I know, but as I was sitting there in tears I believe God spoke to me and said, “You have to do something. The way that you can do it, is through the arts, something to motivate, educate and rejuvenate people.

Sitting there in Cracker Barrel, I came up with the idea of a play centered around reparations for Black people and how that’s a subject we can address everything around.

The play is a mechanism through which we can address social injustice and bring out the truth. We as a people, were brought over here. We didn’t volunteer. This country was built on free labor, our ancestors labor, over hundreds of years. We were treated like animals in a country that accumulated wealth, and a net worth of billions of dollars.  We get nothing.  Not even respect.

So that was my inspiration: The injustices must be addressed, and I think that’s what this play does.

MM:                            Are you sending a message through this play to some of the politicians, the people who could make reparations come to a reality?

CC:                              Absolutely. Where we may not get these 6.4 trillion dollars that’s calculated in the play, something needs to be done: it could be free schooling for African Americans.  Who did more for America than us? We’re also talking about having real conversation between white and black people. The jury deliberation does that. IT gives a vivid you know, outlook on how, as I see it, black people and white people really think about each other.

MM:                            Now from a biblical sense, okay so now in this you have black lives matter, all lives matter. From a biblical sense, should it be the reverse?

CC:                              Well, not necessarily. The reason we say Black Lives Matter, Too is because every other life, nationality, has been appreciated  and readily given reparations and respect

MM:                            Most of your plays have a Biblical context. This play is a departure from that Is “Black Lives Matter, Too” a turning point in your vision as to what you should be doing with your art?

CC                               I think so. The others were geared more toward the church world and this is geared to everybody. I directed for the church.  The “Family Mess” play still even though it’s not is necessarily a church play. It’s my story. We can’t “Black Lives Matter, Too” in a box, either.  It’s a Christian play, it’s a Muslim play, it’s an atheist play, its everybody’s play because everybody who’s of African descent fits into it.

MM:                            You did this without any other investors, any financial support? Did you do like Spike Lee did with his credit card?

CC:                             Absolutely. My background is advertising and marketing. So, when I came over into this arena, God gave me a very good marketing plan.  Being a national recording artist and helping to partner with a lot of churches and also being a pastor helped. In some cities, we’d get 500 tickets in a day just by doing guest appearances at churches. I have been able to survive out here over 12 years and going out to over 160 cities and pack out audiences.

To be able to come to New York, put together a full cast in record time and perform before SRO audiences without doing one radio spot is a success.

MM:                            That’s today. What does success look like tomorrow?

CC:                              Doing films, less traveling, and being more commercialized with productions like Black Lives Matter, Too, that attract all audiences.

MM:                            As a pastor your mission is to save souls. What’s your mission now?

CC:                              It’s still to save souls.

 

Print Edition: April 20, 2017

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WHAT’S GOING ON By Victoria Horsford

HARLEM, USA

 The 4/12 Schomburg Fete was quite an elaborate party. New Schomburg Center Director Kevin Young was formally introduced to library members and friends.   Since his December arrival at the Schomburg, Young has been named New Yorker Magazine poetry editor, arguably a first for an African-American. Once the program began, literary lion James Baldwin emerged as the real star of the evening.  The Schomburg has acquired the James Baldwin archives – papers, manuscripts, drafts, letters – approximately 70 boxes of material. Archive purchase price was not disclosed. The NY Public Library says that acquisition was made possible by donations from the Ford Foundation, the Knight Foundation, NY Life and three donors, possibly Ray McGuire, who spoke onstage and was one of the Schomburg Fete hosts.

James Baldwin

The Schomburg is one of five research libraries in the NY Public Library universe. Red-carpet culturati who attended the Schomburg Fete include writers Jill Nelson, Pulitzer awardee Colson Whitehead, Franklin Thomas and Kate Whitney. Columbia University poetess Elizabeth Alexander, who wrote and recited an original poem for President Obama’s 2008 inauguration, and who was a student of Nobel laureate Derek Walcott. Members of the Schomburg and Baldwin clans were well-represented, as were lots of members from the Young clan.    I bought two books at the new Schomburg street-level book store and viewed the BLACK POWER exhibit.

The Haitian-born, Paris-based writer Joel Dreyfuss wrote the 4/16 NY Times Travel section cover story, “A LA FRANCAISE IN HARLEM”, an informative directory of Harlem’s French bistros from Barawine, Cherie, Ponty Bistro to Maison Harlem, Chez Lucienne and Patisserie Ambassade. Owners’ bios are included. The piece really whets the appetite for more food and/or info.    The Chez Lucienne narrative was a bit confusing. Dreyfuss said that its current owner, Thierry Guizonne, is a man from Guadaloupe. Most people know Senegalese Fara Fall as the owner of Chez Lucienne, Lenox Saphire and Patisserie Ambassade.  Qui est Monsieur Guizonne?

 Fox TV and Apollo Theater brass announced the return of the popular variety show, SHOWTIME AT THE APOLLO. Steve Harvey will host the revived weekly 60-minute show which will include segments from the Apollo’s “Amateur Night”, now in its 82nd year. SHOWTIME is set for the 2017-18 season.

[Visit Apollotheater.org]

         The Save Harlem Now, Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, Community Boards 9 and 10, the NYC Landmarks Conservancy are among the sponsors of Harlem’s first preservation meeting, “Harlem and the Future Preserving Culture and Sustaining Historic Character in a Changing Environment”, a day-long conference focused on West Harlem’s resilience in the face of neighborhood change on April 29 from 9 am to 5 pm at the City College of NY Spitzer School of Architecture, at 141 Convent Avenue at 135th Street. Register now at westharlemcpo@gmail.com. Will Brooklyn follow suit with its own preservation meeting?

Michael Pugh

The Carver Federal Savings Bank ranked 20th in the Crain’s NY Magazine list of the NY area’s Largest 25 Thrifts, with $700 million in assets in 2016 and with $549.7 million in outstanding total loans. Carver opened in 1948 to facilitate access to mortgages for African-Americans who were redlined by mainstream banks, a practice still in place today, well, sorta/kinda. Carver has branches and ATM machines in Harlem, Brooklyn and Queens. Michael T. Pugh is Carver President/CEO and Robert R. Tarter is Carver Board Chairman.   Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone CEO Ken Knuckles is a Carver trustee.

EDUCATION UPDATES

The National Board of the NAACP’s Task Force on Quality Education will host a hearing on Thursday, April 27, 6-8 pm at the Harlem Hospital Center and Pavilion at 506 Lenox Avenue, Harlem. The task force, formed at the NAACP 2016 Convention, called for a moratorium on new charter schools (nationally) until a more thorough examination of charters’ governance and their relationship to and effect on traditional public schools. The hearing is open to the public. [E-mail   NYSNAACP@gmail.com]

WANTED: 2017 HS and college grads who are job hunting. Check out the LaGuardia Spring Job Fair with recruiters from more than 25 companies on Thursday, April 27 from 10 am to 2 pm at Vaughn College, located at 8601 23rd Avenue, East Elmhurst, Queens, NY 11369. Job Fair sponsors include the Port Authority of NY/NJ and Vaughn College. [Visit www.caonynj.com or call 718. 523.7100]

2017: WOMEN’S YEAR

The Apollo Theater presents notable artists, activists and leaders for the return of the omnibus WOW (Women of the World) Festival, part of the Southbank Central London’s Global WOW Movement, for four days beginning May 4. Festival highlights include a tribute to vocalist/activist Abbey Lincoln, starring jazz vocalists Dee Dee Bridgewater, Dianne Reeves, Esperanza Spalding, live storytelling and a series of panel discussions, workshops and performance artists. Tamika Mallory, Carmen Perez and Gaboury Sidibe will speak on empowerment and activism.

The Harlem Business Alliance hosts its 36th Annual Awards Celebration Gala on Wednesday, May 3rd at Mist Harlem, 46 West 116th Street.   Honorees are Jeanne Warford, WK Kellogg Foundation; Vera Moore, Vera Moore Cosmetics; Dyana Williams, Influence Entertainment; Glenda Carr and Kimberly Peeler-Allen, Higher Heights; Jodie Patterson, Doobop & Georgia LGBTQ Activist; and Dr. Aletha Maybank, NYC Dept. of Health and Mental Hygiene. [Visit HBANY.ORG]          

Tracy Reese

The New York Urban League(NYUL) hosts its 52nd Annual Frederick Douglass Dinner Awards at the Chelsea Piers, Pier Sixty, Manhattan, on May 16. Gala honorees include Tracy Reese, American fashion designer; Erica Payne, President, Patriotic Millionaires; and Tiffany R. Warren, Sr. Vice President, Chief Diversity Officer, Omnicom Group and Founder/President ADCOLOR. The NYULYoung Adults will host an After-Party, which begins at 9 -11 pm. [Visit nyul.org]

ARTS/CULTURE

The 24th Annual African Film Festival(AFF) opens at the Film Society of Lincoln Center, the Maysles Cinema in Harlem and the Brooklyn Academy of Music from May 3 to May 29.   The festival showcases feature films, shorts, documentaries by Africans and African Diasporans.  The opening night film, VAYA, is a feature which reveals how three strangers on a train, traveling from a coastal town to Johannesburg, South Africa, are bound by interlocking destinies. Bill Greaves’ 1966 documentary, “The First World Festival of Negro Artists + African Rhythms”, is on the AFF bill. The brainchild of Sierra Leone-born Mahen Bonetti, the AFF is the first festival which celebrates African culture through moving images in the USA. The AFF co-presents the festival with the Film Society at Lincoln Center and the Brooklyn Academy of Music.  [Visit Africanfilmny.org]

Dr. Khalil Gibran Muhammad is back in the news. Read his NY Times Book Section cover story/reviews titled “Power and Punishment”, about two nonfiction books, LOCKING UP OUR OWN: Crime and Punishment in Black America by James Forman, Jr. and A COLONY IN A NATION by Chris Hayes. Former Schomburg director, Dr. Muhammad is a Harvard Kennedy School Professor of History, Race and Public Policy; and the author of the nonfiction book, “The Condemnation of Blackness: Race, Crime and the Making of Modern Urban America”.

South Africa’s jazz epistles, pianist Abdullah Ibrahim and trumpeter Hugh Masekela, appear in concert at Town Hall, 123 West 43rd Street, Manhattan, on April 27. Their performance will be captured for Jazz Night in America on NPR and the CHECKOUT produced by WGBO.

SPRING BREAKS

The Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy and Brooklyn Bridge Park(BBP) announced the 2017 Spring/Summer events calendar which runs from April 8 through August 24 along the waterfront park. The activities offer omnibus pleasures from movies, fitness sessions, storytelling, basketball clinics to vendor pavilions, kayaking, foods, fine art exhibits and installations.   The Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundation Summer Program returns to 99 Plymouth.   BBP Spring/Summer events boast over 600 free and low-cost events. [Visit Brooklynbridgepark.org]

A Harlem-based writer, Victoria Horsford can be reached at Victoria.horsford@gmail.com.

SENIORS: AGE-FRIENDLY AMBASSADORS

By Selma M. Jackson

My mother and my grandmother both lived to be 94 years old. The year before my mother died I asked myself how did I want to enjoy my golden years. If I wanted to be around as long as they were and what would I do for the next 30+ years? How would I live in my autumn season?

This is a new column for seniors: discovery, news, information and a place to share!

I have always been involved in my community wherever I find myself: my church, my job, my residence and my interests. I heard of the Age-Friendly Neighborhood initiative (AFN) and discovered that my neighborhood of Bedford-Stuyvesant has been an AFN since 2009!

What is an AFN and what does it mean for you and me? An AFN is a community that makes sure services are inclusive of older adults. This includes affordable housing, retail stores that price and display items for elders, provide affordable cultural events, keep seniors informed of services, and have opportunities for older adults to enjoy walking, swimming and other forms of exercise.

Each AFN works with the local Council member and has an Advisory Committee made up of community stakeholders from the local Business Improvement District, nonprofit organizations, city officials and others representing cultural, educational and religious institutions. The Advisory Committee is tasked with implementing a Neighborhood Action Plan and recruiting Age-Friendly Ambassadors to help spread the word and help do the work.

So you can imagine I was excited to find out that Council member Robert Cornegy’s office was recruiting AGE-FRIENDLY AMBASSADORS to volunteer on the following four subcommittees:

Retail: this committee is developing a guide for older adults informing them of discounts, special services and age-friendly environments in retail stores–like not having to bend down to the bottom shelf for what you want.

Benefits: this committee hosts events at churches and senior centers informing the community of available services for older adults, including SCRIE, SNAP, health care and other services.

Social Inclusion/Events: this committee plans events for older adults to have a good time. We recently hosted a Red and White Ball for Valentine’s Day and are responsible for the Senior Swim Days at Kosciuszko Pool. Have an idea for fun, let us know.

Fostering Academic and Cultural Excellence: this committee volunteers once a month during school hours at our adopted school PS 308 to read to elementary school children primarily in grades K-3. Along with the Brownstoners of Bedford-Stuyvesant and the Links, we enjoy our intergenerational reading program at four schools throughout the district and have up to 20 volunteers! We also assist with school Science and Book Fairs. It’s an opportunity to nurture and be involved in the growth of our young children.

Besides the above committees, we also help out with Council District 36 Participatory Budgeting voting, senior crawl and housing ideas for older adults like home sharing and this September we will host Active Aging Week, a weeklong campaign that celebrates the positive aspects of aging today.

But it’s not all work, we have fun while we work and we have just plain fun! Last week, we hosted an afternoon of cultural enrichment at Weeksville Heritage Center called “Tea with Tia”, curated by President and Executive Director Tia Powell Harris. We experienced the new addition at Weeksville: one of the houses provides information on tablets about the lives of Weeksville residents and you can listen to stories. We ended with an intergenerational afternoon tea and sweets with Mrs. Harris and the youth from MY BASE (Motivated Youth Building All Self-Empowerment), a community organization for youth 18-25 years. It was enjoyable and a wonderful time to discuss our shared history with the younger generation.

Want to get involved? We meet the second Tuesday from 4-6pm at Quincy Senior Residence, 625 Quincy St. Join us! For more information about AFN Ambassadors contact: Andrea Green, AFN Program Associate at (718) 919-2100 or call the Council Member’s office at (718) 919-0740.

Educator Makes Encore Performance as Storyteller

By Margo Janet McKenzie

At six o’clock one evening came Cynthia Goodison Tompkins taking deliberate steps and steadied by a thick black cane as she walked toward the church where she would sit to talk about one of her second acts in life–storytelling.

Tompkins, whose first act was teaching for 30 years, boasts about working with Adelaide Sanford. She discovered, “There’s life after the Department of Education” and jump-started her encore performance in life by joining the National Association of Black Storytellers (NABS) seventeen years ago. Each year since then, she has traveled to a different city convening with professional storytellers and studying the art of the craft.

In 2012, she joined a local storytelling group, the Elder’s Writing Workshop, under current workshop leader Nefertari Ulen at Siloam Presbyterian Church on Jefferson Avenue, meeting on Friday’s from noon to 2pm to keep her storytelling chops alive during the year.

Once a month, these ladies read stories to one another while the others listen intently. Then each listener provides feedback.

Tompkins credits the local and national workshops with teaching her about the art of telling a good story and little-known facts about Black history. “Did you know that Frederick Douglass used to offer morsels of bread to poor white children in exchange for information about what they learned in school that day? I learned that at a storytelling festival.” She also learned to listen intently and how to receive criticism without giving up writing all together.

Her efforts have paid off. The Center for Black Literature at Medgar Evers College, under the leadership of Executive Director Brenda Greene, has published two volumes of the works of these elder griots. “They are leaving a legacy rich with powerful images of their lives as women,” says Dr. Greene in the foreword of one book. Tompkins has made five contributions to the two volumes.

Though she has been networking with storytellers since 2000, she wishes she had known about the art form earlier, feeling it would have enhanced her teaching and she would have accomplished so much more. She might have become a professional storyteller.

Professional storytellers travel the world telling their stories and getting paid. Just before a NABS regional conference, they contacted the city and are invited to perform at promotional festivities. “My friend was paid $600 for one event.”

Tompkins’ knees slow her down slightly but that does not dampen her enthusiasm nor her resolve to continue the African tradition of storytelling. “We have a job to do; we’re not here by accident.” Her next project is a story about York, an African-American freed slave and member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition of May 1804, the first American expedition into the western United States.

She’s also looking forward to her daughter purchasing Dragon transcription software so she doesn’t have to write her stories by hand.

Taking it easy is not in Tompkins’ genes. She comes from a traveling family. “My mother would take all five of us and pack a lunch and head to Prospect Park, Coney Island or take us on a bus trip around town. People used to say we had wings on our feet.” In that tradition, she will fly to Wichita, Kansas in November so she can take her feet to the seventeenth NABS conference to continue developing her voice as a storyteller.