The year is 1953 in the Harlem apartment of Negro writer Langston Hughes. Unable to sleep he gets up and begins to write a poem, but finds his living space somehow inhabited by his readers. Exposed, guilt-ridden and fearful of the coming day he confesses how he intends to answer McCarthy's accusations on being a communist. He implores his readers not to abandon him no matter what they read or hear. His confession is intermittently interrupted by flashes of inspiration, seen in projected texts and images, of a word or line for his poem. As he tells the story of what he's written and why, and of his difficult and wonderful life as a writer, the poem continues to grow and clarify as a thing with a life of its own, and together they reveal a portrait of an artist faced with his fears and regrets before the greatest ordeal of his life.
Videos
Survivors
Six Points Theater (1/23 - 1/26)
PHOTOS
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Harold Goes To The State Fair
Ballet Co.Laboratory Studio Theatre (3/1 - 3/9) | ||
American Ballet Theatre Giselle
Northrop Auditorium (4/18 - 4/19) | ||
Whoa, Nellie! The Outlaw King of the Wild Middle West
History Theatre (5/17 - 6/8) | ||
'Til Death Do Us Die
The Mystery Cafe (1/10 - 2/15) | ||
The Lightning Thief: The Percy Jackson Musical
Stages Theatre Company (4/11 - 5/11) | ||
When You Trap a Tiger
Stages Theatre Company (3/14 - 3/30) | ||
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