"What To Expect"
BlackPlayBook seeks to re-vision "black play"as cultural production that counters gender, race and class- based oppression. As such, BlackPlayBook performs within a womanist/black feminist tradition on a "play-ground" of black performance, scholarship and activism. BlackPlayBook references a special issue of Theatre Journal v57, n4 (December 2005) that asks, "What is Black Play?"
Friday, April 17, 2020
Wednesday, April 8, 2020
Tuesday, October 8, 2019
Thursday, February 14, 2019
Sunday, February 3, 2019
Blackplaybook Production: Black drama and HBCU performance
Blackplaybook Production: Fort Valley State University's Joseph Adkins Players student drama group will perform as a part of the historic Douglass Theater's first Historically Black College and University (HBCU) Art Series on February 21, 2019 at 7pm.
The student drama group will present plays written by black playwrights that challenge negative portrayals as well as contribute to a canon on black and American theatre.
The student drama group will present plays written by black playwrights that challenge negative portrayals as well as contribute to a canon on black and American theatre.
Purchase tickets now : https://douglasstheatre.myboxoffice.us/program/joseph-adkins-players-1279 For more information, contact Dr. Maisha Akbar at akbarm@fvsu.edu
Thursday, February 9, 2017
BlackPlayBook Production: "We Go High: A Salute to President Barack and Michelle Obama" presented by FVSU's Joseph Adkins Players
We Go High: A Black
History Month Salute to President Barack and Michelle Obama
"In our so-called
democracy we are accustomed to give the majority what they want rather than
educate them to understand what is best for them."
"In the long run, there
is not much discrimination against superior talent. Carter G. Woodson"
(1875-1950), Founder of Negro History Week (now Black History Month)
In celebration of Black History Month 2017, Fort Valley State
University’s Joseph Adkins Players student drama group proudly
presents, “We Go High.”
Through spiritual, speech, poetry, song, drama and dance, “We Go High” salutes Barack and Michelle
Obama’s eight year tenure
as President and First Lady of the United States. As the first African American
couple ever to do so, “Barack
and Michelle” (as we
affectionately refer to them) effectively modeled “superior talent”
as leaders of the free world. Although there may be debate about their
contributions immediately following his administration, in the long run,
President Obama’s legacy
is sure to be highly regarded.
Not only have the Obamas shared with the American public an
admirable record of service, we are also graced with their speeches, words of
wisdom to which we can refer whenever needed. As students and scholars, we can
read, share, examine and recite Michelle’s and Barack’s
speeches as we educate ourselves to understand, in the words of Carter G.
Woodson, “what’s
best for us.” Even further, we might use their
speeches as blueprints for how to become superior talents who would lead,
speak, teach, sing, dance and inspire. Who knows what heights we might achieve
when we rise above petty concerns of the majority to “go high” as
Black history figures in our own rights.
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