Trouble in Mind
Roundabout Theatre Company
American Airlines Theatre
December 26, 2021
Photo courtesy of Roundabout Theatre Company
Roundabout Theatre Company’s production of Alice Childress’s
Trouble in Mind is a revelation.
The play received high acclaim when it was first produced Off-Broadway
in 1955. It was scheduled to move to
Broadway, but was cancelled when Ms. Childress refused to make significant
changes. She chose not to soften the
story that illustrated the racism in the theatre and film industry. After sixty-six years, Trouble in Mind
has received it’s well deserved Broadway production. It is a well crafter play with strongly
developed characters that make a powerfully clear statement about the untruths
depicted in American entertainment.
Wiletta Mayer (played by LaChanze) enters the theater for the first rehearsal of a play she is working on. She meets the doorman, Henry (played by Simon Jones), who remembers her from a production he set the lights for a number of years prior. He treats her like a star. She meets John (played by Reynaldo Piniella), an up and coming, young actor. She schools him on how to behave when in rehearsal with a white director. Millie Davis and Sheldon Forrester (played by Jessica Frances Dukes and Chuck Cooper) join the rehearsal. They are old friends with Wiletta. When the director, Al Manners (played by Michael Zegen) arrives, he is a no-nonsense task master. He pushes Wiletta and the rest of the cast to find the truth in their acting, yet the material they are working on does not contain truths worth their effort. The cast all works at giving the director what he asks for during rehearsal, but when a scene where the character played by John Nevins is going to be dragged off and lynched, Wiletta pushes hard to make changes in the play that are more truthful for the characters.
LaChanze as Wiletta Mayer Photo courtesy of Roundabout Theatre Company |
Michael Zegen, LaChanze, & Chuck Cooper
Photo courtesy of Roundabout Theatre Company
Chuck Cooper has a riveting monologue in Act
II. The action stops as his character
tells of a lynching he witnessed as a young boy. Mr. Cooper takes the audience deep into his
character’s traumatic childhood memory.
It is a powerful moment and brilliantly delivered.
Jessica Frances Dukes is feisty as Millie Davis. Reynaldo Piniella is charming as John Nevins. There are also strong performances from Simon Jones, Victoria Oliver (u.s.), Alex Mickiewicz, and Don Stephenson.
Trouble in Mind is playing at the American Airlines Theatre through January 9. The performances are powerful and the writing is magnificent. Don’t miss it.
Domenick Danza
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