The Shakespeare Theatre Company is helping to draw attention to a little-known mid-19th century actor the organization trumpets as “one of theater’s greatest pioneers,” and more specifically “one of the first great classical actors of color.”
The man in question is Ira Aldridge, who is currently being brought to life on stage by Amari Cheatom (Judas and the Black Messiah) in Red Velvet by Olivier Award-winning playwright (Life of Pi) and actress Lolita Chakrabarti.
Originally staged a decade ago in London, Chakrabarti’s play sheds light on Aldridge’s life and career by embellishing the known historical facts and details with inspired moments and imagined scenarios.
The fictional flourishes serve to illuminate the potential and probable lived experiences of the man, an American by birth who sailed to England as a teenager and remained in Europe for the remainder of his life.
Red Velvet focuses its story around a particular milestone that occurred in 1833, when the 26-year-old Aldridge became the first Black actor to portray Othello.
At the time, his performance at London’s Theatre Royal, Covent Garden was less an achievement than a setback, given that Aldridge was fired after only two performances, charged with being “too passionate” on stage.
Red Velvet — Photo: Teresa Castracane
But that was just the beginning of Aldridge’s career, which spanned nearly 50 years. Ultimately, he became “one of the most popular and widely seen interpreters of Shakespeare the world has ever seen,” as Shakespeare Theatre’s dramaturgs Soyica Colbert and Drew Lichtenberg write in the Red Velvet ASIDES program, further noting that, as an internationally touring performer, Aldridge also helped spark “shifting perspectives about who could play what roles, socially and politically.”
Cheatom as Aldridge leads a cast also featuring Samuel Adams, Jaye Ayres-Brown, David Bishins, Emily DeForest, Shannon Dorsey, Michael Glenn, and Tro Shaw, with direction by Jade King Carroll.
“I hope this production serves as a reminder that history is not linear,” says Simon Godwin, the company’s artistic director. “Many of the troubles we face today are the same trials as those of our ancestors. It is our duty to revisit our histories and break the cycles of injustice.”
Runs July 5 to 17 in The Klein Theatre at the Lansburgh, 450 7th St. NW. Tickets are $49 to $112. Call 202-547-1122 or visit www.shakespearetheatre.org.
What a hullabaloo. There was the book, then the play, and now there is the movie (with an Oscar-winning performance). Hamnet is, as the iconic VISA ad said, everywhere you want to be.
People, it seems, just can't get enough of this Shakespeare-adjacent imagining of the Bard's family life. And the airwaves are veritably humming with the question of what one should read, see, or experience live, first. The truth is, anyone who feels they need to catch the Hamnet wave should be able to start anywhere. Book, film, or play -- each should be capable of standing on its own two feet. Unfortunately, the production by the Royal Shakespeare Company, now at The Shakespeare Theatre, is less standing than crawling around on its knees.
The second half of the theater season always feels like the downhill rush of a roller coaster, a new hill coming into view just as you hit the dip, as local venues begin the time-honored ritual of announcing their upcoming seasons. Still, our focus here is on what's about to bloom -- and this year, that bloom is as big and bold as it gets.
A highlight is Shakespeare Theatre Company, showcasing Hamnet (no, not the movie), Suzy Eddie Izzard in a tour-de-force one-person Hamlet, and the great Wendell Pierce in the title role of Othello. (Pierce joins a notable Othello lineage at STC -- including, for those who remember, Patrick Stewart and Avery Brooks.)
The second one-person show to grace The Shakespeare Theatre this season, Suzy Eddie Izzard's The Tragedy of Hamlet is quite a different beast from Bill Irwin's On Beckett. Right out of the gate, this has the feel of a celebrity offering, where the cult of Izzard is so integral to the concept -- and indeed the performance -- it's hard to tell where one begins and the other ends.
This isn't necessarily a bad thing, because, frankly, there has to be a pretty good reason to watch someone do all the parts in a play, especially something as inherently crowded and complex as Shakespeare. Izzard, with her versatile, high-profile career (encompassing standup, theater, television, and film) has developed just that kind of persona along with the ambition to master this particular skillset (she previously performed Dickens' Great Expectations).
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