Tyrone Robinson’s ‘This Bitter Earth:’ A moving tragedy about love and politics

InterAct’s latest production presents an interracial gay relationship through the scrim of memory.

This Bitter Earth at InterAct Theatre Company, with (from left to right) David Bazemore, Gabriel Elmore.
This Bitter Earth at InterAct Theatre Company, with (from left to right) David Bazemore, Gabriel Elmore.

In This Bitter Earth, a tender tragedy about the intersection of the personal and the political, the playwright Harrison David Rivers takes on two challenges: the depiction of interracial gay love and a restlessly nonlinear narrative.

The play, whose title is taken from a bluesy 1960 love song popularized by Dinah Washington, involves an attraction — really a collision — between two apparent opposites. Jesse (David Bazemore) is an earnest Black playwright, not unaware of race or history, but determined to focus on his art. His white boyfriend Neil (newcomer Gabriel W. Elmore, in an immensely likable performance) is both a child of wealth and privilege and a Black Lives Matter activist. Conflict, as we can imagine, ensues.

This Bitter Earth at InterAct Theatre Company, with (from left to right) David Bazemore, Gabriel Elmore.
This Bitter Earth at InterAct Theatre Company, with (from left to right) David Bazemore, Gabriel Elmore.

InterAct Theatre Company’s satisfying production — its second live staging under pandemic protocols — is directed with care and precision by Tyrone L. Robinson, with an emphasis on the easy, often scintillating chemistry between the two politically mismatched men.

In about 85 intermission-less minutes, the action hopscotches around the period between March 2012 and December 2015, and between St. Paul, Minn., (where Rivers himself lives) and various New York City locations.Advertisement

Both the burgeoning protest movement sparked by police (and other) killings of Black men and women — years before George Floyd’s murder made the world take note — and the growing mainstream acceptance of gay relationships provide the play’s charged backdrop. References to gay Black poet Essex Hemphill, a favorite of both characters, tie the two themes together.

InterAct producing artistic director Seth Rozin has described This Bitter Earth as unspooling “through the jumbled lens of memory.” That idea helps. So, too, do the projections of dates and locations, which orient (and occasionally disorient) us. Still, the play’s complex structure, with its repeated evocations of a single cataclysmic event, seems at least as much a demonstration of Rivers’ virtuosity as a narrative necessity.

On Colin McIlvaine’s set, an apartment bisected by a sidewalk and bathed in Shannon Zura’s purple lighting, Jesse frames the action with a monologue about his problems with balance. The language is poetic, and the malady, though real, is also symbolically suggestive — of the relationship and perhaps the society that complicates it.

The pairing between the lovers, who meet at a New York City rally in which Neil has taken a leading role, is a canvas on which Rivers dissects the pressures on high-achieving Black men. Bazemore’s emotionally reserved, slyly witty Jesse prefers to devote his talents and energy to the theater. But his chosen life with Neil connects him, however reluctantly, to the politics of the day, even if he leaves the marching to his boyfriend.

At times, the two traffic in the expected: Jesse derides Neil for his “white guilt,” and Neil criticizes Jesse for his apathy. When Neil points out that they’re living in a world that still can’t entirely accept that “Black Lives Matter,” it is Jesse who retorts: “All lives matter.”

But Jesse can’t remain permanently on the sidelines (or can he?). And surely mutual desire can’t forever fend off the varied forces threatening to tear the couple apart. This Bitter Earth is an elegy — a deeply moving one — to the relationship, and a dirge about what happens next.

“This Bitter Earth,” presented by InterAct Theatre Company at the Proscenium Theatre at the Drake, 302 S. Hicks St., through Feb. 20. Masks and vaccine proof required. Seating is distanced. Tickets: $35 Information: www.interacttheatre.org or 215-568-8079.

Article by Julia M. Klein for the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Psalmayene 24’s beautiful ‘Dear Mapel’ at Mosaic contains worlds of feeling

In his willingness to be vulnerable there is strength, and in his multifaceted storytelling, each and every emotion strikes a chord.

Psalmayene 24 in ‘Dear Mapel.’ Photo by Chris Banks.

If a picture’s worth a thousand words, then a single song contains worlds. Psalmayene 24’s astonishing Dear Mapel feels just like that. Psalmayene 24 plays himself as he relays his coming of age story, traveling through worlds of feeling, worlds in words, and worlds he’s lived: Park Slope, Howard University, a woman’s basement bedroom, a house in Queens in two different decades. It contains worlds of Blackness, masculinity, childhood, adolescence, sexuality. Absence, presence, change, and movement. In truth, we only get to see a sliver of Psalm’s world, but it’s a privilege that he’s decided to share with us.

Dear Mapel is structured as a series of letters to Psalm’s absent father, Mapel. It is inherently musical, as the dialogue is poetry, often set to the percussive rhythms of JabariDC (musician and various roles). But the form itself also feels like an album, or even one long song. Each story, each snapshot of life that Psalm shares builds on the next with interludes and reprises. Recurring themes are reflected in his words, or the lighting, or the musical pattern of JabariDC’s drums. It creates a picture that’s inseparable from the content, which itself is so interwoven and attached to its musical form, to the drums of West Africa, to hip hop. This musical, song-like form evokes, honestly and authentically, the abstract qualities shared by both dreams and memories. The structure of the show brings us into a world that is grounded equally in the reality of past experiences and dreams of connection, of closure.  

JabariDC and Psalmayene 24 in ‘Dear Mapel.’ Photo by Chris Banks.

The technical elements are instruments providing the backing track for the song-like qualities evoked by Dear Mapel. They feel familiar, even recognizable, yet create something slightly different each time they work together. Alberto Segarra’s beautiful lighting makes big changes subtly, fading in and out, helping the audience to recollect earlier moments in the show. Sound design (Nick “tha 1da” Hernandez) perfectly captures different eras of life, emphasizing new scenes, and sometimes a different Psalm, in each cue. There are projections (Kelly Colburn) that I did not have the privilege to see incorporated, due to some technical difficulties. Although the show did not feel empty without them, I do wish I could have seen the work that went in, and the sensory value they add. Finally, JabariDC brings humor and ease to the show, always the final piece of the puzzle that allows a word, emotion, or thought to rise to its fullest potential. His presence is versatile as he expertly punctuates with sadness, wisdom, laughter, and, most of all, percussion.

Psalmayene 24 leads this epic of a two-man production, encompassing actor, writer, visionary, dancer, and singer. But what is remarkable is that these roles are not used just as individual skillsets. Working together with Natsu Onoda Power (director and production designer), Psalm brings a storytelling through-line to each role, so that they weave together to create a basket that gently holds his experience, which he then holds up and generously offers to the audience. There is so much strength in this willingness to be vulnerable, and it helps each and every emotion Psalm conveys to strike a chord. The humor is real — vulnerable. The sadness, wistfulness, feeling of grieving things you’re not even sure of — vulnerable. Firsts, failures, tries — vulnerable. And that vulnerability creates a song of masculinity, Jamaicanness, Blackness, artistry, generational trauma, grief, honest connection, joy — all inseparable from one another. 

Psalmayene 24 in ‘Dear Mapel.’ Photo by Chris Banks.

It is through this lens of abundance that I see the remarkable song that is Dear Mapel. The play itself holds as many parts, as many stories, as Psalm does himself. It is grounded in contradictory ideas of presence and absence, as it is an act of unconditional love toward the missing Mapel, but an act of unconditional self-love as well. It is about community and individualism because it is Psalm’s self-expression, but it includes everyone in the room. It is a beautiful, multifaceted story of how to create closure, or even oneself, in the face of unaccepting circumstances and hegemonic white American forces. It is an individual story of creation, but Psalm weaves it into the lives of countless others, so that Dear Mapel becomes a personal anthem that is remembered and passed on. A legacy born out of absence, with a name it gave itself, ready to be sung again and again.  

Running Time: 90 minutes, with no intermission.

Dear Mapel — written and performed by Psalmayene 24, directed by Natsu Onoda Power, with percussion by JabariDC — runs in-person to February 13, 2022, presented by Mosaic Theater Company at the Atlas Performing Arts Center, H Street NE, Washington DC. Tickets for general admission are $50 each and can be purchased online or by calling 202-738-9491. Open-captioned performances are February 5 at 8 PM, February 10 at 11 AM, and February 10 at 8 PM (includes ASL postshow).

Dear Mapel also streams February 14 to 27, 2022. Tickets for the virtual option are $40 for individuals and $70 for groups, available online. Viewers have 72 hours in which to watch the performance. Closed captions are available.

The Dear Mapel program is online here.

Article by Gwyneth Sholar for the DC Metro Theatre Arts available here.

Mosaic Theatre’s DEAR MAPEL A Compelling, Personal Journey

BWW Review:  Mosaic Theatre's DEAR MAPEL A Compelling, Personal Journey

Any time you can spend with a master storyteller is time well spent; and when the storyteller is Psalmayene 24, you know you’re in for a rewarding, though-provoking evening. This time, digging into his past, with all the joys and pain that growing up involves, audiences can look forward to a performance that is by turns dazzling, drop-dead hilarious, but with moments of darkness that remain all too familiar.

Director and Production Designer Natsu Onoda Power has given us a theatre littered (literally) and plastered with written and typed pages-some crumpled and piled up on the stage, some hung out on clotheslines, to be pulled into the action strategically. Psalmayene 24 and his scene partner, the brilliant actor and rhythmic artist JabariDC, begin the action by pulling out a couple leaf-blowers to clear the floor (to the accompaniment of selections from Nick “tha 1da” Hernandez’ sound design).

Psalmayene 24

The introductory monologue, steeped in hip-hop, ranges in pace from deliberate and crystal clear to a cascade of syllables, delivered at astonishing speed, in the same spirit with which Charlie Parker and Dizzie Gillespie played their own instruments. A reminder that the human voice is an instrument in its own right, and rap provides Psalmayene 24 with a means of demonstrating his virtuosity.

The narrative thread for “Dear Mapel” is clear enough-an estranged son’s letters to his biological father, whom he only sees rarely, and even then not under the best of circumstances. Early letters detail the milestones of adolescence: Psalmayene’s first sexual experience; his first encounter with racist taunts directed at him personally; and, later on, his band’s attempts to wow the audience at the legendary Apollo Theater in Harlem on “Amateur Night.”

Psalmayene’s years living in Washington, D.C., and his time at Howard University, feature prominently-which gives the night a special vibe, as fellow Howard alums in the audience chime in. What makes this such a joyful show is the way we’re encouraged to respond vocally, viscerally, and personally, to all the twists and turns of Psalmayene’s story.

Another performer who gives “Dear Mapel” an especially thrilling vibe is JabariDC, who steps in sometimes as Psalmayene’s scene partner, and who provides rhythmic accompaniment throughout the show on a variety of percussion instruments. His range of styles enables us to track Psalmayene’s life journey in a variety of moods, propelling the action forward but also punctuating each plot twist with its own emotional import.

You have one more week to see this latest incarnation of Psalmayene 24’s life story; It’s compelling, it’s alive, it’s personal, it’s what theatre is truly for.

[Reviewer’s Note: On the evening I went to see Mosaic’s stellar production of “Dear Mapel,” the projection equipment had malfunctioned, so I can’t speak to the work of Kelly Coburn, except to say that by the looks of it, Coburn’s work will serve as icing on an already well-served cake.]

Publicity Photo courtesy Mosaic Theatre.

Running Time: 90 minutes without Intermission.

Dear Mapel runs through February 13 at the Atlas Performing Arts center, 1333 H Street NE, Washington, D.C. It is also available through streaming, for those who prefer to attend remotely. For tickets, visit http://www.mosaictheater.org/ or call the Atlas box office at 202-399-7993.

Article by Andrew White for Broadway World here.

Dear Mapel, by Psalmayene 24, Opens TODAY at Mosaic Theatre Company

This joyfully energetic coming-of-age story by Psalmayene 24 takes viewers from Park Slope, Brooklyn to Washington, DC, on a journey through Psalm’s adolescence and major life milestones which are often accentuated by the absence of his father, Mapel. Through a series of letters, both real and imagined, we explore the power of the written word to connect us with our loved ones, our past, and our future.

Get your tickets here.

Deneen Reynolds-Knott Wins College Collaboration Commission

Reynolds-Knott will develop a new play with Oklahoma City University, Centre College in Kentucky, and Furman University in South Carolina.

Deneen Reynolds-Knott.

BROOKLYN: The Farm Theater has awarded Deneen Reynolds-Knott the College Collaboration Project commission. Reynolds-Knott will work with Oklahoma City University, Centre College in Danville, Ky., and Furman University and Greenville, S.C. The project marks Oklahoma City University’s first collaboration with the Farm Theater, along with Centre College’s fifth and Furman University’s second times participating.

Reynolds-Knott will have the opportunity to meet with groups of students from each school via video conference at the beginning of the spring 2022 semester. Each school will produce the play in person during the 2022-23 academic year, and Reynolds-Knott will continue to revise the text throughout the process. Oklahoma City University will produce the play this coming November, while Centre College will produce the play in Feb. 2023 and Furman University in April 2023.

Reynolds-Knott is a Brooklyn-based playwright who will have a workshop production of her play Babes in Ho-lland, which was featured at the 2020 Bay Area Playwrights Festival, at Shotgun Players this winter. She was a member of Clubbed Thumb’s 2019-20 early career writers group and received the 2021 Clubbed Thumb constitution commission. Her work has been produced at Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Orlando Shakespeare Theater, Premiere Stages at Kean University, San Diego Rep’s 2021 Black Voices Reading Series, PlayPenn, and the Fire This Time Festival, among others. She has also developed work with Liberation Theatre Company’s writing residency, Project Y’s Playwrights Group, Rising Circle’s INKTank Development Lab, and the 3in3 playwright residency of the Frank Silvera Writers’ Workshop. Reynolds-Knott received her MFA from Columbia University.

The College Collaboration Project asks multiple schools to commission an early-career playwright to write a play that each school will independently produce throughout the academic year. The majority of characters in the play will be under 30 years of age so that undergraduate students can successfully play the roles, and the play will reflect the students’ thoughts on a theme suggested by the playwright. This is the Farm Theater’s 10th installment of the project.

The Farm Theater develops early-career artists that may not have the support system afforded to others through workshops, productions, and mentoring.

Full article from American Theatre.