Wednesday, January 12, 2022

2022 SAG Award Nominations Announced

Will Smith is nominated for "King Richard"


The 2022 Screen Actors Guild (SAG) nominations were announced today. The
 SAG Awards, voted on by the Hollywood actors’ guild SAG-AFTRA, are considered by many to be the strongest precursor when it comes to predicting Oscar momentum in the acting races. In most years, at least four of the five SAG nominees in each acting category will also receive an Oscar nomination.

Here’s the complete list:

Outstanding Cast

“Belfast”

“CODA”

“Don’t Look Up”

“House of Gucci”

“King Richard”


Actor in a Leading Role

Javier Bardem, “Being the Ricardos”

Benedict Cumberbatch, “The Power of the Dog”

Andrew Garfield, “Tick, Tick … Boom!”

Will Smith, “King Richard”

Denzel Washington, “The Tragedy of Macbeth”


Actress in a Leading Role

Jessica Chastain, “The Eyes of Tammy Faye”

Olivia Colman, “The Lost Daughter”

Lady Gaga, “House of Gucci”

Jennifer Hudson, “Respect”

Nicole Kidman, “Being the Ricardos”


Actor in a Supporting Role

Ben Affleck, “The Tender Bar”

Bradley Cooper, “Licorice Pizza”

Troy Kotsur, “CODA”

Jared Leto, “House of Gucci”

Kodi Smit-McPhee, “The Power of the Dog”


Actress in a Supporting Role

Caitriona Balfe, “Belfast”

Cate Blanchett, “Nightmare Alley”

Ariana DeBose, “West Side Story”

Kirsten Dunst, “The Power of the Dog”

Ruth Negga, “Passing”


Stunt Ensemble in a Movie

“Black Widow”

“Dune

“The Matrix Resurrections”

“No Time to Die”

“Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings”


Ensemble in a Drama Series

“The Handmaid’s Tale”

“The Morning Show”

“Squid Game”

“Succession”

“Yellowstone”


Actor in a Drama Series

Brian Cox, “Succession”

Billy Crudup, “The Morning Show”

Kieran Culkin, “Succession”

Lee Jung-jae, “Squid Game”

Jeremy Strong, “Succession”


Actress in a Drama Series

Jennifer Aniston, “The Morning Show”

HoYeon Jung, “Squid Game”

Elisabeth Moss, “The Handmaid’s Tale”

Sarah Snook, “Succession”

Reese Witherspoon, “The Morning Show”


Ensemble in a Comedy Series

“The Great”

“Hacks”

“The Kominsky Method”

“Only Murders in the Building”

“Ted Lasso”


Actor in a Comedy Series

Michael Douglas, “The Kominsky Method”

Brett Goldstein, “Ted Lasso”

Steve Martin, “Only Murders in the Building”

Martin Short, “Only Murders in the Building”

Jason Sudeikis, “Ted Lasso”


Actress in a Comedy Series

Elle Fanning, “The Great”

Sandra Oh, “The Chair”

Jean Smart, “Hacks"

Juno Temple, “Ted Lasso”

Hannah Waddingham, “Ted Lasso”


Actor in a TV Movie or Limited Series

Murray Bartlett, “The White Lotus”

Oscar Isaac, “Scenes From a Marriage”

Michael Keaton, “Dopesick”

Ewan McGregor, “Halston”

Evan Peters, “Mare of Easttown”


Actress in a TV movie or limited series

Jennifer Coolidge, “The White Lotus”

Cynthia Erivo, “Genius: Aretha”

Margaret Qualley, “Maid”

Jean Smart, “Mare of Easttown”

Kate Winslet, “Mare of Easttown”


Stunt Ensemble in a TV Series

“Cobra Kai”

“The Falcon and the Winter Soldier”

“Loki”

“Mare of Easttown”

“Squid Game

Friday, December 31, 2021

SAYING GOODBYE: 2021 IN MEMORIAM

 


By Darlene Donloe


2021 was a helluva year!

A number of noteworthy people of color closed their eyes for the last time in 2021. They were writers, actors, directors, musicians, activists, community leaders, and politicians. All were influential in their own way. And, before leaving the planet, they all made their mark and touched the lives of so many.  This column pays tribute to those who passed this way. Rest in Paradise!

JANUARY

 

Jan. 3 - Eric Jerome Dickey, bestselling author Milk in My Coffee, Sleeping with Strangers and Friends and Lovers. He was 59.

Jan. 7 - Marion Ramsey, ‘Police Academy’ and Broadway actress. She was 73.

Jan. 8 - Dearon “Deezer D” Thompson, “ER” actor.  He was 55.

Jan. 11 – Howard Johnson, musician. He was 79.

Jan. 13 – Bryan Monroe, former president of National Association of Black Journalists. He was 55.

Jan. 13 - Edward ‘Duke Bootee,’ Fletcher, rapper and co-writer of Hip-Hop classic, ‘The Message.’  He was 69.

Jan/ 15 – Duranice Pace, gospel singer. Member of The Pace Sisters. She was 62.

Jan. 16 – Jim Tilmon, Chicago TV newsman, meteorologist, pilot. He was 86. 

Jan. 16 – Judge B. Pennie Millender of the 36th District Court in Detroit. She was 68. 

Hank Aaron


Jan. 22 – Hank Aaron, baseball great, homerun king who defied racism. He held the home run record for 33 years. He was 86. 

Jan. 22 - James Purify, singer (I’m Your Puppet). He was 76. 

Jan. 24 – Gregory ‘G Bone’ Everett, filmmaker ‘41st and Central: The Untold Story of The L.A. Chapter of the Black Panther Party.’ He was 58. 

Jan. 28 – Cicely Tyson, legendary actress. She was 96. 

Jan. 29 – John Chaney, basketball Hall of Famer. He was 89. 

Jan. 30 – Marc Wilmore. TV writer and brother of Larry Wilmore. He was 57.


FEBRUARY                                             

Feb. 3 – Danny Ray, “cape man” and emcee for James Brown, The Godfather of Soul. He was 85. 

Feb. 4 - Gil Saunders, lead singer of Harold Melvin and the Bluenotes.

Feb. 4 -  Charles McGee, iconic Detroit artist.  He was 96.

Feb. 5 – Leon Spinks, former Heavyweight Champion. He was 67.

Mary Wilson


Feb. 8 – Mary Wilson, founding member of the legendary Supremes. She was 76.

Feb. 9 – Chick Corea, jazz pioneer, composer, keyboardist, and bandleader. He was 79.

Apostle Frederick K.C. Price


Feb. 12 – Apostle Frederick K. C. Price, founder of Crenshaw Christian Center. He was 89.

Feb. 15 – Vincent Jackson, former NFL wide receiver. He was 38.

Feb. 18 – Prince Markie Dee, a member of the pioneering hip-hop group the Fat Boys. He was 52.

Douglas Turner Ward


Feb. 20 – Douglas Turner Ward, theater giant. Co-Founder of the Negro Ensemble Company. He was 90. 

Feb. 21 - Lawrence Otis Graham, lawyer, and bestselling author who exposed prejudice. He was 59. 

Feb. 22 - James Burke, The Five Stairsteps and The Invisible Man’s Band. 

Feb. 28 – Irv Cross, NFL sports analyst. He was 81.


MARCH 

March 1 - Jahmil French, known for his role as Dave Turner in the Canadian teen series Degrassi: The Next Generation. He was 29. 

March 2 – Vernon Jordan, civil rights leader, and D.C. power broker. He was 85.

March 12 - Herman Roberts, Chicago tycoon. He owned 35 taxis, eight motels, a nightclub, a bowling alley, a skating rink, and oil wells on a 2,000-acre ranch in Oklahoma. He was 97.

March 13 – ‘Marvelous’ Marvin Hagler, middleweight boxing great. He was 66.

March 14 - Singer Reggie Warren, an original member of Troop. He was 52.

Yaphet Kotto


March 15 – Yaphet Kotto, Bond villain and ‘Alien’ star. He was 81.

March 22 – Elgin Baylor, LA Lakers Hall-of-Famer. He was 86.

March 23 – Jeanne Gaye, singer, Marvin Gaye’s sister. She was 84.

March 24 – Craig “muMs’ Grant, Blue Bloods and OZ star. He was 52.

 

APRIL

April 6 – Alcee Hastings, Florida’s first Black congressman. He was 84.

April 6 - Midwin Charles, MSNBC legal analyst. She was 47.

DMX


April 9 - DMX, rapper. Real name Earl Simmons. He was 50.

April 11 – Gerren Taylor, “Baldwin Hills” star. She was 30. 

April 22 – Gregory ‘Shock G’ Jacobs, co-founder of Digital Underground. He was 57.

April 22 – Terrence Clarke, Kentucky basketball guard. He was 19. 

April 29 – Frank McRae, actor in “Licence to Kill” and “Last Action Hero.” He was 80.

 

MAY

May 1 - Damon Weaver, a student journalist who once interviewed former President Barack Obama. He was 23. 

May 6 – Pervis Staples, co-founder of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees, The Staple Singer. He was 85.

May 7 – Lloyd Price, singer “Stagger Lee” and “Personality.” He was 88.

May 12 - NaTalia Johnson, Dance Theatre of Harlem ballerina, Artistic Director of the NaTalia Johnson Conservatory in Sacramento, CA. She was 37.

Paul Mooney


May 19 – Paul Mooney, legendary comedian. He was 79. 

May 19 - Olympian Lee Evans, who raised a fist on medal stand in 1968. He was 74.

May 22 – Chi Modu, hip-hop photographer. He was 54.

May 24 - Samuel E. Wright, voiced the role of the crab, Sebastian, in “The Little Mermaid.” He also originated the role of Mufasa in “The Lion King.” He was 74. 

JUNE

Clarence Williams III


June 4 – Clarence Williams III actor who played Linc on “Mod Squad.” He was 81.

 

JULY 

July 6 – Suzzanne Douglas, actress. She was 64. 

Suzzanne Douglas


July 10-11 - Londre ‘KTS Dre’ Sylvester. Chicago rapper. He was 31. 

July 11 - Charlie Robinson, ‘Night Court’ actor. He was 75. 

July 14 - Lawrence Horner, former Thousand Oaks Mayor. The city’s only Black mayor. He was 91.

Biz Markie


July 16 – Biz Markie, “Just A Friend’ rapper. He was 57.

July 18 – Gloria Richardson, civil rights pioneer. She was 99. 

July 21 – Clarence McDonald, Grammy-winning keyboard player, and producer. He was 76.

July 25 - Bob Moses, civil rights leader. He was 86.

July 26 – James “Jim” Stricklin, pioneering Black news photographer a WMAQ-TV. He was 88.

 

AUGUST 

Aug. 5 – Eloise Greenfield, award-winning children’s book author. She was 92. 

August 9 – Chucky Thompson, producer. He was 53. 

Aug. 20 - T. Rodger, the founder of the West Coast chapter of the Almighty Black P. Stone Nation Bloods gang. He was 65. 

Aug. 22 - Micki Grant, trailblazing “Don’t Bother Me I Can’t Cope” creator and Another World actress. She was 92.

Sam Salter


Aug. 28 - Sam Salter, 90s soul singer. He was 46.

Aug. 29 – Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry, reggae legend.  He was 85.


SEPTEMBER 

Sept. 1 – Gregg Leakes, husband of Nene Leakes. He was 66. 

Sept. 3 - Harry Coombs, veteran Philadelphia International Records executive. He was 85. 

Sept 4 – Fuquan Johnson, comedian. He was 43. 

Michael K. Williams


Sept. 6 – Michael K. Williams, “The Wire” actor. He was 54.

Sept. 6 – AJ ‘Ezal’ Johnson, actor. He was 55.

Sept. 15 - Leonard “Doctor” Gibbs, percussion guru and music educator.

Sept. 20 - Sarah Dash, LaBelle singer. She was 76. 

Melvin Van Peebles


Sept 22 – Melvin Van Peebles, the Godfather of Black Cinema, actor,  director, producer, playwright, activist. He was 89.

Sept. 27 – Andrea Martin, Grammy award-winning singer. She was 49.

 

OCTOBER 

Oct. 8 – Ricarlo Flanagan, “Shameless” and “Last Comic Standing.”  He was 40.

Oct. 9 – Shawn McLemore, gospel singer, minister. He was 54. 

Oct. 10 – Granville Adams, “Oz” star. He was 58. 

Oct. 11 - Deon Estus, bass player, and singer, and member of R&B group Brainstorm. He was 65.

Oct. 15 - Dorothy Steel, ‘Black Panther’ actress. She was 95.

 Oct. 15 – Regi Hargis, Brick co-founder, and guitarist.

Colin Powell


Oct. 18 - Colin Powell, the first Black Secretary of State. He was 84.

Oct. 21 – Tommy DeBarge, member of famed DeBarge family and member of the band Switch. He was 64.

Ruben Rodriguez


Oct. 24 – Ruben Rodriguez, music industry exec.  

Oct. 27 – William Shelby, co-founder of Dynasty, and a part of Lakeside. He was 67. 

Oct. 31 – Randy Ross, jazz saxophonist. Member of  The Blue Morning Quintet.

 

NOVEMBER 

Nov. 2 – Ronnie Wilson of The Gap Band. He was 73. 

Ronnie Wilson


Nov. 15 - Yolande Du Bois Irvin, lecturer and the only grandchild of W.E.B. Du Bois. She was 89. 

Nov. 17 – Young Dolph, Memphis rapper. He was 36. 

Nov. 27 - Johnshel Alexander, former child actor in “Beasts of the Southern Wild.” She was 22.

Virgil Abloh


Nov. 28 – Virgil Abloh, Louis Vuitton artistic director. He was 41.

Nov. 28 – Lee Elder, broke a racial barrier as the first Black golfer to play in The Masters. He was 87.

Lee Elder
 

DECEMBER 

Dec. 1 – Jacqueline Avant, local philanthropist, wife of music executive, and Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Clarence Avant. She was 81.

Jacqueline Avant


Dec. 4 – Glenn Foster, former NFL player. He was 31.

Dec. 6 - Rhonda Stubbins White, actress on Tyler Perry’s “Ruthless.” She was 60.

Dec. 7 – Greg Tate, American writer, musician, producer, and longtime critic for The Village Voice. He was 64.

Dec. 8 - Robbie Shakespeare, producer, Grammy-winning bassist for Sly and Robbie. He was 68.

Dec. 8 - Parker Lee Williams, aka DJ P-Lee Flash, Chicago hip-hop pioneer. He was  54. 

Dec. 9 – Ralph Tavares, eldest member and longtime leader of the family group Tavares. He was 79. 

Dec. 9 - Demaryius Thomas, Denver Broncos. He was 33. 

Dec. 9 – Patrice Malidoma Some’ (Maa Kheru), healer, author, teacher, medicine man, diviner. He was 65. 

Dec. 15 – Gloria Jean Watkins, who went by the pen name, Bell Hooks, an author, feminist, social activist, and professor. She was 69. 

Dec. 16 – Leonard Hubbard, founding member of the hip-hop band The Roots. He was 62.

Dec. 18 - Shiller Shaun Fequiere, known as Kangol Kid. ‘Roxanne Roxanne’ rapper and UTFO co-founder. He was 55. 

Dec. 18 – Darrell Caldwell, a Los Angeles rapper who goes by Drakeo the Ruler. He was 28. 

Dec. 20 - Paul Mitchell, co-founder of “Float On” group The Floaters.

Dec. 20 – Kimera Anotchi Bartee, professional baseball outfielder, and coach. He played for the Detroit Tigers, Cincinnati Reds, and Colorado Rockies. He was 49.

Desmond Tutu


Dec. 26 – Desmond Tutu, South African Anglican cleric, and theologian, known for his work as an anti-apartheid and human rights activist. He was the Bishop of Johannesburg from 1985 to 1986 and then the Archbishop of Cape Town from 1986 to 1996, in both cases being the first black African to hold the position. He was 90.

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Marvel Studios Debuts Teaser Trailer and Poster For "Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness'

 

Marvel Studios recently debuted the teaser trailer and poster for “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness”—a thrilling ride through the Multiverse with Doctor Strange, his trusted friend Wong and Wanda Maximoff, aka Scarlet Witch. 

“Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” opens in U.S. theaters on May 6, 2022.



 



 

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Hewett Rings In The Holidays With New Album

Grammy Award-winning R&B/Pop Singer, Songwriter Howard Hewett rings in the holidays with his R&B, Jazz infused album, 'Howard Hewett Christmas,' featuring the single, “That’s Christmas.” 

Hewett’s unique R&B smooth vocals with that oh-so-divine falsetto add special holiday magic and cheer to his 11-song collection of Christmas favorites and originals redone the Howard Hewett way. Originally released in 2008, Howard Hewett Christmas includes musical contributions of a list of All-Star musicians such as Verdine White (Earth Wind and Fire on bass guitar), Paul Jackson, Jr. (guitar), Kirk Whalum (tenor saxophone, and Stevie Wonder.

Produced by Hewett, the late George Duke, Ralph Johnson, and Monty Seward, Howard Hewett Christmas, will take you down Christmas memory lane and bring you back to the present with his spin on holiday classics like the Donny Hathaway penned music staple,  “This Christmas,” “The Christmas Song,” “’Baby, It’s Cold Outside,” “Silent Night” “Sleigh Ride,” and originals “I Remember Christmas,” and “That’s Christmas.”

Hewett feels his single and album are just what the people need. He said, “Christmas has always been a magical time for the people, and they need that magical, special time, especially now, in the middle of what we’re going through with the Covid-19 times we’re living in…and this music will bring the magical.”

Your holiday music playlist won’t be complete without the heart-warming album that will brighten your holidays, Howard Hewett Christmas. 

“That’s Christmas,” the video of the single (originally shot with an iPhone), featuring personal images of Howard Hewett, family, home, and Christmas love is available on YouTube.

Howard Hewett Christmas is available everywhere music is sold.



Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Jamison's 'Coming To Africa' Set To Open In Ghana

Just in time for the holidays, the romantic comedy, “Coming to Africa,” written and directed by Anwar Jamison, is set to make its theatrical premiere in Ghana at two of the country’s top theatres. The film will bow at the  Silverbird Cinemas, both in the Accra Mall and the West Hills Mall on Friday, December 10, and Saturday, December 11, respectively. Located in Accra Ghana, both theatres will feature a 7 and 9 p.m. showing of the award-winning film. After the December 10th  premiere, there will be an after-party at the Soho Bar in Accra, featuring the cast and crew. 

“Coming to Africa” is a romantic comedy, which explores the themes of classism, racism, and social consciousness behind the backdrop of contemporary black love. The film boasts an ensemble cast, which includes Jamison, along with Khalil Kain (“Juice,” “Girlfriends”) and Ghanaian tv and film star Nana Ama McBrown (“Aloe Vera,” “McBrown’s Kitchen”).

Anwar Jamison


In this new role, Jamison portrays a Black man blinded by his personal aspirations and success; and not interested in any dialogue about the social ills of the world. Afraid to rock the boat, he’s unwilling to use his privilege and position to sound an alarm for political or social injustice. In fact, he’s adapted to his privileged culture quite comfortably, until a dose of reality and a trip to the Motherland changes his world.

Heartwarming and funny, “Coming to Africa” will transport audiences to Ghana, and watch a Black man transform his heart and soul and discover his self-identity – all thanks to the power of #BlackLove.

“Coming to Africa” was shot in Memphis, Tennessee, and Accra, Ghana. The romcom was produced by Ghanaian tv host PY Addo Boateng. Jamison served as executive producer. Mi Prime Entertainment and Hood Professor Productions served as the production companies on this project.

Due to the pandemic, the film had a limited run on the film festival circuit. However,  the film came up a big winner at the  7th annual Las Vegas Black Film Festival (LVBFF), which took place on August 6-9, 2020 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Making its world premiere at LVBFF, “Coming to Africa,” nabbed three Jury Awards – that is, Best Romance, Best Comedy, and Best Actress. The four-day festival screened a distinctive lineup of narrative features, documentaries, music videos, and short films at the Mediterranean-themed Suncoast Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. 

Currently, “Coming to Africa” is streaming on Amazon Prime, Apple TV, and Google Play. 

COMING TO AFRICA - run time: 95 minutes 

Sunday, November 28, 2021

Singer China Moses Tells U.S. To 'Move Over!'



“I know it’s different. I know I sound different. I’m not scared of that. Maybe you’ll like me; maybe you won’t. But I’m a singer-songwriter of soul music; I’m a child of jazz and this is what I have to propose.” 

That’s China Moses speaking about her digital EP, “China Moses & The Vibe Tribe,” which recently dropped on MPS Records (via Edel Germany/Bob Frank Entertainment in North America). She recorded the set after four years of touring Europe and Asia with The Vibe Tribe - saxophonist Luigi Grasso, keyboardist & pianist Joe Armon Jones, pianist & organist Ashley Henry, bassist Neil Charles and drummer Marijus Aleksa - with the intention of showcasing the band’s exuberant live energy. Her goal for the four-track EP is loftier: to introduce her diverse sound to the US market while paving the way for her next album, which will be released next year.

The first two singles from the EP, “Nicotine” and “Put It On The Line,” originally appeared on Moses’ 2017 album, “Nightintales,” and appear on the EP in completely different versions that were recorded live with the five multicultural members of The Vibe Tribe.

Born in Los Angeles, Moses moved to Paris when she was seven and has lived abroad ever since. She was a teenager when her first recording was released yet she has never been comprehensively promoted in the US. Known as a progressive soul singer, Moses considers herself to be “French with an American passport,” thus her perspective, experience and music are indeed different. Each song on the EP - three of which she wrote with the fourth song being a reinvention of Janis Joplin’s “Move Over” - is essentially a different genre. The EP draws upon Moses’ Black American cultural and musical background. It goes from swanky late-night blues to intense afro beat-tinged R&B to a soulful deep funk-rock energy to a four-on-the-floor house remix by Charles, who is also a household name in the UK’s electronica music scene under the monikers Ben Marc and N400.

“Coming back to the States, what I have had to explain is that I sound Black American when I speak and I look Black American, but I have a very different life experience. I have fewer limits on what my music can or should be. I think my music has that freedom. It’s a freedom that my mom (legendary jazz singer Dee Dee Bridgewater) and my ancestors have fought for. I would not be able to make the music I make today if I was raised in the States. It’s unfortunate but true. My music wouldn’t sound the same,” said Moses who hosts two radio shows, Made in China on TSF Jazz in France and Late Night China Moses on Jazz FM in the United Kingdom. 

Also released recently was the third video from the EP, “Move Over,” which is another black-and-white clip from Brazilian director Adriano Vannini lensed during Moses’ years of touring with The Vibe Tribe (https://youtu.be/pbe5kNruMno).

Writing and recording musical amalgams rooted in Black America - jazz, R&B, soul, funk and blues – Moses seeks to find her place “back home,” a process that began with the release of the EP. Part of her musical homecoming means that Moses is recording her next album in the US with co-producer Troy Miller (Gregory Porter) and is co-writing the songs with keyboardist-singer-songwriter Oli Rockberger. GRAMMY nominated trumpeter Theo Croker is crafting the horn arrangements for the collection that will tentatively be titled “Nigra Prismo,” Black Prism in Esperanto, a universal utopic language, an apropos choice given Moses’ desire to redefine what a singer-songwriter can be. 
 
“Black Prism’ is basically what I am, and the album is a kaleidoscope of Black American music. I’m really trying to bend the notion of what a modern-day singer-songwriter is and can look like and be and the wide realm of music that you can do. I think that’s the reason I constantly do songs that are ‘different genres,’ but part of the same world,” said Moses, who is poised to be the next jazz and soul singer from Europe to create a splash in the US.

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

'Paradise Blue,' An Intricate, Layered Narrative

 

By Darlene Donloe 

Paradise Blue, Dominique Morisseau’s latest play is sexy, gritty, real, funny, and complicated, making for a powerful noir-inspired drama. 

Currently playing in the Gil Cates Theater at the Geffen Playhouse through December 12, Paradise Blue is a sultry, dark presentation that delivers on all cylinders. 

There are stories of love, success, gentrification, domestic abuse, disenfranchisement, determination, loyalty, and self-preservation.

From the story, the acting, the costumes, the lighting, the direction, and the music, and the overall drama, the dialogue draws you into a section of Detroit called Black Bottom, circa 1949 on a strip known as Paradise Valley. 

Cast of 'Paradise Blue'


The story centers on the Paradise Club, a local landmark where trumpet-playing club owner Blue (Wendell B. Franklin) faces a tough decision.  While he loves the club, he’s being pulled toward selling his legendary jazz joint, once owned by his father, as gentrification begins to raise its ugly head.  

The situation doesn’t sit well with members of the house band, who fear their livelihood will be taken away – leaving them out in the cold. 

Wendell B. Franklin as Blue


What they don’t know is that Blue has been fighting internal demons that are pushing him to sell. The demons stem from his past violent family memories that Blue swears have affected his ability to blow his horn sufficiently.

It seems Paradise to some - can be a nightmare to others.

Alani iLongwe as P-Sam


The house band includes P-Sam (Alani iLongwe) and Corn (John Earl Jelks). 

All the players find themselves in a fight for the future of Paradise. 

John Earl Jelks as Corn


Enter a mysterious, bold, and brash temptress named Silver (Tyla Abercrumbie) who, traveling without a man, has her own agenda and is not afraid to go toe-to-toe with any man. It’s also rumored that she may have killed her husband. 


Silver, a widow who carries a gun just in case something goes down, soon makes her intentions known by offering to buy the club – something Blue has no intention of doing. 


(l-r) Tyla Abercrumbie as Silver and Shayna Small as Pumpkin


Silver is the antithesis of Pumpkin (Shayna Small), Blue’s girlfriend who considers herself a “go along gal.” She doesn’t like drama and is usually the mediator between the house band and Blue.  She is the sole caretaker of the club, who has found her place in the world between the four walls that are the Paradise Club. Pumpkin loves to express herself by reciting poems of Harlem Renaissance writer Georgia Douglas Johnson. Her’s and Blue’s relationship is loving, but also has its dark, abusive side – something Pumpkin tries to deny. 

Dominique Morisseau


According to Morisseau, “Paradise Blue is also about women’s relationship to men at a time when things like domestic violence and abuse were not really conversations. Where violence against women was sort of part of the normal culture. And so it’s looking at what happens on the brink of not only a community’s changing identity to its larger city and how people are gonna fight for that, but also women’s changing identities in a male-dominated community – how they kind of hold their own.” 

Each Paradise Blue character is well-developed and stands out in their own right. Each character has a moment in the sun when telling the story of Paradise Blue. In doing so, they reveal who they really are. When it comes to telling this story, there are no weak links.

Superb performances from all five cast members. 

Morisseau’s writing is exquisite. It’s real, it’s raw and authentic, which is why the production works so well. 

Stori Ayers


Through Ayers’ direction, the actors move effortlessly around the multi-layered stage. 

Kudos to Edward E. Haynes, Jr. (scenic designer), Alan C. Edwards (lighting designer), Wendell C. Carmichael (costume designer), and Jeff Gardner (sound designer). 

Paradise Blue is a satisfying theatrical production. 

Paradise Blue marks the second Dominique Morisseau production at the Geffen, following Skeleton Crew in 2018, both part of Morisseau’s The Detroit Project (a 3-play cycle), which also includes Detroit ’67. 

Morisseau’s credits include: A MacArthur Fellowship, a Tony nomination for the Temptations musical Ain’t Too Proud, and an Obie (Off-Broadway) Award for her now-headed-to-Broadway play Skeleton Crew. 

Three of her nine plays form a cycle, “The Detroit Projects,” all delving into parts of the city. The plays span the years 1949 (Paradise Blue) to 1967 (Detroit ‘67) to 2008 (Skeleton Crew).  

Paradise Blue, written by Dominique Morisseau, and directed by Stori Ayers, stars Tyla Abercrumbie, Wendell B. Franklin, Alani iLongwe, John Earl Jelks, and Shayna Small.

On the DONLOE SCALE: D (don’t bother), O (oh, no), N (needs work), L (likable), O (oh, yeah), and E (excellent), Paradise Blue gets an E (excellent).

Paradise Blue, Geffen Playhouse, 10866 Le Conte Avenue, Los Angeles, Tues-Fri, 8 p.m.; Sat. 3 and 8 p.m., Sun. 2 and 7 p.m., through Dec. 12; $30-$129; 310 208-2028 or www.geffenplayhouse.org. Children under 12 years of age will not be admitted. 

Running Time: 2 hours and 15 minutes, including one 15-minute intermission.