While
governments on both sides of the American – Canadian border have seen fit in
recent years to reducing the amount of money that flows into the arts at all
levels, including our schools, Theatre
Perception Consortium, a group of Los Angeles based playwrights, directors and
actors, is preserving an important part of our musical heritage through their
musicals. It was this journalist’s delight to be in Hollywood California last
spring for the production of Howlin’
Blues and Dirty Dogs, which told the story of a great blues songwriter and
singer Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton who recorded the song “Hound Dog,” three
years before Elvis, a tune that stayed at # 1 on the Billboard R&B charts for
seven weeks and sold two million copies for “Big Mama” Thornton. She also wrote
and recorded “Ball ‘n’ Chain,” which in later years became a monster hit for
Janis Joplin. This time around, Theatre
Perception Consortium are restaging North
On South Central Avenue which chronicles the jazz music scene in Los Angeles
during the 1940’s and 1950’s and in particular, focuses on one of the most
celebrated clubs of the era, Club Alabam. This is the tenth anniversary of the
musical and there will only be one performance on Sunday October 4th
at 3:00 pm and it will be presented at
the historic Wilshire Ebell Theatre in
Los Angeles. The
Wilshire Ebell Theatre first opened its doors
in 1927, two years before Club Alabam did.
The telling of the stories behind the Club Alabam and the
entertainment industry from this period of Los Angeles’
history holds special meaning for playwright and actor Larry Robinson, “My dad
moved here from rural Mississippi
and he worked at the 5 – 4 Ballroom which was also a big venue that people
attended. He was the night watchman there or the security guard, so he used to
interact with a lot of the celebrities who came through there and they would
frequently go to the Club Alabam. I lived on and ran up and down
Central Avenue when I was young.
All of the clubs were there and they ran from one end of the avenue to
the other, but I didn’t know much about them. When I became an adult I began to
ask questions and of course, my father told me a few stories. From there I took
the story of Club Alabam and the history of Central
Avenue. Central Avenue had a lot to do with the
entertainment that was going on in the city.
Everybody came there, Mae West, Howard Hughes and everybody who was
anybody from their twenties on up were hanging out on
Central Avenue. Then of course the question came,
What happened to Central Avenue?
There were a lot of things that happened to Central Avenue,” says Robinson as he
talks about how many people moved further west, some sections attracted what he
refers to as riff raff and other influences such as the university crowd became
more prevalent.
“So then I asked the question and I did some research and
that is how the story came about. My dad is in the story only (we have) him
working at the Club Alabam instead of the 5 -4 Ballroom, but all the events that
happened are pretty much on point. Billie Holiday came there, Johnny Otis of
course was the bandleader there, Dorothy Dandridge (the first African American
actress to be nominated for an Academy Award for best actress) and Bill
“Bojangles” Robinson used to hang out there. It was the place to be. It has a
very rich history in the pre-war years and the post – war years too. It was a
very attractive place to be. People dressed up and they looked sharp. The Dunbar
Hotel also had a venue that people would frequent. They would come out of the
Club Alabam and they would stay at the Dunbar Hotel. It was just busy, busy and
a lot of commerce was going on there.
Robinson however, was not alone in developing
North On South Central Avenue, as it
is the result of a collaboration with actress and theatre veteran Carla Dupree
Clark who in 2004 won a NAACP Award in the
Best Director category for her work
on North On South Central Avenue and
Tu’Nook an accomplished actress, director and playwright. Both women have
received proclamations from the City of Los Angles
for their work in theatre relative to the preservation of
Los Angeles history. By age seventeen, Robinson had
starred in three movies and appeared on more than two hundred television shows.
He appeared in the sitcom Good Times,
which starred Esther Rolli, Janet Jackson and Jimmie Walker and the television
series What’s Happening!, both of which aired during the 1970’s. In more recent
years he appeared in the series Judging Amy, which concluded in 2005, after a
six year run.
Carla Dupree Clark talks about her involvement with the
production, “Not being a native Angelino, I was fascinated when Larry introduced
the story to me, as I dearly love jazz music. And the period of the 40's
was an era when fashion was simply delightful. So coming strictly from a
directing point of view, I was mostly turned on to the combination of what great
music and magnificent costuming the piece would inspire. After becoming
engrossed in the story, the history of jazz relative to the city of
Los Angeles began to unfold, and with that the music of
the era is what inevitably transcended the cultural barriers that existed back
then. Everyone wanted to be a part of the musical genius that pulsated up and
down Central Avenue,
therefore the door was opened for people of all colors and backgrounds to mix
and mingle. They headed to the Club Alabam on Central
Avenue to partake of that great creative scene. How
exciting it has been for me to be one of the re-creators of such a great musical
era.”
Robinson says that during the course of the musical, we
will meet, “Dinah Washington, Ella Fitzgerald and Tom Bradley (who served five
terms as the mayor of Los Angeles)
will make a brief cameo. We also have Billie Holiday, Cab Calloway, and the Club
Alabam band. We replicate the Club Alabam. It is about the rise and fall of
Central Avenue as we tell the story. Nat King Cole
also comes through the Club Alabam He was doing a show at the Lincoln Beatty
which was up the street from the Club Alabam. It was where Duke Ellington gets
his “Jump For Joy,” and “Chocolate Dandies,” and all of those great musicals.”
As for the music, Robinson says, “There are a couple of
blues songs and a love ballad called “My Baby’s Going Away,”
and Billie Holiday’s signature song “Ain’t Nobody’s Business If I Do,”
and a blues song “Last Night,” on which I will be playing the harmonica.
We have a tribute to Captain Dunham which will (feature) drums and
African beats, with dancers on stage who are dressed in traditional outfits. The
Club Alabam dancers will be doing another dance. You will hear a lot of
traditional music from that period.”
North On South
Central Avenue received nine NAACP Theatre
Awards nominations and won in five categories. It is amazing that until this
point in time, despite the fact that accolades continue to flow in concerning
North On South Central Avenue, and it
is a critically acclaimed production, that nobody has approached TPC about
acquiring the film rights to produce a feature film.
Other Theatre
Production Consortium projects to keep an eye open for, include,
Queen Of Sass, a tribute to Loretta
Mary Aikens, better known as Jackie Moms Mabley, the first African American
Female stand-up comedian during the time of Vaudeville, and the Roaring 20’s and
the Civil Rights eras.