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Displaying items by tag: Jada Jackson

In Definition Theatre's production of "Splash Hatch on the E Going Down," Kia Corthron's 1997 work feels unnervingly relevant in 2025. Under Cheryl Lynn Bruce's incisive direction, this story of environmental racism and maternal health transforms from a Clinton-era critique into a mirror reflecting our ongoing, unresolved struggles with environmental justice—struggles that have only become more pronounced in the wake of the Flint water crisis, Hurricane Katrina, and the toxic train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.

The play revolves around Thyme (Jada Jackson), a pregnant teenager whose self-taught passion for environmental science serves as both her armor and her cross to bear. Jackson infuses raw authenticity into Thyme's arc, as we watch her transform from an idealistic eco-warrior into a young woman confronting harsh realities. Her scenes with Jabari Khaliq, who embodies the role of her 18-year-old husband Erry, are particularly memorable. Khaliq brings a delicate balance of youth and forced maturity to his performance. His natural, unaffected style meshes perfectly with Jackson's intensity, creating moments that pulse with teenage vitality while tackling grown-up challenges. When they share the stage, their connection feels genuine rather than performed – two kids trying to navigate an adult world with nothing but determination and each other. This chemistry transforms what could have been preachy material into something deeply human and affecting.

Bruce, known for her work in Chicago theater, skillfully balances intellectual and emotional elements in Corthron's complex play. Rather than getting lost in scientific data about lead poisoning and environmental racism, she reveals the human story underneath. Through subtle directing choices—a mother's nervous touch, children's fading laughter, Thyme's increasingly desperate monologues, Bruce transforms statistics into lived experiences. This approach feels especially relevant in our post-Flint era, where lead poisoning's effects are no longer theoretical but real tragedies affecting American communities. The production reminds us that every statistic represents actual people, children, mothers, and communities—whose stories demand our response.

The supporting cast transforms this environmental drama into a richly layered exploration of community and health disparities. As Ollie, Stetson Pierre brings nuance to the role of Thyme's truck-driving father, portraying a man caught between providing for his family and confronting the environmental hazards he's learned to accept. Quenna Lené Barrett, a seasoned Chicago performer and educator, infuses Marjorie with quiet strength, while Rita Wicks delivers an outstanding performance as Shaneequa, Thyme's equally pregnant best friend with an usual condition. Together, these characters weave a powerful narrative about Black maternal health that extends far beyond one family's story, reflecting stark realities about healthcare access in America. Their interwoven experiences echo through recent headlines about water crises and pandemic outcomes, making the play's message devastatingly timely.

Brian Sidney Bembridge's set design, though technically impressive, failed to capture the cramped intimacy of a Harlem apartment. The oversized space worked unexpectedly well as a neutral backdrop, allowing Willow James's sound design to truly shine. James created an immersive urban atmosphere through layered audio: subway rumbles, hospital monitors, and children's distant laughter. These sounds, more than the set itself, anchored the production in its Harlem setting.

The play’s educational aspects, which could feel like public service announcements in less skilled hands, become integral to character development here. Thyme’s knowledge isn’t just information dumping; it’s her way of trying to control an increasingly uncontrollable situation. Her scientific facts become a form of incantation, as if understanding the problem thoroughly enough might somehow solve it. But as history has shown—from Flint to East Palestine—knowledge alone is not enough.

"Splash Hatch on the E Going Down" at Definition Theatre is a reckoning. It challenges us to consider how many of the environmental and healthcare issues Corthron identified in the ‘90s remain unresolved. Under Bruce’s direction, this production transforms a historically significant play into an urgent contemporary conversation, proving that sometimes the most powerful way to look forward is to look back with clear eyes. It’s about TIME!

Recommended

When: Through April 13

Where: Definition @ 55th, 1160 E. 55th St.

Running time: 1 hour, 45 minutes

Tickets: $25 - $35

definitiontheatre.org

 

*This review is also featured on https://www.theatreinchicago.com/!

Published in Theatre in Review

I’m going to do my best to not provide any spoilers in my review of “Fairview” the 2019 Pulitzer Prize winning play by Jackie Sibblies Drury. It’s going to be hard. Definition Theatre’s production under the direction of Tyrone Phillips will certainly challenge its audience. This production starts in heightened realism, flows into surrealism, runs head on into the absurd before landing a moralistic gut punch. It would be unfair of me to describe the twist, turns and surprises. Everyone should be given a fair view of this excellent production for themselves.

Director Tyrone Phillips has staged “Fairview” as a play within a play. We are introduced to the home of The Frasier Family. It is a nice, if somewhat simple home. The type of home you may find in so many television sit-coms. It becomes obvious the Frasers are middle class African Americans once we meet high anxiety Beverly (Kandice Robins) and her hen-pecked, doting husband Dayton (David Goodloe). They are straight out of central casting, Perfect. If you closed your eyes and just listened to them, you would be hard pressed to guess their race. Yeah…those Black people.

Beverly is preparing a birthday dinner for her mother, the family matriarch, and everything must be perfect because, well, what would people think. As Beverly sits cutting carrots listening to Stevie Wonder’s “Happy Birthday” the channel on the radio changes and starts to play the traditional “Happy Birthday Song. It rattles Beverly for a minute, but the music quickly changes back, and she continues her preparation of the dinner as if nothing happened. Her sister, Jasmine (Martasia Jones) arrives with a bottle of rose wine to kick the party off. It is obvious Jasmine is a little more spirited (o.k. she’s ghetto)

than her proper sister. She’s opinionated, gossipy, loud and (well, ghetto.) We next meet Keisha, (Jada Jackson) the teenage daughter any family would want. She has the usual teenage problems but it’s clear she’s very smart and focused.

The family has the usual conversations any middle-class family would have. Beverly is hoping her lawyer brother, Tyrone makes the party. Keisha wants her Aunt Jasmine to ask her mother to allow her to take a gap year after graduation. Dayton is helping his wife as much as he can. Jasmine and Beverly have an on-going rivalry. Beverly gets more anxious as things aren’t going perfectly. When she realizes the cake has burnt she faints, chopped carrots fly everywhere. Lights down!

The lights come halfway up on stage. And for the next five to ten minutes stagehands reset the set. This happens right before our eyes. The genius of Phillips is giving the audience the opportunity to have a conversation while this is going on. Nothing truly remarkable happened in the first act. Its unremarkable nature was, in fact, was quite remarkable. There are going to be some interesting conversations going on during this non-intermission.

The actors start the show from the top, except this time they are doing it in silence. There are two new audience members seated arguably in the best seats in the house. As everyone’s conversation has subsided, these new audience members conversation is just starting. We’ll call the more aggressive White male, Jimbo (Max Stewart) and the more liberal leaning White women, Suze (Barbara Figgins). The topic of Jimbo’s conversation: If you can be any race, what race would you be? Poor guilt-ridden, bleeding-heart Suze is verbally abused by Jimbo. She refuses to answer, she doesn’t want to be wrong for one thing. Next to walk into this conversation is a white man we’ll call Mack (Collin Quinn Rice). He clearly knows what race he wants to be, Latinx, not Latino, Latinx. He practically fetishizes the Latinx. Rounding out this coterie, is European born Bets (Carly Cornelius). Asked the same question, Bets answer is probably the weirdest or rather the most interesting. She eventually comes around.

Initially, this conversation seems to have no bearing on the Frasier family’s affairs, with their prying questions and uneasy answers. I was tempted to disregard the actions on stage for the action happening in the audience. However, as Act ll progresses, the two plotlines converge and interact, creating some of the most hilarious comedy I’ve seen on stage in a very long time.

“Fairview” is an exploration on the white gaze. Writer Jackie Sibblies Drury has let us in on the private thoughts of white people. We get an idea of how people create whole scenarios based solely on race, especially the Black race. They weren’t even listening to The Frasiers. They made up the story to suit their individual biases. Director Phillips has made the “white gaze” an actual gaze done by actual white audience members. We see how matter of factly racist tropes are spewed especially when it’s “just amongst us”. This play is also an exploration in the art of the mindfuck. The Urban Dictionary describes a mindfuck as something to confuse or reshape your thought the way the "mind-fucker" wants you to think. making you question, doubt, or acquire a new set of ideas based on what the perpetrator has told you. Susan Lori Parks did a mindfuck with Topdog/Underdog. By naming her characters Lincoln and Booth, she tells us what is going to happen. Yet we act like we don’t know what will happen. Jackie Sibbles Drury is a bit more sly but equally effective.

This production is excellent. The ensemble was perfect. The Choreography by Jyreika Guest, who was magic in “How Blood Goes” another excellent production, was engaging and fun. Special recognition must go to Props Designer Mariah Bennett (you’ll understand when you see the show). The costumes by Alexandria Richardson ran the gamut from plain to unforgettable.

 Theater should challenge and inspire. Theater should beg you to question and dare you to act. Theatre should teach and enlighten. “Fairview” does all these things and if you have a heart it will move you, and don’t we deserved to be moved…….. ain’t it time!

HIGHLY RECCOMMENDED

When: Through May 28

Where: The Revival, 1160 E. 55th Street Chicago

Running time: 120 minutes

Tickets: $35

Contact: definitiontheatre.org

Published in Theatre in Review

 

 

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