Decades before the enactment of Title IV, famous for its impact on expanding opportunities for women and girls in sports and well before the inaugural game of the WNBA, an African American women became the first to play for a professional baseball team.
“Toni Stone”, written by award winning playwright Lydia Diamond is receiving a rip-rousing production at the Goodman Theatre. Arguably, this is Lydia Diamond’s finest work, and that is saying a mouthful. She has consistently written engaging, thought-provoking work, adding beauty and depth to the American theatre canon.
We meet Toni Stone as she introduces herself and her teammates in a circus like atmosphere. She narrates the story of her life with The Indianapolis Clowns, a baseball team much like the Harlem Globetrotters. Although they play baseball and are darn good at it, their main job is to entertain. This was before African Americans were allowed to play in the all-white baseball leagues. We meet a cast of characters that are the most interesting characters I’ve seen on stage in a very long time.
Diamond wrote Stone as a beautifully complex, conflicted character. I don’t believe Toni Stone ever saw herself as sexual. She knew she wasn’t a man, but she also knew she was so much more than what was expected of a woman. She saw herself simply as a baseball player. She expected everyone to see her as a baseball player. When she meets Alberga, a male suitor that falls in love with her, she is thrown a curveball. Along with her only woman friend Millie, she navigates life as a baseball player and wife. Baseball came easy, being a wife was a bit more challenging.
This is Toni’s story, but it couldn’t be told without the assistance of a team of rambunctious, opinionated, athletic men. Under award-winning director Ron OJ Parsons’ assured and exuberant direction we are transported back to the late 1940’s.
With the help of movement director, Cristin Carole, Parson’s has his cast dancing, singing, juggling and doing acrobatics as if by second nature. This is a fun show to watch. The Actors morph into a variety of characters with striking ease.
It would be unfair not to mention some of the uniformly excellent the cast by name. Tracey Bonner is a joy as Toni Stone. Her warmth and enthusiasm are evident in this role. It’s hard to think of another actress embodying this character. The outrageously talented Edgar Miguel Sanchez plays a bookish Spec with steely resolve. Kai A. Ealy fresh off the Court stage in “The Island” gives us an energetic King Tut. Travis A. Knight goes from team bus driver Stretch to team owner Syd Pollock effortlessly. Chike Johnson brings a tender effect to Alberga, Toni’s admirer/husband. It was good seeing Chike on stage in Chicago again. Jon Hudson Odom plays a drunk ballplayer and Millie, Toni’s friend and confidant. The character of Millie could have gone too many ways of wrong, but for the writing of Diamond, the direction of Parsons and the acting expertise of Odom. Odom played Millie so understated that it was sublime and never caricature.
Todd Rosenthal’s set of a dugout with bleachers is masterful. This set has lots of surprises, with projections by Mike Tutaj it becomes the team bus, a boardroom, a bar but mostly a baseball playing field. Keith Parham’s lighting design was as high energy as the set, blinding white lights reminiscent of a summer day in the ballpark, quiet country roads at midnight.
Toni Stone was honored by the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1991 and was inducted into the Women’s Sports Hall of Fame in 1993. Although we have made inroads in sports, to date there are no women playing professional major league baseball.
Not only is this an entertaining piece of theatre, it’s also an important piece of theatre. How often does that happen?
When: Through Feb. 26
Where: Goodman Albert Theatre, 170 N. Dearborn
Tickets: $25 - $45
Info: goodmantheatre.org
“There’ll come a time when they will stop laughing, and that will be the time when our Antigone hits them with her words”
John- The Island
Two Black men, bound together with shackles on their feet and hands, are brought to a beach on Robben Island. The same Robben Island that housed Nelson Mandela for 26 years. For the next 15 minutes, the men are engaged in a wordless, strenuous mime of Sisyphean labor. Sisyphus was the King of Corinth. He was imprisoned for his craftiness in cheating death. His punishment, being forced to roll an enormous boulder up a hill only for it to roll down when they near the top, repeating this action for eternity. The crimes committed by our two Black men are never truly explored, but this being South Africa, under the apartheid regime of 1973, we can be sure it is something as simple as living while Black. The key word being simple. The apartheid regime was violent, and this punishment is an extension of that violence.
''The Island,'' the extraordinary protest drama created by White dissident playwright and director Athol Fugard and two Black actors, John Kani and Winston Ntshona is receiving a sharp and impressive reimaging at Court Theatre under the excellent direction of Associate Artistic Director Gabrielle Randle-Bent.
The story is built around the relationship of our two men, John, played by the talented Kai A. Ealy, and Winston, played by the equally talented Ronald L. Connor. There is a sincerity in both these men faces aiding in the interpretation of their characters. John, the more aggressive and active of the two is a relative newcomer to Robben Island, whereas Winston has been incarcerated for quite some time. They are much more than cellmates or brothers in arms. They are each other’s lifeline. They remind each other of lost humanity in an inhumane environment. While they are physically imprisoned, their imaginations cannot be restrained. They use their imagination to remain sharp and connected to the world and life they once knew. It is in their imagination these men live their fullest lives. With the opportunity to perform for the prison guards and other inmates, John chooses to do a stripped-down version of Antigone. Winston is uncomfortable playing the female Antigone.
When John’s sentence is commuted, shortening his time to three months, Winston frets about becoming a stone shell of himself. A stone, not unlike the stones he is made to cut. Realizing why he is in this predicament and knowing he will spend the rest of his life in prison because of his stance, Winston is finally motivated to play Antigone. This play is an act of defiance against the South Africa government both literally and figuratively.
Director Randle-Bent, being true to the original intent of the writers, draws the audience into the drama, having John as Creon ask direct questions to audience members. Winston as Antigone pleads her case, not so much to Creon, but to the us, the state. It has a powerful effect on the audience.
I remember the scenic designer Yeaji Kims through her work at American Blues’ production of “Fences” as well as her work with Griffin Theatre. She once again shows her unbelievable imagination. Her set, a sunbaked stone wall with an opening for the guards to look through in the background, in the center of the stage is a slab of stone teetering on a stone mound surrounded by red sand. The slab moves like a teeter-totter, serving the action of the players at their will. This set combined with the soundscape of waves crashing against stone and other island sounds by Andre Pluess and Daniel Etti-Williams give the impression of isolation on foreign shores. The movement of the sun, the unforgiving sun, was perfected by lighting designer Jason Lynch. Michael Keith Morgan is a genius. Kai and Ronald’s South African accents were EXCELLENT!
That’s all we want them to do…listen in the end.
-John
While we laugh at these characters foibles, it is important to remember these events are reality based.
It is impossible to get an accurate number of the people that suffered and died under apartheid.
Not only must we listen, but we must also remember and never forget.
Please see “The Island” at Court Theatre, it’s as important now as it was 50 years ago.
When: Thru December 4
Where: Court Theatre, 5535 S. Ellis Avenue
Tickets: $40.50 - $82.00
Info: Courttheatre.org.
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