“For me, this piece has been about honoring my own inner life and about honoring the inner life of so many Black men who experience love, or want to experience love and are looking for ways to express it and don’t really know how,” he continues. They are three-dimensional human beings who are multifaceted and have inner lives that must be honored. That’s sort of been the goal with this piece, is to really show Black men in a way that they are more than just the labels that have been put on them. He occupies a space of melancholy for much of the play. “I think while my character is called Love, I don’t think he always shows up in a way that looks like love, what we traditionally think of as looking like love. “I think what Keenan has done brilliantly with this piece is created these archetypes of men and then really turned them on their head,” he says. I feel like I have less pressure or attachment to outcomes in a certain way. They studied theater and they worked in the theater.’ I do come back to the theater with the mindset of coming back to my roots and really working on my craft and being grounded in the craft of the work that I do. I want to study theater, I want to be on the stage to sort of get my chops and pay my dues in a way. “Before, when I was on the stage, I was doing it because I thought, ‘this is what I need to do to become a good actor. I have a better understanding of who I am as an artist and what I want to say and how I want to say it,” he says. “I see myself a lot more clearly now I think. Since Burnside was last onstage in 2016, his life has changed dramatically, thanks to a little show called “Pose.” The 32-year-old became a sensation along with the rest of the series’ cast, as the show won multiple Emmys and became a cultural fixture (its final episode aired earlier this year).īurnside says returning to the theater following the ending of “Pose” is a therapeutic experience in many ways. Mostly people just say how grateful they are to get to witness it and get to see these portrayals of these Black men on stage.”Īlisha Boe Makes Her Period Piece Debut With 'The Buccaneers' It’s been a really cool cross section of feedback. People are laughing a lot and they’re talking back to us in the theater, which I love. “It’s been really interesting the way that this piece is affecting people. “One of the responses that I’ve heard a lot is that a lot of people have said, ‘wow, I know all of these men on the stage.’ A lot of Black folks who have come to see the show and they’re like, ‘that’s my brother’ or ‘this character is me’ or ‘this character is my father,’” Burnside says. The actor Dyllón Burnside, one of the play’s seven cast members, says it’s like this every single night - and it hits home the magic of being back onstage again, telling a story that is making history on Broadway. From the moment the show begins the audience inside the John Golden Theatre is engaged: talking back to the actors, murmuring in agreement, reacting in emotion. Broadnax 3rd, is far from a silent experience. Taking in “Thoughts of a Colored Man,” the Broadway play from playwright Keenan Scott 2nd and director Steve H.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |