Itโ€™s not unusual to see gospel musical theater on the marquee at the National Black Theatre Festival, which was held last week in Winston-Salem, where it was expected to draw sixty-five thousand attendees. The form has been popular in the African-American community since its origins in the 1930s, from The Green Pastures and Langston Hughesโ€™s series of biblical stagings in the 1960s (including Black Nativity, a perennial Triangle holiday favorite) to the Tony-winning 1976 breakthrough hit Your Arms Too Short to Box with God.

That popularity has only increased in recent years, with touring productions of shows like Mama, I Want To Sing and My Grandmother Prayed for Me, which have largely clung to the values of traditional African-American churches. But Moses T. Alexander Greene, an emerging playwright at the helm of the upstart Raleigh company Li V Mahob Productions and a minister at Raleighโ€™s Baptist Grove Church, took the venerable genre in a controversial direction at the largest professional gathering of black stage artists in the world.

โ€œI want them to come expecting the same story theyโ€™ve always received: something about Jesus and singing and praying,โ€ Greene says, with no small amount of holy mischief. โ€œThen weโ€™ll give them this high-definition reflection of their own lives.โ€ย 

Greeneโ€™s drama, Pooled, was chosen from more than one hundred applications across the country for the festivalโ€™s twenty-five main-stage productions. (North Carolina Central Universityโ€™s production of Blood at the Root, about the Jena Six case, was also selected.) But Pooled was the only gospel musical chosen this year at a festival that usually puts several of them on the scheduleโ€”a significant endorsement.ย 

โ€œIt just jumped out at us when we saw it,โ€ says Jackie Alexander, artistic director for the North Carolina Black Repertory Company, the producers of the NBTF. โ€œPooled is breaking the mold of what people think traditionally in terms of gospel musicals.โ€

Greeneโ€™s script is drawn from the story of the healing pool at Bethesda as recorded in the book of John. According to that scripture, the sick would gather around its five porches in order to be the near the pool when an angel descended and troubled the waters. The first one in when the waters were stirred would be curedโ€”but because only the first would be healed, people could linger for years in search of relief.

In the Bethesda pool, Greene found a potent metaphor for our times, so he set his drama in the present. At first glance, the community around the pool seems homey, and the people thereโ€”those seeking remedy, their friends and family, and those already healedโ€”are just plain folks. Though they squabble at times, four vivid matriarchsโ€”Grandma Rose, Grandma Doll, Sister Adah, and Sister Carryโ€”seem to keep things well in hand.

Then we begin to notice the little fractures along the edges. The two grandmothers of central character Delsin, whose limp symbolizes deeper suffering, are always talking each other down. A third character sings, โ€œIโ€™ll pray for you, but I really donโ€™t like you.โ€ We gradually realize that healing means something different for each person, but it often involves finding answers to difficult questionsโ€”answers that others on stage have sometimes carefully concealed.ย 

โ€œAt the pool, you have everyday people and the stories they canโ€™t be shielded from,โ€ Greene says. โ€œWhoever you are, you canโ€™t be shielded from aging parents, from a marriage that looks good on the outside but is crumbling inside, or the sexual abuse of your children when youโ€™re not there.โ€

Thatโ€™s when a twist reminiscent of Sartreโ€™s No Exit hits us head-on: On a fundamental level, many of these characters are one anotherโ€™s jailers, whose silences, words, and deeds prevent true healing. Sister Carry (India Williams) clings to her heartbreak at the hands of her estranged husband, Deacon Carry (Darius Hooks), a man whose addiction to alcohol and porn is so debilitating that heโ€™s been repeatedly healed at the pool, but he keeps relapsing.

Freedher (Lynette Barber) is denigrated by prejudice against darker skin, and central character Delsin (played by Greene himself) has been stigmatized his whole life because he was molested by men as a child. When he poignantly asks why God permitted this, the community replies, in one strong voice, โ€œHush black man, donโ€™t you talk about that.โ€ Delsin has no choice but to conclude that โ€œthere is no place in the world and less than no place in the churchโ€ for him to talk about that dilemma.

These and other robust characters point to another signal difference between Greeneโ€™s drama and previous gospel musicals. The issues the characters raise and the people they represent have historically remained invisible in the genre.

โ€œItโ€™s changing up the narrative, and thatโ€™s important. Pooled addresses a lot of issues that most gospel musicals wouldnโ€™t dare touch,โ€ Alexander says, and it has the potential to open that sphere to a larger audience. โ€œSome people define faith-based communities very narrowly. I know people from all walks of life, people of faith, but they often feel excluded from faith-based stories and musicals.โ€

Greene partly based the musical on his and othersโ€™ past experiences in unwelcoming churches. โ€œMany of our cast members have had these moments where weโ€™ve had to learn the love of God despite the conventional church,โ€ he says. โ€œWeโ€™ve had to learn to separate God from some of the iterations of the church.โ€

โ€œWhen things get rough is when you need faith the most,โ€ Alexander observes. โ€œIt gets rough sometimes for all of us. Pooled is about the beauty of what faith can do for the characters in this play, and for us all.โ€

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Bio: Byron Woods is the INDY's theater and dance critic.Email: [email protected]: http://twitter.com/byronwoods