
โ โ โ โ
Saturday, Feb. 23
Living Arts Collective, Durham
Itโs to their significant credit that NCย Theatre and Theatre Raleigh commissioned a new script from renowned regional playwrights Mike Wiley and Howard L. Craft for the companiesโ โReflectionsโ series, a fledgling joint enterprise devoted to locally generated theatrical works in progress. But a different sort of commissionโthe mandate to bear witness that artists receive from their communitiesโgrabbed our attention toward the end of promising two-act drama Peace of Clay, which first greeted the world in a star-studded staged reading Saturday night at Durhamโs Living Arts Collective.
It comes when Marvin (a robust JaJuan Cofield), an exuberant boon companion of the teenageย Clay (Neeko Williams)โa budding photographer and filmmakerโhas recovered a video camera after thieves ransacked his familyโs apartment in a housing project in the fictive small town of Bullins, North Carolina. After Marvin enthuses, โYouโre the hood documentary!โ (and Clay gently corrects, โdocumentarianโ), Marvin charges the young artist: โTell our stories until they listen to them โฆ Donโt let it be for nothing.โ
The directiveย to bear witnessย repeatedly rises from theย script by two playwrights who both come from backgrounds similar to these characters. Clay tells Aisha (a sharp Destiny Diamond), a video-store coworker whoโs interested in his work, that he feels compelled to โget the stories out of these projectsโ and let the people of his deceased fatherโs hometown โsee what I see when I look at them.โ
But Peace of Clay makes it clear that it’sย not an easy task. Racial economics in the small-town South make Clayโs mom, Dean (a vivid Yolanda Rabun),ย doubt that people like them can afford to have dreams. At one point, she angrily asks Clay who he knows that has gotten out of the projects through filmmaking.ย Clayโs reply: โWho do you know thatโs tried, Mama?โ
Under Aurelia Belfieldโs direction, a strong cast of supporting characters fleshed out a vivid world of everyday people. Phillip Bernard Smith conveys the fragile ambitions of Bumbry, Deanโs long-term boyfriend, and noted actor Lakeisha Coffey excavates the internal conflicts tearing up Marvinโs mom, Sheila. Meanwhile, the gruff, comical Donnell (Cofield) is always putting the earthy, candid Connie (Kyma Lassiter), Deanโs coworker and sounding board, โon watchโ over at the local diner.
At present, Craft and Wileyโs script needs the editing and development expected of a work in progress. It episodically conveys some of the challenges of living in the projects but leaves the schisms of class between its inhabitants and those in Northside, โthe bougiest neighborhood in Bullins,” relatively unexplored. Still, Peace of Clay already reads in places like a soul-baring letter from the old neighborhood, one in whichย two artists who have risen far hold themselves accountable to the folks back home.
Correction: This piece originally misspelledย the surname of directorย Aurelia Belfield.ย


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