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Black Jewels

Ain’t No Mo’ by Jordan E. Cooper

12/20/2022

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On Friday, December 16th at 8:00pm, two days before Ain’t No Mo’ was to close on Broadway at the Belasco Theatre, I saw it a second time.

I’m unable to tell it all in this review because there’s so much extraordinary talent, emotion, truth, blatant, funny and dramatic, that one MUST SEE to understand what is shared about this fearless play.

First of all, the inimitable Playwright, JORDAN E. COOPER, lives in each character he has created. I know from one playwright to another. At one moment responding to a call to action from the stage, I got carried away, forgot I was in theatre, and was about to run to the front of the stage until I was restrained.  That ability to foment that kind of response from the audience is genius.  The play is alive and that’s all we really need to say. At the end when Peaches goes through what she goes through (not giving it away), I was overwhelmed with every distraught, unconscious feeling of loss, but I started clapping. Somebody told my personal story.

There are multiple themes in Ain’t No Mo’ and one of them is a contemporary Marcus Garvey, Back-to-Africa movement. Black people jump up and decide: “We tired of this shit and we gawn.”  It’s also a mourning and wakeup call regarding desired change that never happened for Black people after Barack Obama became our first Black President. 

Controversial and eventually reverberating around the world, Cooper proclaims that Black folks own the exclusive right to use the word, “nigger, nigga, niggah,” and all the variations...at will.  This exclusive right MUST be defended since some folks want to demand and dictate when we can use it. How dare they try to covertly appropriate the use of our word claiming we can’t use it; it’s racist! It is ours, exclusively to use!

Ain’t No Mo’ celebrates the myriad ways Black folks have cultivated and retained our culture, all of it, from Africa to Harlem to the deep South, incarceration and the murders of our people and more all imbued in one character named Black.  Oh, I told you it’s too much to tell…that’s why you got to go see it NOW.  

Belasco Theatre, Ain’t No Mo’. 
https://aintnomobway.com/


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​​ What might James Baldwin say about our country of 2021?

12/20/2022

1 Comment

 
​As a black girl growing up in Milwaukee, Wisconsin in the 1960’s, I was mesmerized whenever I saw James Baldwin on television, a dark skinned “Negro” man with piercing, animated eyes, exuding the confidence and intellect equal to any white person I had ever seen and heard before.  Without hatred, he spoke directly into the authoritarian faces of white men challenging America’s persecution of black folk and people of color and questioning America’s humanity when she engaged in racism and brutality.
 
​I learned that James Baldwin refused to hate; however, he was intolerant of hate of any kind toward anyone. 
​Rather, he
preached a truth that we all need to run toward just about now.
 
To Baldwin, writing was more important than anything so much so he left America in 1948 because he could not write in America.  In an interview, he told Henry Louis Gates, Jr. why he left the United States.  “It was November 1948, Armistice Day, as a matter of fact. I left because I was a writer.  I had discovered writing and I had a family to save.  I had only one weapon to save them, my writing. And I couldn’t write in the United States.”
 
James knew that writing gave him a voice and power.   In Milwaukee, people in power wanted black voices shut down. We were greatly outnumbered by the “silent majority” and they were doing their best to keep us segregated in schools and neighborhoods, economically impaired and politically emasculated. There was so much oppression that I was convinced that I would never see a black man no less a woman as President of the United states.  I didn’t even dream of that possibility. However, when I witnessed James Baldwin speaking out with tenacious power, I knew I had to become a writer.
 
So, what might James Baldwin say about our country of 2020?
 
He might say that if we continue to look the other way, this country will become entrapped in a momentum of destruction, racial intolerance and hatred that we won’t be able to stop.  That the moment is now to oppose the growing, insidious will to undo civil liberties, suppress freedom of speech and withhold justice for all.  That we have no other choice than to embrace our humanity while we still have it and fearlessly fight back.
 
James Baldwin might say, “I am my brother’s keeper and if I am destroyed, my brother is too.” Read The Fire Next Time and study what Baldwin wrote about race relations in the 1960’s – almost sixty years ago – some things have changed and much remains the same.
 
We, all of us, white, black, brown, yellow, red, the glorious rainbow of mankind, must refuse to go back to hatred and bigotry.  Some might argue that we have already gone back beyond redemption. But I do not believe that.  We have been misled and are lost, but together we can find our way. We have come too far to turn back now for we surely know that our only other recourse will be the fire next time.
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