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When Herald Loomis arrives at an African-American Pittsburgh boardinghouse, after seven years' impressed labor on Joe Turner's chain gang, he is a free man--in body.

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8 reviews
short on action, long on dialog...this play is what I'd call a dramatic character study, and very powerful in laying out a slice of life in the early 20th century for a handful of black people who cross paths in a Pittsburgh boarding house. These people, while technically "free", still have to deal daily with obstacles and perils arising out of discrimination and intolerance; we get to hear a heart-wrenching tale of a married couple separated by the underhanded actions of Joe Turner, who tricks black men into dice games, has them arrested and "sold" into a form of bondage which is only marginally less cruel than outright slavery because it does have an end date built in. "Joe Turner's come and gone" explains to many a woman why her man show more has disappeared and left no word behind. Wilson's world is so rich, and unlike many plays (for me, at least) it works very well on the page. show less
This play, the 2nd chronologically in Wilson's ten-play cycle, is a character study of the inhabitants of a boarding house in Pittsburgh in 1911. I worked on the Broadway production of this play. The lyricism of the play stays with me, but I have trouble remembering the sequence of events, perhaps because the play is an exploration of losing yourself in spirituality, with an ambiguous point of view. Most unforgettable lines: "Say when you look at a fellow, if you taught yourself to look for it, you can see his song written on him. Tell you what kind of man he is in the world. Now I can look at you, Mr. Loomis, and see you a man who done forgot his song. Forgot how to sing it. A fellow forget that and he forget who he is. Forget how he's show more supposed to mark down life..." show less
The use of magical realism in August Wilson's drama about the African American experience in a post-Civil War Pittsburgh is not the only surprising rhetorical technique utilized by the playwright. Wilson infuses his characters with religious allegory to underscore the suffering brought on by slavery and discrimination. Colloquial language abounds, as does the symbolism - it is mainly these devices that drive forward what would otherwise be a play sparse in story. The characters never seem to jump off the page with that subjective "aliveness" that we come to expect from theatre. They feel more like tools to serve the writer's objective more than actual human beings with flaws. The only sense of reality comes from the females, who seem to show more speak the truth plainly more than their male counterparts, who use extended metaphors in their speech to convey the injustices of the time period. The play makes for a quick and very interesting read, but never seems to get right into the heads of any one person. show less
This play of August Wilson is set in 1911 at the home of Seth and Bertha Holly. Seth rents out rooms in his house and Bertha provides two meals a day. Bynum, a rootworker, and Jeremy a young kid who works on the road and plays guitar are living at Seth's when the play begins. The story centers around Harold Loomis who is looking for his wife Martha. He and his daughter Zonia move in to Seth's house at the beginning of the play. Harold pays Rutherford Selig, who is a traveling salesman and a people finder, to find his wife.
During the play Harold goes into a spell and Bynum talks him out of it. Seth doesn't like Harold going into a spell and tells him he will have to move. Zonia gets to know Reuben, the boy next door, who kisses her and show more says she will be his wife. Jeremy picks up with one woman and then runs off with Molly Cunningham who is real slick.
The play takes place in Seth's kitchen or in the back yard. August Wilson is an excellent playwright. I don't say that lightly. I enjoyed spending time in the world of Seth, Bertha and the others. Seth and Bynum play dominoes while Bynum sings " Joe Turner's Come and Gone". Everybody eats a biscuit with grits and gravy for breakfast and fried chicken on Sunday. It's a friendly place.
Wilson's skill is in making the play an authentic portrayal of this experience. I felt that this play focused on the issue of personal power. It included several incidents that illustrated how racism deprived African Americans of power over their lives. To make sure you can't forget at the end we learn who Joe Turner is and get a real cruel example of white supremacy at work in the lives of some nice people who just happened to be African American. Read this play and then talk about the good old days.
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Absolutely stunning literary, emotional, educational, historical experience. I need to read, or ideally see, more of August Wilson’s plays.
This play is set in the second decade of the Century Cycle that covers the African American experience in the United States during the 1900s.

In the 1910s, African Americans are still searching for lost and separated family during slavery. They are still trying to find their place and their purpose. Identity and Spirituality are two strong themes like in many of Wilson's plays.

I have enjoyed the first two and am sure they would be even better seen than read.
A truly wonderful play that mixes reality and the supernatural.

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Author Information

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28+ Works 5,922 Members
Playwright August Wilson was born on April 27, 1945 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His experiences of living in a primarily black community and then being the only black student in his class at a Roman Catholic high school would inform his dramatic writings. He dropped out of school at the age of 15 and continued his education on his own. Wilson show more wrote a ten play cycle that chronicles each decade of the black experience in the 20th century. Each of his plays focuses on what he perceived as the largest issue to confront African-Americans in that decade. He won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama for Fences and Piano Lesson, the best play Tony Award for Fences, and seven New York Drama Critics' Circle awards. He also received the Whiting Foundation Award, the American Theatre Critics Award, the 1999 National Humanities Medal awarded by the President, and numerous honorary degrees. He died of liver cancer on October 2, 2005 at the age of 60. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Awards and Honors

Series

Work Relationships

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1988-10
People/Characters
Seth Holly; Bertha Holly; Bynum Walker; Rutherford Selig; Jeremy Furlow; Herald Loomis (show all 11); Zoonia Loomis; Mattie Campbell; Reuben Scott; Molly Cunningham; Martha Loomis
Important places
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA (1911); Pennsylvania, USA
Dedication
For my daughter, Sakina Ansari, with love and gratitude for her understanding.
First words
The lights come up on the kitchen.

Classifications

Genre
Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
812.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican drama in English20th Century1945-1999
LCC
PS3573 .I45677 .J64Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
515
Popularity
58,346
Reviews
7
Rating
(3.97)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
5
UPCs
1
ASINs
9