Monday, September 20, 2010

Is Tyler Perry Possessed by the Word? Thoughts on 'For Colored Girls...'



Tyler Perry's Presence is the Difference Between a Major Blockbuster and a Little Watched Film.

Possessed by the Word?: Tyler Perry does 'For Colored Girls'
by Mark Anthony Neal | TheLoop21.com

There was a collective holding of breath recently, when the trailer for Tyler Perry’s adaptation of Ntozake Shange’s For Colored Girls Who Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Was Enuff began to circulate on the internet. I was among those who were pleasantly surprised by the craftsmanship and power of the trailer, replete with a stunning vocal melding of Nina Simone’s classic “Four Women.”

The trailer is in clear contrast to what audiences have come to expect from the Tyler Perry brand. If the trailer is any indication of the quality of the film, than it might seem that our apprehensions about what would happen when Perry got his hands on this signature Black feminist text, might have been for naught. But are we witnessing a growth in Perry’ skill-set or the fact that even a “professional novice” like Perry can’t mess up a text that is so magical?

The original Broadway production of For Colored Girls…, which opened at the Booth Theater in September of 1976, inspired as much controversy as Perry’s adaptation does now. Produced two years before the publication of Michele Wallace’s Black Macho and the Myth of the Superwomen, Shange’s text represented the most explicit expression of Black Feminist discourse to find an audience in mainstream American culture. In the late 1970s—before Alice Walker’s The Color Purple appears—the work of Shange, Wallace and novelist Gayl Jones became easy targets for those who believed that Black feminism undermined Black men, who were already under assault by racism and White supremacy.

In his 1980s essay, famously titled “Aunt Jemima Don’t Like Uncle Ben” Stanley Crouch described Shange’s work as “militant mediocrity and self pity.” However critics like Crouch and others felt about Shange’s work, the power of For Colored Girls… was not lost on anyone, including a ten-year old Joan Morgan who, two decades before the publication of her groundbreaking When Chickenheads Come Home to Roost: My Life as a Hip-Hop Feminist, was disappointed in not being able to accompany her mother to a performance of the show during that initial Broadway run. Perhaps Erykah Badu was recalling a similar reaction when she channeled Shange in her music video for “Bag Lady” (2000).

Read the Full Essay @ theLoop21.com

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