Total Rating: 
*3/4
Opened: 
August 6, 1999
Ended: 
August 7, 1999
Country: 
USA
State: 
North Carolina
City: 
Winston-Salem
Company/Producers: 
Step And One Half Productions
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
National Black Theater Festival
Theater Address: 
Reynolds Auditorium
Phone: 
(336) 723-2266
Running Time: 
90 min
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
Daniel Walter Owens
Director: 
Seret Scott
Review: 

 This ripening script pits a UN colonel against an African chieftain in a drama mirroring the long strife in Angola and the futility of well-intentioned mediation. John Amos, of "Good Times" fame, gets the opportunity to stretch beyond comedy and unleash the full power of his manly stage presence as General Motambi. But the spell is too often broken by Amos having to call upon an offstage prompter to read him his next line. And playwright Walter Owens gives him far too many lines to remember. We quickly get the picture: Lindstrom has the food Motambi needs for his people, but Lindstrom needs more cooperation from Motambi to complete his investigation of reported atrocities and clear the general's name.

Round and round we go until this deadlock is broken. About 15 minutes of circuitous babble could be cut from this sometimes tedious 90 minutes of dialogue -- and another five could be clipped if actors Amos and Madison Mason picked up the pace and got securely off book. Into that void, Owens needs to pour more plot. Meanwhile director Seret Scott needs to demand more variety from the players. Every time Amos invokes the 30 years of his personal struggles -- or the 500 years of Portuguese colonialism -- it's with the exact same inflection.

Cast: 
John Amos (General Motambi), Madison Mason (Colonel Lindstrom).
Technical: 
Setting: Arthur Reese; Sound: Leon Smith; Production Mgr: John Harris; Assoc Production: Elisabete De Sousa; Step and One half Productions.
Critic: 
Perry Tannenbaum
Date Reviewed: 
August 1999