Def Poetry Jam on Broadway is a poetic outpouring of ethnic frustration and rage -- the pain of the poor. The darker people (black, Latin, Asian, Arabic and various mixtures) and their working-class neighbor express their inner turbulence and anger -- for people in high-priced Broadway seats. It's made up of very inventive poems of protest, life, love, all parallel to or tangential from the main stream, performed by their creators, including a teeny Puerto Rican woman (Mayda Del Valle) who is very heavy and a big heavy guy (Poetri) who is the lightness in the show. A pretty Jamaican lesbian, Staceyann Chin, strongly throws out her POV, and the one white guy, Steve Coleman, presents a working-class insight and irony. These people are all poetry champs from different parts of the U.S., and they do indeed belong on Broadway, each in his or her own way expressing thoughts and feelings of our times, the drama of life today, with the rhythm of the streets, the bounce of today: the hip of the hop and the hop of the hip.
Images:
Opened:
November 2002
Ended:
May 4, 2003
Country:
USA
State:
New York
City:
New York
Company/Producers:
Russell Simmons, Stan Lathan in assoc w/ Kimora Lee Simmons, Island Def Jam Music Group, Brett Ratner & David Rosenberg. Exec Prod/GM: Roy Gabay.
Theater Type:
Broadway
Theater:
Longacre Theater
Theater Address:
220 West 48th Street
Running Time:
2 hrs
Genre:
Performance
Director:
Stan Lathan
Review:
Cast:
Beau Sia, Black Ice, Staceyann Chin, Steve Colman, Mayda Del Valle, Georgia Me, Suheir Hammad, Lemon, Poetri. DJ: Tendaji.
Technical:
Set: Bruce Ryan; Costumes: Paul Tazewell; Lighting: Yael Lubetzky; Sound: Elton P. Halley; PR: Pete Sanders Group; Mktg: Tracey Mendelsohn & Monique Martin; PSM: Alice Elliott Smith; PM: Theatersmith, Inc.
Other Critics:
THEATERSCENE.NET Simon Saltzman + / TOTALTHEATER David Lefkowitz +
Critic:
Richmond Shepard
Date Reviewed:
January 2003