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Collected Works of Langston Hughes v. 6; Gospel Plays, Operas and Later Dramatic Works
Collected Works of Langston Hughes v. 6; Gospel Plays, Operas and Later Dramatic Works
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1930s
1942
1950s
A01=Langston Hughes
African American
Art
Author_Langston Hughes
Ballet Libretoos
Black Nativity
Category=ATD
Category=DD
Category=DNL
Contemporary
Culture
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Gospel
gospel plays
Hughes
Langston Hughes
Leslie Catherine Sanders
musicals
operas
Performance
radio plays
Sanders
Simply Heavenly
Song Lyrics
Street Scene
Tambourines to Glory
Theatre
Product details
- ISBN 9780826214775
- Weight: 1200g
- Dimensions: 160 x 233mm
- Publication Date: 01 Mar 2004
- Publisher: University of Missouri Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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Although Langston Hughes had a lifelong engagement in theatre and other performance arts, his work in this area is the least known of his rich and complex contributions to African American expressive culture. This volume focuses on Hughes's plays after 1942, along with all of his other work written for performance, including operas, musicals, radio plays, ballet libretti and song lyrics, all of which demonstrate his strong determination to inject an African American presence into a range of cultural forms. In 1943, Hughes brought into being what would become his most famous character, Jesse B. Semple - not for the stage, but for a newspaper column he would write for the ""Chicago Defender"" for 15 years and then for the ""New York Post"" until 1965. Hughes revised and collected the stories into four books, and following the success of his second collection, ""Simple Takes a Wife"", composed a play of the same name, which he later turned into the musical ""Simply Heavenly"". Although well known, this work was atypical of Hughes's interests during the postwar period. It was African American music that engaged him, particularly gospel music, which was, in the 1950s, acquiring significant crossover success. Aside from a few educational or occasional pieces, virtually all of Hughes's stage writing after 1942 incorporated music in some form. He wrote five complete operas, as well as musicals, gospel plays, several cantatas, two very successful Broadway productions, and the more than 30 plays that he provided to community theatres and collegiate, church and amateur groups. It was inevitable that HUghes, the most prolific of African American playwrights at that time, would seek to employ the music genre that dominated Broadway during the 1940s and 1950s to tell his own kind of stories. Hughes's intense engagement with theatre and other performance arts lasted more than 35 years. In every genre he attempted, Hughes left unforgettable and inspiring work, giving rise to the range and richness of contemporary African American theatrical achievement.
Leslie Catherine Sanders is on the faculty at York University and is the cofounder of the Centre for the Study of Black Cultures in Canada. She is the author of The Development of Black Theater in America and coeditor of The Collected Works of Langston Hughes, Volume 5, The Plays to 1942: Mulatto to The Sun Do Move
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