Joe Turner's Come and Gone
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Joe Turner's Come and Gone is a play by Pulitzer Prize winning playwright August Wilson. The original working title of the play was Mill Hand's Lunch Bucket, the title of a painting by Romare Bearden. [1]
It is the second installment of his decade-by-decade chronicle, often called the Pittsburgh Cycle, of the African-American experience. Set in a boardinghouse in 1911 Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, it deals with a time in American history when the sons and daughters of recently freed slaves journeyed to the booming industrial cities of the North in search of prosperity, a new way of life, and, essentially, their own identities.
In the opening stage direction, Wilson says, "They arrive carrying Bibles and guitars, their pockets lined with dust and fresh hope, marked men and women seeking to scrape from the narrow, crooked cobbles and the fiery blasts of the coke furnace a way of bludgeoning and shaping the malleable parts of themselves into a new identity as free men of definite and sincere worth."[2]
Enter Herald Loomis, the play's protagonist. Herald is a tall man of thirty-two, wearing a full-length wool coat and a hat, who occasionally becomes possessed by unseen forces. Recently released from seven years of forced labor on Joe Turner's chain gang, he is searching for his wife, Martha, but more importantly, his place in the world. Loomis struggles to function normally and draws the suspicion of the owner of the boardinghouse, Seth Holly. Searching for "a world that speaks to something about himself,"[2] Loomis is determined to deliver to Martha his eleven year-old daughter, Zonia.
The play deals with a number of issues, including the unseen scars of slavery, the differences between religion and spirituality, and the struggles of beginning a new life, and all of these themes connect to the importance for African Americans of finding and understanding their African roots.
It was produced on Broadway in 1988 at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre with performances by Delroy Lindo as Herald Loomis and television and movie star Angela Bassett as Loomis's wife, Martha.
[edit] References
- ^ 3 October 2005 Obituary, The Village Voice
- ^ a b Quotes from: Wilson, August. Joe Turner's Come and Gone. New York: Plume, 1988.