Negro Ensemble Company

The Negro Ensemble Company is a New York City-based theater company. Established in 1967 by playwright Douglas Turner Ward, producer/actor Robert Hooks, and theater manager Gerald S. Krone, the company focuses on themes in "black life".

In 2005, the ensemble was among 406 New York City arts and social service institutions to receive part of a $20 million grant from the Carnegie Corporation, which was made possible through a donation by New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg. [1] [2]

Contents

Notable alumni

Current News

The Historic Negro Ensemble Company will celebrate its repertoire of work ranging from Sundown Names and Night-Gone Things and The First Breeze of Summer by Leslie Lee, Home by Samm-Art Williams, and Zooman and the Sign by Charles Fuller this 2008-2009 Season. Sundown Names and Night-Gone Things presented at Castillio Theatre on 42nd Street, featured TV celebrity, Nathan Purdy. The company's productions of WEBEIME and First Breeze of Summer produced by The Signature Theatre, with Leslie Uggams won several Audelco Awards. Company founder Douglas Turner Ward recently awarded Antoinette Nwandu the first Leslie Lee Award for Emerging Playwrights for her play Flat Sam at NYU/ Tisch School of the Arts. Negro Ensemble Company offices are located at 303 West 42 Street Suite 501. The company's Artistic Director is Charles Weldon, actor of Soldier's Play, Radio Golf and many others plays and films. Charles Weldon is a long time alum of NEC since the 70's. NEC's Executive Directors have included: Leon Denmark, O.L Duke and Freidsa Nerangis. Frieda Nerangis (who died in August 2010)the company's acting Executive Director is Leslie Lee; Office Managers, Beverly Summers and Anthony Jones; Design and Graphics, Kimberlyn Crawford; Director of Education and Program Development, Marie McKinney. Interns include Soyini Crenshaw, Nicholas Miles Newton, Ed Robinson. www.necinc.org webmaster, Tim Gamory; www.necartz.com webmaster and founder,Acting Instructor and founder of NEC Arts-in-Ed, NEC Rep re-launch and alum of NEC Marie McKinney.

History

The company's combination professional theater group and training program located at St. Mark's Place, started (with funds from the Ford Foundation) on May 14, 1967 , when Robert Hooks knocked down the walls of his village apartment to teach young actors like Hattie Winston. The NEC's first production at St. Mark's Playhouse in New York's Greenwich Village was called Happy Ending and Day of Absence by Douglas Turner Ward. It was produced by The Group Theare Workshop founded by Robert Hooks in the summer of 1964 and again in November of 1965 through January 1967. The Negro nsemble Company In a New York Times article (August, 1966) Douglas Turner Ward explained: "...that until there was a Black-oriented theate of some permanence, the vagaries of the commercial and non-commercial White thetre would not allow our participation on a regular basis -- and that the least of what was needed was Black autonomy, a theatre where Black artists could decide and promote and oversee their own dsiny in the theatre. Out of this cam=e the plan of The Ngo Ensemble Company." This cutting edge, Black theare showing a variety of experiences from a Black point of view was located downtown and competitive with other downtown NYC theatres. Original members of the Resident Company in 1968 were: Frances Foster, Rosalind Cash, William Jay Marshall, Arthur French, Esther Rolle, Clarice Taylor, Allie Woods, Hattie Winston, Anita Wilson, Mari Toussaint, Samuel Blue, Jr, Damon Brazwell, Norman Bush and Julius Harris; production stage manager, Edmund Cambridge and stage manager, James S. Lucas. Original Training Program Faculty were: John Blair, Lonne Elder, Margaret Harris, Luther James, Louis Johnson, Kristin Linklater, Ron Mack, Paul Mann, Lloyd Richards, Michael A. Schultz, Charles Vincent; Assistants: steve carter, Robbie McCauley, Cleo Quitman, Gloria Schultz. By 1969, the company had won the Drama Desk Award, Vernon Rice Award, Lambda Kappa Mu Citation, Brandeis University Creative Arts Award and the Tony Award. Since then the Theater moved to Theatre 4 on 55th St between 9th and 10 Avenues in NYC with many acclaimed alumni, like Angela Bassett, Keith David, Adolph Caesar, Graham Brown, Samuel L. Jackson, Delroy Lindo, Carol Maillard, Michelle Shay, L. Scott Caldwell, Phylicia Rashad, Barbara Montgomery, Ching Valdez, Count Stovall, Charles Weldon, Malik Yoba, Laurence Fishburne, Lou Gossett, Jr., designers: Judy Dearing, Myrna Collie Lee, Charles McClennahan, Shirley Pendergast, Marie McKinney, Ves Weaver, Lisa Watson.The "NEC Monthly Meet was launched in 2009 (by Marie McKinney)at The Riverside Church , in an effort empower professional actors, writers, directors, and technical professionals to meet, partner, create and perform on an on going basis. Participants in the NEC Monthly Meets receive free training in arts business and management, arts skills and career development on teams and meet with key artist service organization staff. NEC's award winning instructors: Leslie Lee, Erik Kilpatrick, Marie McKinney, Laurence Holder and other experts provide training in acting, play writing, traditional arts and culture, and business skills. Techniques based on Michael Chekhov, Bea Richards, Cicely Berry, Stella Adler, Stanislavsky methods are used to expand the professional actor's abilities in character development, voice production and articulation, dramaturgy, period work, dialects, classic world literature, and improvisation. Like the original NEC Training program, current workshops and labs explore basic elements of African, Native and Latin Dance and music, martial arts. NEC Training Program participants are encouraged to do weekly field research exploring the African's role in world history through field trips to collect samples of dialects and living culture in action, also fact finding at research libraries and museums. Their finds are shared with the group to give the actors a variety of tools to powerfully express their unique voice. The NEC Classic Play Readings come from original works by emerging playwrights in both The NEC Training Program's Play Writing and Acting Workshops and the NEC archives. The NEC Archives features brilliant known and lesser known writers like: Paul Carter Harrison, Alice Childress, Derek Walcott, Ed Bullins, Gail Davis, Charles Fuller, Pearl Cleage, Douglas Turner Ward, Leslie Lee, Maggie Lee Hunkins, Ali Walduo, Joseph A Walker, Lennox Brown, Steve Carter, Hal DeWindt, Ron Milner, Loften Mitchell, Peter Weiss, Yvette Evsns, Trevor Rhone. Plays from the NE Archives and Emerging Actor's and Playwrights from The NEC Training Program are presented regularly. NEC's Arts-in-Education program founded by O.L Duke, Robert Whaley and Marie McKinney features classic shows and residencies facilitated by professional performers for elementary, middle and high school students in the NYC public school system. 10-20 week Residencies are custom designed to augment the school's curriculum, through hands-on participation in artistic, literary and technical skills. Students created TV productions including original music, writing and choreography were aired on MNN cable network, live performances, newsletters and middle school students were included in on-the job training.The website www.necartz.com was started in August 2008 to connect professional performing artists with resources to produce their work as creative entrepreneurs. Information on grants and opportunities, artist service organizations, events, workshops, articles, social networking and other resources are included on www.necartz.comand during NEC Monthly Meets at Riverside, founded and facilitated by Marie McKinney. Internships and on the job training are available at the Negro Ensemble Company offices. The Following is a quote from Douglas Turner Ward in the New York Times August 14, 1966: "If any hope, outside of chance individual fortune, exists for Negro playwrights as a group - or, for that matter, Negro actors and other theater craftsmen - the most immediate, pressing, practical absolutely minimally essential active first step is the development of a permanent Negro company of at least off-Broadway size and dimension.Not in the future, but now. "A theater evolving not out of negative need, but positive potential; better equipped to employ existing talents and spur the development of future ones. A theater whose justification is not the gap it fills, but the achievement it aspires toward - no less high than any other comparable theater company of present of past world fame. "A theater concentrating primarily on themes of Negro life, but also resilient enough to incorporate and interpret the best of world drama - whatever the source. A theater of permanence, continuity, providing the necessary home-base for the Negro artist to launch a campaign to win his ignored brothers and sisters as constant witnesses to his endeavors...so might the Negro, a most potential agent of vitality infuse life into the moribund corpus of American theater."

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