Pill Hill (play)

Pill Hill
Written by Sam Kelley
Characters Charlie, Joe, Al, Tony, Ed, and Scott
Date premiered 1990
Place premiered Yale Repertory Theatre
Original language English
Setting Pill Hill, Chicago 19731983

Pill Hill is a three-act play by American dramatist Sam Kelley. Set in a neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago known informally as Pill Hill, the play examines the failures, successes, and relationships of six African American steel mill workers as they transition from blue-collar jobs to white-collar professions between 1973 and 1983. The play is regarded as an allegory of economic progress related to the American Dream.

Pill Hill debuted at the 1990 Yale Repertory Theatre Winterfest series of plays in progress, and was subsequently performed in several venues across the United States.[1][2][3] The play was published by Dramatic Publishing Company in 1995.[4]

Characters

Plot

Pill Hill (red) within the Calumet Heights community area
.

The Pill Hill neighborhood was a popular residence for successful white physicians (resulting in the nickname for the neighborhood). In the 1960s and 1970s, it was a symbol of affluence that represented the American Dream. For young blacks, this symbol was especially poignant, which provides for a subtext in this play.[5]

The three-act play examines the failures, successes, and relationships of six black steel mill workers in Chicago as they transition from blue-collar jobs to the white-collar professions. The time is 1973, 1978, and 1983, and the scene is a Chicago basement apartment where the characters meet to socialize over cards and drinks. Racial themes relating to the disparity of life at the steel mill are presented, and dreams about possibilities represented by the upscale Pill Hill neighborhood in Chicago are examined. The conflicts are painful as the characters deal with leaving the comfortable life of the mill to embark on a road of uncertainty while pursuing professional aspirations.[1][2][3][6]

Performance and publication history

The play debuted in the 1990 Yale Repertory Theatre Winterfest series of plays in progress. It was mounted as a full production in another Connecticut theater, before travelling as productions of the Philadelphia Theatre Company and the Penumbra Theatre Company in St. Paul, Minnesota. The play had a late-1992 production by the Hartford Stage Company,[1] and a 2010 production at Coppin State University.[7] Dramatic Publishing Company published the play on February 23, 1995.[4] The publisher lists it as a full-length drama intended for both high school and college/adult audiences.[6]

Critical reception

John Beer of Time Out Chicago attended a performance in 2009 and wrote, "At its best, Pill Hill draws a corrosive picture of individual lives caught within merciless social systems. Racism haunts the men's periodic get-togethers, most pointedly in a monologue about a Southern excursion gone terribly wrong. [...] [W]riting at the height of the Reagan-Bush years, Kelley saw clearly the impact of right-wing policies on the urban working class." He thought the individuality of the characters was undeveloped, but the play was "neatly structured to a fault". He criticized what he perceived as a "heavy authorial hand" in the repetition of a conversation about one character's self-doubts throughout the play.[2]

Analysis

Pill Hill is an allegory of economic progress told as tales of various pursuits of the American Dream. Kelley uses a spectrum of sociological types that he develops into complex, recognizable personalities in order to deliver his message in natural idioms.[5] When the play was performed in 2005 at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, the website description noted that a good life in Pill Hill was a common goal that was difficult to reach and when achieved, it was at a cost that could be one's soul.[8]

The conflicts range from economic difficulties to the proverbial glass ceiling common to blacks climbing the ladder of success.[6] The changing professional situations coincide with relationship transitions that occurred in America as the hippie generation transformed into the yuppie generation.[6] Four of the six characters become successful by 1983: Al is a real estate dealer, Tony is Mercedes Benz salesman, Ed is a groundbreaking black lawyer and Scott has achieved financial success in a suspicious and mysterious way. The other characters are less successful with Charlie, who is the oldest of the characters, having stayed in the mill without progressing up the ranks, but earning a secure life through hard and dangerous work. Joe's troubles at the mill lead to unemployment and a destiny with the homeless shelter.[3] A 1994 Chicago performance elicited the following character descriptions from the Chicago Reader: Joe is boisterous; Charlie is fatherly; Al is the eternal runner-up; Tony is ingenuously amoral; Scott is innocent and Eddie is the play's "spokesman."[5]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Klein, Alvin (November 22, 1992). "Theater; Life in One Chicago Neighborhood". The New York Times. Retrieved May 10, 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 Beer, John (July 2–8, 2009). "Theater review: Pill Hill". Time Out Chicago. Archived from the original on July 21, 2009. Retrieved May 10, 2010.
  3. 1 2 3 Rawson, Christopher (May 25, 2007). "Stage Review: 'Pill Hill' has highs but lacks bonding". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved May 10, 2010.
  4. 1 2 "Pill Hill". Amazon.com. Retrieved July 20, 2010.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Barnidge, Mary Shen (June 16, 1994). "Pill Hill; Dark Matter". Chicago Reader. Retrieved July 21, 2010.
  6. 1 2 3 4 "Pill Hill". Dramatic Publishing. Retrieved July 20, 2010.
  7. Williams, Shernay (April 1, 2010). "Pill Hill to Culminate Coppin's Theatre Season". Coppin State University. Archived from the original on May 27, 2010. Retrieved July 21, 2010.
  8. "Pill Hill by Sam Kelley". ncattheatre.org. Archived from the original on July 27, 2011. Retrieved July 21, 2010.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.