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http://www.blackenterprise.com/lifestyle/arts-culture/john-douglas-thompson-henrietta-lacks-julius-caesar/

John Douglas Thompson

(Photo Credit: Courtesy of HBO)

 

John Douglas Thompson has been extolled by the New York Times as “one of the most compelling classical stage actors of his generation,” and noted as “the best American actor in Shakespeare, hands down” by James Shapiro, Columbia University scholar and an international leading authority on William Shakespeare. Now, Thompson will star as Caius Cassius in New York’s upcoming Public Theater Free Shakespeare in the Park production of  Julius Caesar at the Delacorte Theater in historic Central Park, May 23–June 18. Directed by Oskar Eustis, The Public’s artistic director, this contemporized production of Julius Caesar is the first to be produced in the Park since 2000. In 2005, Thompson played the role of Flavius in Julius Caesar on Broadway alongside star Denzel Washington.

Humbled and often overwhelmed by critical praise, Thompson hopes that the production inspires more people to support and experience the classics of the theater. “If it gets a new audience to come to a classic stage company, or any theater I work at that focuses on the classics, that’s good,” says Thompson. “Ultimately, I want people to come see the work—especially people who look like me to come see the work—I’m so passionate about.”

(Photo Credit: Courtesy of HBO)

 

Recently seen on Broadway in August Wilson’s Jitney, Thompson is featured in HBO’s highly publicized theatrical release of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, premiering this weekend. He appears opposite Oprah Winfrey in the role of Lawrence Lacks, the eldest brother to Winfrey’s character, Deborah Lacks, the youngest daughter of Henrietta Lacks. Directed by Tony Award winner George C. Wolfe, and based on Rebecca Skloot’s New York Times’ best-selling book, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks features a stellar cast of theater, television, and film actors, including Rose Byrne, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Reg E. Cathey, Rocky Carroll, Courtney B. Vance, Ruben Santiago-Hudson, Leslie Uggams, Reed Birney, Adriane Lenox, and Roger Robinson. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks premieres on Saturday, April 22, at 8:00 p.m. ET/PT.

Thompson, who is featured in three pivotal scenes, says working with Winfrey was a profound experience for him. “Working with Oprah was great because it wasn’t what I expected, he says. “She was incredibly accessible, totally open, and just there for us [actors]. I found her quite wonderful as the character Deborah. She was in the moment as we were filming these scenes. She was that character. She had created a physicality and a cadence and a countenance, particularly a cadence in the way she spoke with that slightly Southern dialect. She was very good; she carries the film.”
Thompson says he was fortunate and blessed to secure the role of Lawrence for this epic project. There were many other top New York actors up for the role. Working with director Wolfe was a first for Thompson. “George is incredibly skilled, and he just knew the characters,” he says. “He knew the story. He knew those people. He knew the book. He knew the script. He knew how he wanted to frame this story, and got us all on board. We rehearsed, which is rare. His vision and what he sees, and how he captures it, is genius.”

(Photo Credit: Courtesy of John Douglas Thompson)

 

In Thompson’s upcoming production of Julius Caesar, he says he was predisposed to Shakespeare through his mother. Thompson remembers that his mother would recite Mark Antony’s speech in Julius Caesar, and he would talk with her about Shakespeare, since she had been exposed to Shakespeare in school while growing up in Jamaica, the West Indies. Thompson, like most young people his age, studied Shakespeare in English classes at both a Jesuit high school and college. “During that time, I never thought about being an actor,” he says. “I remember liking the language, liking the text, liking the words, the meanings of the words, and the poetry.”

The story of Julius Caesar resonates with today’s political climate and the social environment of activism. Written more than 400 years ago, Julius Caesar is a play about the fall of the Roman Empire. Thompson’s character, Caius Cassius, is in direct conflict with Caesar and is the first person to start the rebellion to plot his demise.

“That’s what makes [this] stage performance so fascinating because it speaks to our current time,” says Thompson. “It’s very similar to what’s happening now. It’s a story about the machinations that create the fall. The fall of the leader, the impeachment of the leader, the death of the leader. It’s about people making big mistakes, who miscalculate, based upon their personal desires. They create a situation where there’s a lot of collateral damage to themselves and those they support. It’s also about wanting better leadership, and a better future for your country, for your family, and for yourself. How was Shakespeare so prescient to know what future civilizations and countries would be going through? That’s the genius of him. That’s why he’s always in the moment. He speaks to our future. He speaks to our past, and to our present. A play like Julius Caesar, albeit it’s over 400 years old, may as well have been written on November 9th.”

John Douglas Thompson in TROILUS and CRESSIDA (Photo Credit: Joan Marcus)

 

Thompson has performed in numerous Shakespeare plays, including Macbeth, King Lear, Richard III, Antony and Cleopatra, and Troilus & Cressida, which he performed last year at Shakespeare in the Park. Best known for his extensive work in Othello, which he has performed in seven productions to date, Thompson said Othello is one of his favorite Shakespeare plays.

This fall, Thompson will star in the role of Hamlet at the American Contemporary Theater in San Francisco. Many consider Hamlet to be one of the greatest plays and one of the greatest roles ever. Thompson said Hamlet has been on his bucket list for a long time. “I have never, in my life as an actor, in the more than 20 years, have ever seen an African American or a black person play the role of Hamlet. I’ve seen many versions of Hamlet, but I have never seen someone who looks like me, represented in that role.”

Awarded the Samuel H. Scripps Award for extraordinary commitment to promoting the power of language in classical and contemporary theater, and the Robert Brustein Award for Sustained Excellence in American theater. Thompson’s other works include The Iceman Cometh, A Doll’s House, Hedda Gabler, Red Velvet, Mother Courage, Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train, Tamburlaine, Satchmo at the Waldorf, The Emperor Jones, The Father, and The Forest, among others.

Although Thompson envisions more work in television and film in his future, he says theater is his first love, which is why he will always be connected to it. “It’s the only medium that is truly a part of our human DNA. When we were in the caves, though we were Neanderthals, we told stories to each other to describe the hunts,” he explains. “In the caves, we drew pictures and made noises. Theater was always a part of our lives in describing our lives to our families or people in our tribe. Theater is an inherent way of storytelling. It’s been with us since our inception. My indoctrination to theater through August Wilson and the play I saw [Joe Turner’s Come and Gone] was profound, and that level of profoundness only came from theater because it’s a live and breathing art form. I can’t see my life as an actor without stage work. It’s just impossible to imagine. I will always be doing theater. It will always be a part of my life.”

Part of Thompson’s greatness as an actor is demonstrated through his unyielding commitment to the craft of acting and the art of discipline required to perform eight shows a week. He knows the importance of not indulging in alcohol or any other substances or distractions that prevent him from maintaining a healthy mind and body and performing at his highest level during a production.

“I want to honor the playwright who wrote the words and gave me the character to play,” he says. “I want to honor the audience who came to see a show because either they heard about it, or they’ve seen it before, and want to have the experience of being in the presence of the production again. I want to honor the other actors I’m on stage with that I’m giving my all, and I’m going to be there for them, and that there’s nothing that’s taking me out of that experience because I’m not prepared.”

Like a champion, he often says there’s a Jack Johnson in all his characters. Profoundly inspired by Johnson’s power, uniqueness, and his one-of-a-kind genius, Thompson approaches his roles with that same larger-than-life quality that Johnson exhibited in the ring and in life, whether he’s playing Othello or Tamburlaine or Hamlet or Becker. Thompson says Johnson is an archetype he often thinks about as he prepares a character for stage.

 


Gwendolyn Quinn is an award-winning media consultant with a career spanning more than 25 years. She is a contributor to BlackEnterprise.com, Black Enterprise’s BE Pulse, Huffington Post, EURWEB.com, and Medium.com. Quinn is also a contributor to Souls Revealed and Handle Your Entertainment Business.

 

 

April 23, 2017

John Douglas Thompson Opens Up About ‘The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks’ and ‘Julius Caesar’

http://www.blackenterprise.com/lifestyle/arts-culture/john-douglas-thompson-henrietta-lacks-julius-caesar/

John Douglas Thompson

(Photo Credit: Courtesy of HBO)

 

John Douglas Thompson has been extolled by the New York Times as “one of the most compelling classical stage actors of his generation,” and noted as “the best American actor in Shakespeare, hands down” by James Shapiro, Columbia University scholar and an international leading authority on William Shakespeare. Now, Thompson will star as Caius Cassius in New York’s upcoming Public Theater Free Shakespeare in the Park production of  Julius Caesar at the Delacorte Theater in historic Central Park, May 23–June 18. Directed by Oskar Eustis, The Public’s artistic director, this contemporized production of Julius Caesar is the first to be produced in the Park since 2000. In 2005, Thompson played the role of Flavius in Julius Caesar on Broadway alongside star Denzel Washington.

Humbled and often overwhelmed by critical praise, Thompson hopes that the production inspires more people to support and experience the classics of the theater. “If it gets a new audience to come to a classic stage company, or any theater I work at that focuses on the classics, that’s good,” says Thompson. “Ultimately, I want people to come see the work—especially people who look like me to come see the work—I’m so passionate about.”

(Photo Credit: Courtesy of HBO)

 

Recently seen on Broadway in August Wilson’s Jitney, Thompson is featured in HBO’s highly publicized theatrical release of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, premiering this weekend. He appears opposite Oprah Winfrey in the role of Lawrence Lacks, the eldest brother to Winfrey’s character, Deborah Lacks, the youngest daughter of Henrietta Lacks. Directed by Tony Award winner George C. Wolfe, and based on Rebecca Skloot’s New York Times’ best-selling book, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks features a stellar cast of theater, television, and film actors, including Rose Byrne, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Reg E. Cathey, Rocky Carroll, Courtney B. Vance, Ruben Santiago-Hudson, Leslie Uggams, Reed Birney, Adriane Lenox, and Roger Robinson. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks premieres on Saturday, April 22, at 8:00 p.m. ET/PT.

Thompson, who is featured in three pivotal scenes, says working with Winfrey was a profound experience for him. “Working with Oprah was great because it wasn’t what I expected, he says. “She was incredibly accessible, totally open, and just there for us [actors]. I found her quite wonderful as the character Deborah. She was in the moment as we were filming these scenes. She was that character. She had created a physicality and a cadence and a countenance, particularly a cadence in the way she spoke with that slightly Southern dialect. She was very good; she carries the film.”
Thompson says he was fortunate and blessed to secure the role of Lawrence for this epic project. There were many other top New York actors up for the role. Working with director Wolfe was a first for Thompson. “George is incredibly skilled, and he just knew the characters,” he says. “He knew the story. He knew those people. He knew the book. He knew the script. He knew how he wanted to frame this story, and got us all on board. We rehearsed, which is rare. His vision and what he sees, and how he captures it, is genius.”

(Photo Credit: Courtesy of John Douglas Thompson)

 

In Thompson’s upcoming production of Julius Caesar, he says he was predisposed to Shakespeare through his mother. Thompson remembers that his mother would recite Mark Antony’s speech in Julius Caesar, and he would talk with her about Shakespeare, since she had been exposed to Shakespeare in school while growing up in Jamaica, the West Indies. Thompson, like most young people his age, studied Shakespeare in English classes at both a Jesuit high school and college. “During that time, I never thought about being an actor,” he says. “I remember liking the language, liking the text, liking the words, the meanings of the words, and the poetry.”

The story of Julius Caesar resonates with today’s political climate and the social environment of activism. Written more than 400 years ago, Julius Caesar is a play about the fall of the Roman Empire. Thompson’s character, Caius Cassius, is in direct conflict with Caesar and is the first person to start the rebellion to plot his demise.

“That’s what makes [this] stage performance so fascinating because it speaks to our current time,” says Thompson. “It’s very similar to what’s happening now. It’s a story about the machinations that create the fall. The fall of the leader, the impeachment of the leader, the death of the leader. It’s about people making big mistakes, who miscalculate, based upon their personal desires. They create a situation where there’s a lot of collateral damage to themselves and those they support. It’s also about wanting better leadership, and a better future for your country, for your family, and for yourself. How was Shakespeare so prescient to know what future civilizations and countries would be going through? That’s the genius of him. That’s why he’s always in the moment. He speaks to our future. He speaks to our past, and to our present. A play like Julius Caesar, albeit it’s over 400 years old, may as well have been written on November 9th.”

John Douglas Thompson in TROILUS and CRESSIDA (Photo Credit: Joan Marcus)

 

Thompson has performed in numerous Shakespeare plays, including Macbeth, King Lear, Richard III, Antony and Cleopatra, and Troilus & Cressida, which he performed last year at Shakespeare in the Park. Best known for his extensive work in Othello, which he has performed in seven productions to date, Thompson said Othello is one of his favorite Shakespeare plays.

This fall, Thompson will star in the role of Hamlet at the American Contemporary Theater in San Francisco. Many consider Hamlet to be one of the greatest plays and one of the greatest roles ever. Thompson said Hamlet has been on his bucket list for a long time. “I have never, in my life as an actor, in the more than 20 years, have ever seen an African American or a black person play the role of Hamlet. I’ve seen many versions of Hamlet, but I have never seen someone who looks like me, represented in that role.”

Awarded the Samuel H. Scripps Award for extraordinary commitment to promoting the power of language in classical and contemporary theater, and the Robert Brustein Award for Sustained Excellence in American theater. Thompson’s other works include The Iceman Cometh, A Doll’s House, Hedda Gabler, Red Velvet, Mother Courage, Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train, Tamburlaine, Satchmo at the Waldorf, The Emperor Jones, The Father, and The Forest, among others.

Although Thompson envisions more work in television and film in his future, he says theater is his first love, which is why he will always be connected to it. “It’s the only medium that is truly a part of our human DNA. When we were in the caves, though we were Neanderthals, we told stories to each other to describe the hunts,” he explains. “In the caves, we drew pictures and made noises. Theater was always a part of our lives in describing our lives to our families or people in our tribe. Theater is an inherent way of storytelling. It’s been with us since our inception. My indoctrination to theater through August Wilson and the play I saw [Joe Turner’s Come and Gone] was profound, and that level of profoundness only came from theater because it’s a live and breathing art form. I can’t see my life as an actor without stage work. It’s just impossible to imagine. I will always be doing theater. It will always be a part of my life.”

Part of Thompson’s greatness as an actor is demonstrated through his unyielding commitment to the craft of acting and the art of discipline required to perform eight shows a week. He knows the importance of not indulging in alcohol or any other substances or distractions that prevent him from maintaining a healthy mind and body and performing at his highest level during a production.

“I want to honor the playwright who wrote the words and gave me the character to play,” he says. “I want to honor the audience who came to see a show because either they heard about it, or they’ve seen it before, and want to have the experience of being in the presence of the production again. I want to honor the other actors I’m on stage with that I’m giving my all, and I’m going to be there for them, and that there’s nothing that’s taking me out of that experience because I’m not prepared.”

Like a champion, he often says there’s a Jack Johnson in all his characters. Profoundly inspired by Johnson’s power, uniqueness, and his one-of-a-kind genius, Thompson approaches his roles with that same larger-than-life quality that Johnson exhibited in the ring and in life, whether he’s playing Othello or Tamburlaine or Hamlet or Becker. Thompson says Johnson is an archetype he often thinks about as he prepares a character for stage.

 


Gwendolyn Quinn is an award-winning media consultant with a career spanning more than 25 years. She is a contributor to BlackEnterprise.com, Black Enterprise’s BE Pulse, Huffington Post, EURWEB.com, and Medium.com. Quinn is also a contributor to Souls Revealed and Handle Your Entertainment Business.

 

 


April 22, 2017

TLC Are On Their ‘Way Back’

https://blackgirlnerds.com/tlc-way-back/

By Francesca De Biasi Have you been longing for some authentic 90s r&b taste? Your wait is finally over: TLC are back! Way Back is the new song released by the iconic r&b/ hip hop duo on April 13th. It features rapper, Snoop Dogg and was first heard during the TV series Star on March [...]

The post TLC Are On Their ‘Way Back’ appeared first on Black Girl Nerds.


April 22, 2017

Hollywood NEVER Gets Stephen King Adaptations Right (Updated)

http://theblackgeeks.com/2017-it-trailer-review/

I can confidently state that 90% of the TV & film adaptations of Stephen King’s literary works are garbage. "IT" remake doesn't seem to change that.

The post Hollywood NEVER Gets Stephen King Adaptations Right (Updated) appeared first on TheBlackGeeks.


April 22, 2017

The Expanse Recap: The Monster and The Rocket

http://blacknerdproblems.com/site/the-expanse-recap-the-monster-and-the-rocket/

Season 2 / Episode 12 / SyFy Channel

Sorry to break it to y’all, but I think Holden has lost his actual mind. Not to say it isn’t pretty well earned, I mean dealing with aliens can get kind of brain melty, but still. Once you’re yelling at your pilot to fly a ship through an ag dome while you machine gun wisps of blue goo…maybe it is time to take a step back, have a cup of decaf, and chill. Try some country music. Alex has some of the sleepy songs all set up in his Spotify. But before we get to that, we have to talk Errinwright, or as I call him, That Mu’fucker.

Earth

I told y’all That Mu’fucker was up to some shit. But what shit exactly, I didn’t know. This opening sequence had me thinking that he was actually turning his hatred and ambition inward — the purposeful neck prick, the flashback voiceover with Avasarala being totally unhelpful, it is all a set-up for suicide. Then he goes all “Jonny let’s have this one last talk; you follow your heart” moment with his son. I wonder if anyone has sympathy for That Mu’fucker, if any of the viewers think “yo, he’s a good guy, just trying to buy a super weapon that he can use for mutually assured destruction, you know…like you do.”

Above Ganymede

Alex and Jim
Holden and Alex have a weird “Native Americans were obsolete” conversation that is one of the more predictable and trite lines of dialog in the show. I expect better from writers who have generally refused to engage in modern stereotyping of their diverse cast. Luckily, they don’t linger on extended, bizarre past vs future comparisons, but they move on to shooting up the landscape. Holden is clearly fraying, his face all scowly. It would be more moving if the actor had a wider range of facial expressions…I find his “I’m angry” scowl and his “I want to sex up Naomi” scowl and his “I have no idea what’s going on” scowl to all be interchangeable.

Prax tries to talk some sense into Holden, which is understandable that Prax is the only dude on the ship who still has sense left. Holden dismisses him, calling him Plant Boy, and continues yelling at Alex, who’s just trying to be his best. Folks always want to yell at the pilot.

Earth, UN HQ

Ah, the be strong talk. The giving away of all of his most loved items. Still not feeling sorry for him. Not one bit.

Ganymede Station


The Somnambulist is taking all comers, well…except for Naomi and Amos that is. Naomi offers to fix what they shot up.

“You people are shit magnets,” the Belta Lady says. True facts. But she lets Naomi get to work anyway, with a clearly wounded and unsteady Amos standing protectively near by.

Earth, Avasarala’s office

Bobbi and Cotyar are adorable together, well, adorable in that killers who sleep with one eye up kind of way. Their exchanges are so revealing of who each of them are — two career soldiers on opposite sides of a silent war, brought together by the gravity of Avasarala and the pressure of a system spinning out of control.



She doesn’t even say it mean, or sneering. She just says it. And you don’t doubt it. Cotyar doesn’t either.

Then you add Avasarala into the mix and it just gets better. With the boss sinking into petulance, Cotyar and Bobbi take turns laughing at and with her, distracting her while also mocking her weakness. I won’t say they’ve established a team dynamic, but you can see the contours of one forming, an alliance of people trying to stop the war from the inside that will balance out the crew of the Rocinante trying to stop it from the Belt. Really, as the leader of the threesome, Shohreh Aghdashloo plays Avasarala impeccably. Her monologues are profoundly delivered without being preachy, her interactions always aloof but genuine. This is a role the Emmy winner can sink herself into and she does it. She’s one of the best parts of the whole show, hands down.

Oh, here it is…That Mu’fucker is writing a letter alone, eyeing a pill…does he do it? Does he?

Ganymede

More madness from Holden. More yelling at Alex. More dismissing of Prax. Hunting down Caliban is stressful.

Ganymede station

Beltas getting restless...
Oh, the Belters are getting restless. Air cyclers are shutting down. The dock has been cut off from the rest of the station. There’s nowhere to go and the ship isn’t ready for all the passengers. It is, in short, a hot mess. This is what Belter Lady gets for trying to do right by these people. Amos, attempting to keep up his usual role, goes in to defend her, but quickly fails. He’s lost too much blood perhaps, is in too much pain. They shut the refugees out, they’ve gotten too dangerous. And then the kicker. The “but OF COURSE” kicker: the air refill station has shut down. The air tanks on the Somnambulist are only ¼ full. There’s enough air for 52 people. There are 100+ waiting to board. Decisions are gonna have to get made.

Earth

Sadavir Errinwright
Nope, he didn’t do it. Instead, That Mu’fucker took his rival Martian out to the opera. Their conversation reveals the set-up we’ve known had to be there from the jump: Mao had Errinwright on Earth and the Martian Emissary on Mars as his “partners”, using them to control the governments and promising them each some of the protomolecule. They could use it for defense or development or whatever else, but most importantly, they could maintain a balance of power while Mao just maintained power. These mu’fuckers.

Ganymede Station

The mob is losing its cool. Naomi has finished fixing the ship.

Earth

Heart Attack! That MU’FUCKER! Well, I guess we know who that pill was for, and it wasn’t Sadavir Errinwright. Poor dead Martian.

Space

Entrance
That. Walk. So, you may not know it, but there’s a way a woman walks when she’s in complete control of her body, when she’s put on her armor of confidence and picked up her sword of wit and is about to go to war. Avasarala comes off the elevator onto Mao’s ship in That Walk. If a woman steps to you like that, something’s getting wrecked. Probably you.
Unsurprisingly, Mao knows how to decorate his home away from home. Antiques and cultural…

The fucking point is that a Martian ship over Ganymede has been blown up and is pelting the station with debris. The Belters are screaming. Shit is meeting the fan.

The fucking point is that Avasarala has had e’rybody in Mao’s family arrested, including his cousin the monk (that’s cold). She’s frozen all his assets. Harassed all his friends. Pushed him to the edge.

The fucking point is that That Mu’fucker has blown up that Martian ship, and he makes a phone call and ruins everyone’s day, putting Avasarala and Mao on notice that he’s back on top and taking charge of this little project.

Well, that diplomatic tete-a-tete is over. Any cucumber sandwiches left?

Ganymede Station, one last time

Naomi can’t take it. She’s as wracked with guilt over what happened on Eros as Holden is, but instead of taking it out in bullets, she’s got to save more people. Amos tries to stop her, he remains a consistent bodyguard. She hits him with a double dose of painkillers, laying the big man on his back, steps over him and out into the dock to face her fellow belters.

Now what’s really interesting about this scene is that Naomi doesn’t convince the mob with her words, she convinces the heavy with her words, but she does convince them with her actions and her honesty. Naomi isn’t a powerful presence, but she gets shit done.

“Every single one of you knew, on the day you were born, Our Life Is Hard.”

Y’all, Belters are the only fucking adults in the entire solar system. They don’t like it, they’ll fight it, but they will suck it up and do right by each other when all the other humans are too busy chasing power to save their own lives, let alone someone else’s. Belters hear the truth and they handle their business. 52 people. They do what they have to do to save half, so that they save some.

“You’re not finished yet.”

Nope, they’re not. One more episode in the season. 45 more minutes. Let’s see what it holds.

You can read all of our Expanse coverage here on the site.

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