"Rage is not a 1-Day Thing" is a one-woman stage play written by and starring Awele Makeba, who uses documentary theatre to examine the untaught history of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, that has become a cornerstone of American mythology. The Jane Hibbard I
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"Rage is not a 1-Day Thing" is a one-woman stage play written by and starring Awele
Makeba, who uses documentary theatre to examine the untaught history of the Montgomery
Bus Boycott, that has become a cornerstone of American mythology. The Jane Hibbard
Idema Women's Studies Center at ÂÌñÒùÆÞ is sponsoring Awele's performance
on Thursday, January 23 from 12:15-1:45 p.m. in the Kretschmer Recital Hall of the
Art and Music Center. The play is free and open to the public.
Awele, an internationally known actor, playwright, storyteller, award-winning recording
artist and educator, is a "truth-teller" and an artist for social change. The story
is told primarily through the voice of 15-year-old Claudette Colvin, who would not
give up her seat on a Montgomery, Alabama bus nine months before Rosa Parks' arrest
for the same act. Colvin, the star witness in the federal court case that went all
the way to the Supreme Court, shares the stage with ten other characters including
18-year-old history maker Mary Louise Smith; JoAnn Robinson, president of the Women's
Political Council and Rosa Parks, NAACP Youth Director and Secretary. "Rage" examines
the impact of exclusion, hatred and violence under segregation and helps audiences
to understand racism's legacy and continuing influence. The play is based on oral
histories, interviews, court transcripts memoir and biographies.
Makeba has captivated audiences from the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in
Washington, D.C. to the Hsinchu Teachers College in Taiwan. She has appeared in Russia,
Australia, Taiwan, France and Canada. A featured storyteller in the National Youth
Anti-Drug Media Campaign, she is also featured on the benefit recording "This Land
is Your Land" for the Southern Poverty Law Center along with Danny Glover, Sweet Honey
in the Rock, Taj Mahal, Raffi, Willie Nelson, the Neville Brothers and others.
An affiliate of the California Arts Council, American Alliance for Theatre and Education,
Western Arts Alliance, Music for Little People and Nebraska Story Arts, Awele has
California Arts Council Funding for the next two years. She earned a master of arts
degree in education from San Francisco State University in 2002.