The Pulitzer Prize-winning work, set in 1936,
tells the story of a brother and sister battling over what to do
with an heirloom piano that has images of their family carved by
an enslaved ancestor.
LaTanya Richardson Jackson, in her Broadway directing debut, has
a more literal take on the story than her predecessors.
"I think that the men have shied away or they wanted to make
this such a metaphor. And I'm like, oh, no, I'm telling a ghost
story," she said.
Samuel Jackson, playing Doaker Charles, returns to the work
after playing the character's nephew Boy Willie in its first
production at the Yale Repertory Theatre in 1987.
"By the time the play traveled and came back to Broadway and I
was an understudy, I was pretty much devastated that I wasn't
going to make my Broadway debut," the actor said.
"Drowning myself in a drug-fueled kind of craziness and ended up
in rehab, which, you know, started a whole 'nother journey for
me."
John David Washington, making his Broadway debut as Boy Willie,
is dealing with many different feelings, he said. "I'm extremely
excited to walk that stage and present this play the best, the
best way I can."
The show, which also stars Danielle Brooks, begins previews on
Sept. 19.
(Reporting by Alicia Powell; Editing by Richard Chang)
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