Before It Hits Home

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Before It Hits Home
Written byCheryl West
CharactersWendal
Simone/MissPeterson
Douglass
Reba
Maybelle
Bailey
Dwayne
Nurse
Dr. Weinberg
Junior
Date premieredJanuary 1991
Place premieredArena Stage (1991)
LuEster Hall (1992)
SubjectMiddle-American family comes to grips with AIDS
GenreDrama

Before It Hits Home is a play by Cheryl West.

Background[]

The show was originally workshopped by the Seattle Group Theatre at the Multicultural Playwrights Festival in 1989, then later was given a reading at the Circle Repertory Company in 1990.

Productions[]

The original production opened in January 1991, at the Arena Stage, directed by Tazewell Thompson, set design Douglas Stein, lighting design Nancy Schertler, costume design Helen Qizhi Huang, and sound design Susan R. White. The cast starred Michael Jayce (Wendal), Cynthia Martells (Simone/Mrs. Peterson), Keith Randolph Smith (Douglas), Trazana Beverley (Reba), Mercedes Herrero (Nurse), Sandra Reaves-Phillips (Maybelle), Julian Hughes (Doctor), Wally Taylor (Bailey), Ryan Richmond (Dwayne), and Lee Simon Jr. (Junior).[1]

The production then had its Off-Broadway premiere at LuEster Hall in February 1992, directed by Thompson, set design Loy Arcenas, costume design Paul Tazewell, lighting design Schertler, and sound design White. The cast starred James McDaniel (Wendal), Sharon Washington (Simone/Mrs. Peterson), Smith (Douglass), Yvette Hawkins (Reba), Marcella Lowery (Maybelle), Frankie Faison (Bailey), James Jason Lilley (Dwayne), Carol Honda (Nurse), Beth Dixon (Dr. Weinberg), and Monti Sharp (Junior).

Reviews[]

Frank Rich of the New York Times said the show has "validity and brute force" and that it's "authentic, at times almost hysterical wake-up call to the black community, sounded from within."[2]

Awards and nominations[]

Year Award Category Nominee Result
1991 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize Susan Smith Blackburn Prize Cheryl West Won
1992 Obie Award Obie Award for Distinguished Performance by an Actor James McDaniel Won

References[]

  1. ^ "Dramatists Play Service, Inc". www.dramatists.com.
  2. ^ Rich, Frank (March 11, 1992). "Review/Theater; A Black Family Confronts AIDS". The New York Times.

External links[]

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