The M ichigan D aily-W eekend etc. M arch 5, 1992 Pagelillllii11 ii i 1 : The Michigan Daily -Weekend etc. March 5,1992 Page 1 What's wrong with Black culture? Ebony is about 17yearsold; she's an intelligent young woman I met because of her friendship with my younger sister. What makes Ebony pertinent to this column is not her age in years, but her wisdom which has taught me a thing or two about life itself. About a month ago, my mother and I were talking about Ernest Dickerson's film Juice, which ex- ploits the lives of Black teenagers in the violent inner cities. She told me that a scene, wherein a young Black man turns agun on his friend and kills him, brought Ebony to tears in the theater. My mother reminded me that Ebony'ssisterhad been killed about a year ago, when two young boys callously fired guns into a house. We concluded that films like Juice aren't worth their exploita- tion of violent imagery. But that wasn't the end of my lessons. A week ago, my sister, Ebony and I sat at the couch in our living room watching rap videos when Scarface's riotous "A Minute To Pray and a Second To Die" came NOTES FR OM UtJDEIGR0tlN friRg%T l4Rri3 on. I didn't turn away from the video but sat there and rappedalong with it. Ebony left the room. My sister then reminded me of Ebony's sister. That's when I figured out what's wrong with Black culture. We Black people continue to accept destructive images of our- selves here in America. Our stories are crudely commodified away by rich executives, almost as if sla- very had neverbeen outlawed. The negative messages that we eagerly consume, whether in music, film, television or writing, usually reach us because a group of white pro- ducers would profit from them. But we still accept them. While Black artists in Africa are so far ahead of us that they make their culture and the people's struggle for liberation one in the same, here in America we become prostitutes. We continually fail to learn the lessons of history. Throughout the 1800s, up through John Ford's renowned 1956 film The Searchers and long afterward, Hollywood amassed profits from "cowboy" films. These films served the purpose of deni- grating Native Americans and at- tempting to justify their genocide by white people. And now in the '90s, we have the same kind of exploitation in multi -media,justifying theoppres- sion and genocide of Black people; the biggest difference between us and the Native Americans being that Black people are profiting from these works and consuming them. This must be stopped. Black artists must be pressured by their true audience, the Black masses, to stop exploiting us for white money. Black directors like Dickerson and Mario Van Peebles must be held accountable if they continue shooting Black people for fast bucks. As the lyrics of Public Enemy tell us, "We've got to keep our- selves in check." Black people, all of us, need to think before we plunk down the ntvt tatn-rnl1r hill fnr that ¢ann- s there any way to sum up 75 years of any thing? Through the De pression, the rebellion of the sixties, the Reagan administration, theater has been an pre vailing outlet. Children staging puppet she- - grow to be pro's on Broadway. But how many laypersons are aware of the education that lies behind "act- ing?" In 1916 the magic of student the- ater was brought to the stage for the first time as part of the University curriculum. This was by no means the start of student interest in theater, but it was the beginning of the trek toward what the department is today. Prior to 1916 when Servant in the House , the first student show pro- duced as an outcome of a class, was presented, students found an outlet for their talents by putting on shows without formal involvement from the faculty. "Studentshave always been deeply involved in theater long before the advent of a course for credit," said Tom Loewe, public relations director for University Productions. Opera was a prevalent form of liberating performance for students. The Michigan Union was built with money raised by students who wrote, produced and performed operas. These musical performances, starring all male casts, became so popular that theyeven toured all around the coun- try. During the days of the Speech Department, which was started by Thomas Clarkson Trueblood (after whom the Trueblood Theatre in the Frieze Building is named), plays were produced informally by self-moti- vated students. It wasn't until Richard Hollister offered a course in Play Pro- duction that theater began to catch on as an academic pursuit, andServant in the House was the final product this course. Under the direction of Hollister, and Theater professors Valentine Windt, William Halstead and many others, the theater program developed into a thriving department of its own. By the time the '30s came around, the theater department was producing several shows a season. Often profession- als wer progra "At Jack B 1937 a tus fift of the becaus the few *e brought in to supplement the partment, causing a series of highs m, especially in the summer. and lows. According to Bender, after t the time I came here," said World War II and on through the ender, who was a student in 1960s, the focus of the department nd became a professor emeri- shifted from undergraduate work to- y years later, "the real strength ward production and graduate work. department was in the summer, Bender feels that during this time, e it (the University) was one of the average stu- v theater programs in the coun-, presents 9 hat t ec' the 7X of- j s and e oduc- \ada rogram by eSSIC well as w devel- eputation Jalentine .And, as a in the sum- ne they liter- would have CV' try tI had course ferings the pr tion pi ... as N the nov oped re of V Windt result,i mertim ally m BFA program was initiated. The BFA degree was started to provide more specialized training in theater. Stu- dents can take classes in both perfor- mance and production, and then can concentrate in either area as they progress through the program. Upon graduating, this degree provides a stu- dent with more technical training than the original BA degree, which con- centrates more on liberal arts. Controversy surrounded the in- stitution of the BFA. The BA degree is still given through LSA, though the BFA students get more atten- tion from the theater department because it is a new program. The point of contention lies in the fact that the School of Music is so performance-oriented, and to new students being re- cruited, the BFA program is more desirable, drawing stu- dents away from the LSA degree. Many believe that new students shouldn't focus their studies so early. "I think that BFA pro- grains are a little bit dangerous in general because they bring in people who are 18. You primarily work on acting and de- G velop your skills and crafts there, but I think there are other studies that are just as important," said Kevin Humbert, a senior working toward a BA in theater. "There are a lot of things that need to be studied," suggested Humbert, such as the plays of Shakespeare and Ibsen. "My fear is that you're only working on a craft, without knowing what you find important and what you have to say with your art." he con- cluded. The balance between maintaining the BA program alongside the BFA program has not yet been reached. According to Richard Klautsch, the BFA is "perceived to be an open-door program" in that they let in people to boostenrollment without considering the individual's future. For instance, a student may be qualified for the present, but not equipped to handle professional theater, post-program. Klautsch felt that overall, the depart- mentneeds to be more selective about who is admitted. "With the new BFA program in theater, I think that's going to grab a lot of people who would be studying through a BA degree," said Humbert. "So I think it's pulling a lot of people away who would like to be actors, but would like to study other things also because they're being told, maybe not out front, that a BFA program is the way to study theater and get into the business." In the long run, what matters most is not what path you took, but who was teaching the craft. Since the early glory days of Windt and Hollister, many professors have builtupa strong and varied department. "I think they've got the right mix of people there now," said Jeff Daniels, a pro- fessional film actor who founded the Purple Rose Theatre in Chelsea and is an adjunct professor at the Univer- sity. Klautsch agrees. "The diversity and multiplicity of the faculty is a good thing because we challenge each other on many levels," he said. For the past 75 years the theater department has endeavored to pro- duce well-rounded students prepared for a career in theater. People like Gilda Radner, James Earl Jones and Christine Lahti have gone on to have successful careers on stage, while other alumni have excelled behind the scenes in areas such as costume design or direction. Most importantly - the depart- ment has undergone change and sur- vived. Today's theater department still faces changes through a difficult time of statewide financial insecurity for all the arts, as well as with the chal- lenge of the new BFA program con- tinually being developed and refined. But the general outlook seems posi- tive. "I hope that people begin to recon- sider that theater is an important en- deavor. It's a very important means of communication," said Klautsch. "I 's an outlet for people to share their most important dreams." Erik Fredricksen, chair of the department said it best; "Places like U of M will be where theater artists of the 21stcentury will be look- ing to go." C DA dent was overlooked. The department's rockiest stretch of the road was probably its transfer from LSA to the School of Music. This is a relatively recent transition, accomplished within the last decade. With this move came several struc- tural changes. "I think that since the transfer the dean of the School of Music has been very skillful in the way cuts were made and restorations made along the way," said Bender. "As a result, as I see it, there is now a very fine program that is aimed to a great extent towards the undergradu- ate student." The program as it is today took several years to evolve. The graduate program was disbanded, and a new Windt several hundred students in the the- ater production courses." But the 75 year ride has not always been smooth. Administrative diffi- culties have periodically hit the de- E: