4B - The Michigan Daily - We4* e*. - Thursday, November 9, 1995 OyamO's passion fuels work 'I Am a Man' tells story of Memphis strike F i I '; . . By Kristin Bartus For the Daily "I almost never really relax like most people do. Maybe that makes > me a workaholic, I don't know, but I have to write what I have to write. I've just got to do that, because if I don't do that, basically I'll just die." Passionate, peaceful and eternally exhausted, University professor Charles "OyamO" Gordon dedicates himself to two careers that he finds immensely demanding and reward- ing. An associate professor of theater and one of just two professor/play- wrights currently on staff, OyamO came to the University in 1990. Inci- dentally, this was the same year he wrote his critically-acclaimed play "I Am A Man," which makes its Uni- versity premiere this weekend. Presently, classes and writing projects not only fill his life - they are his life. In the middle of his hectic schedule of grading papers, doing rewrites for productions across the country, rehearsals until 2 a.m., as well as his own personal writing projects, this sleep-starved man takes a precious half-hour to sit in his dark office and simply close his eyes. This short period of meditation seems to help OyamO regain focus. Casually clad in jeans, turtleneck and a gray striped shirt, he relaxes in his chair, stretches out his legs, and pro- ceeds to reveal the influences and in- tricacies of his life as a professor/ playwright. "Usually I try to write about what interests me, whatever occurs to me that can hold my attention. And as for the way I may write about something ... I let the material dictate what the style and structures are going to be," he said. Although "Man" is based on a his- torical event, OyamO does not write all his plays about history, nor does he attempt to make them all docu- mentaries. He never really knows what he will write about next or how the work will present itself, but this is half the fun. "Most other occupations don't really interest me that much. They are too predictable, they're too dull, and they have too many politics involved. I don't like playing poli- tics. I know there are politics in ev- erything, but I don't have to like them," he said. "My job is to absorb what I mean to absorb of the world and to process it inside myself, and then to recreate it in an expression for the stage, essen- tially, or for film. And, anything that interferes with that process bothers me, a lot, and politics definitely inter- fere. Therefore, I keep politics out of my life," he said firmly. OyamO the playwright believes he will never run short of things to write about. He does not understand the concept of writer's block and insists if he were locked up in a cell for the rest of his life, he would always have new ideas in his head to write about. While he remains open to a rain- bow of possibilities of future writing projects, OyamO has strong feelings for what he dislikes in the theater. He holds forceful opinions against the currently chic trend of so-called "avant-garde" theater that contains a very cynical regard for the world, progress and the "futile" state of hu- manity. "Life is an ongoing process and I don't think it is wise to make some ultimate, definitive statement that says, 'this is life,' unless you really think you are some kind of god." He also generally dislikes plays that lack passion, where people just come into a room and "yack at each other." "The theater that I love most is the theater of bouncing theatricality - muscular, visual, visceral theatrical- OyamO's "I Am a Man" focuses on the 1968 sanitation worier's strike that led to the assassination of Martin Luther King J ity," he said. It is this theatricality and passion that tends to exist in the writers he enjoys most. Although OyamO claims he has never been specifically imita- tive of any particular author, he cites the names of numerous writers who he appreciates and admires. His list includes Adrienne Kennedy, Maria Irene Fornes, Ralph Ellison, Tennes- see Williams, Leroy Jones and Fyodor Dostoievsky. While he appreciates a variety of authors and works, OyamO's actual influences in writing stem from his childhood. "I think the greatest influence on me was my grandfather who was a minis- ter and who liked to tell stories with his sermons in church," he said, squirming in his chair from his re- laxed state and becoming more alive. "He acted out all the parts in the stories and so forth and he was gener- ally funny. He really looked like he enjoyed himself when he was telling these stories and for some reason I never forgot what he did. Even as a little child who usually squirmed around a lot in church, I never squirmed around when he was talking." This squirming child also caused quite a bit of trouble in school, but always loved reading and writing. In fifth grade his required one-paragraph writing exercises would stretch on for pages. Although quite a clown and a troublemaker, the young OyamO also enjoyed a great deal of time alone playing in the woods and spending time with his own thoughts. H is delinquent-style troublemaking ended as a teenager, but in terms of his writing, OyamO believes causing trouble is not only good, but also nec- essary. He exercises this belief in his own writing and also stresses this idea to the students in his playwriting courses. "I try to let the kids know that if you are going to be an artist, you have to understand you are in a state of rebel- lion and that it is your duty, your responsibility to get into trouble," he said. "If you are an artist and you don't get in trouble, there is a problem - you are not going far enough." OyamO writes from his heart and by reaching deep into his spirit and soul and encourages his students to do the same. "For me, the value of these courses is discovering people who do in fact have some kind of ability and some love of language and willing- ness to be honest and to be crazy and to connect with that wild thing that is inside of them," he said. Similarly, OyamO feels that this cur- rent University production of "Man" can serve as an inspiration for college students to reach inside of themselves and make something special. OyamO created "Man" from ti historical perspective of the sanit tion workers' strike of 1968 in Mer phis that led to the assassination the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. figure there are so many plays writt about Martin Luther King - filrr television specials, and so forth - and Martin Luther King just didr interest me. So, I told (the stor through the eyes of this worker wI was poor, who was uneducated only through the eighth grade - a who didn't have anywhere near tI kind of resources King had." Since 1990, OyamO's perspecti' on this event has won him much crit cal acclaim, numerous national at international productions, a publis ing deal with Applause Books, at even a deal with HBO. He has cor pleted a screenplay for "Man" ai also wrote a script for HBO's "F mous Black American Anthology.' As for OyamO, his immediate f ture includes a production opening Stanford November 10, a newly-fi ished screenplay, a commission f< the Seattle Children's Theater and n merous personal writing projectg. Some of these projects will get hi in trouble, and that excites him. F certainly, however, will not find tipT for more sleep any time soon, unle: his unlimited creative powers begi to border on miraculous. a Playwright OyamO brings his forceful opinions to the stage and the classroom. d a W d Z' 0 a s z n a W _W F MV PARTAS CUSA/RAYOMOS.JUIEA LADS I i * HUMIDOR " CIGARETTES S ACCESSORIES " CIGARS I Hours: Mon-Sat: 9-8 Sunday: 10-4 N-. PI WE ACCEPT PERSONAL CHECKS 1760 PLYMOUTH ROAD (IN THE PLYMOUTH VIEW CENTER ACROSS THE ROAD FROM WENDY'S) a 0 Wendy's Plymouth r Smoker's Depot N Pipes e Imported and Domestic Cigars " Full Line of Pren Imported Cigarettes: Dunbill " Djarum " De Mauri Thank You For Smoking ALL ALL GENERIC i PREMIUM I CARTONS I I CARTONS I mium " Generic Cigarettes ier " American Spirit VISA -r - - STEP INTO A NEW WORLD... " I I I PEA M PEACE CORPS WEEK comes to an end... Events on-campus today: Look for us at the "Job Fair" being held in the Michigan Union from 1:00-5:00 Stay for the Liberal Arts Job Panel at 530, also in the Michigan Union Come see the Peace Corps film "Completely Alive" in the International Center 4i' at 7:00 p.m. For Peace Corps information, or an application, call your Peace Corps Campus Rep., Joseph Dorsey at IN I I