Images: 
Total Rating: 
****
Previews: 
October 29, 2015
Opened: 
October 30, 2015
Ended: 
December 6, 2015
Country: 
USA
State: 
California
City: 
Los Angeles
Company/Producers: 
Art of Wordz/Rogue Machine Theater
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
Theatre/Theater
Theater Address: 
5041 Pico Boulevard
Phone: 
213-529-5153
Running Time: 
2 hrs, 45 min
Genre: 
drama
Author: 
Paul Neiman
Director: 
Dan Martin
Review: 

Playwright Paula Neiman has chosen to tell the whole story of Nat Turner, leader of a daring but doomed slave revolt, from the time of his birth to the date of his death in 1831. Most contemporary playwrights would deal only with a corner of Turner’s life, utilizing (for economic reasons) a cast of, say, six or seven actors. Neiman, obviously, likes to think big. Not only does her new drama span 30 years but it requires a cast of 15 actors, many of whom play multiple parts.

It’s fair to say, then, that Nat Turner: Following Faith is an epic work, an historical drama conceived and executed on a grand scale. The play, now in a world premiere run at Theatre/Theater, was directed by Dan Martin, among whose acting credits are stints with the famed Negro Ensemble Company in New York. Only a seasoned pro like him could have tackled such an immense project and brought it off so well. The man deserves some kind of an award.

The same goes for Nat Turner’s cast, led by Tarnue Massaquoi (as Turner), Asante Jones (as the narrator, Gabriel Prosser), Darius Dudley (as Hubbard, Nat’s spiritual father), Sade Moore and Baadja-Lyn Ouba (Nat’s mother and grandmother, respectively). The rest of the large, talented cast should not be slighted, either; they are simply too numerous to name and describe here.

Credit should also be paid to the production’s technical team, especially set designer Vali Tirsoaga, costume designer Mauva Gacitua, lighting designer Sammie Wayne IV, and sound designer Jaimyon Parker. Together they have found a way to turn Theatre/Theater’s stage into a Virginia ante-bellum plantation replete with big-house porch, cotton fields and slave quarters, all of which are later transformed into a battle-field, a court-house and even the gallows upon which Turner met his demise.

The story Neiman tells, in rich, poetic language, is a powerful and heart-breaking one, a tragic piece of American history which never should be forgotten. The child of a young mother who was raped by her “master,” Turner showed great intelligence and charisma from the start, only to be denied the chance to use his gifts by his white overlords, who preferred that he remain a field hand. Frustrated at every turn in his life, Turner continued to read everything he could, especially the Holy Bible, many of whose strictures he took to heart, especially the ones from Exodus (“I will deliver thee from bondage”). That’s just what he tried to do when he assembled a band of sixty blacks—a “slave cavalry”—and led them into battle against a few local slave-owners, thinking this would encourage the hundreds of thousands of southern slaves to join the revolt and kill their brutal, inhuman masters. This desperate attack on the criminal slave system ended in failure (largely because Turner was betrayed by one of his own men), but as Neiman points out, the seeds of black pride and militancy were planted. The ultimate result of the insurrection was emancipation and freedom.

That brief story summary doesn’t do justice to the scope, depth and complexity of Nat Turner: Following Faith or to its power and importance.

Critic: 
Willard Manus
Date Reviewed: 
October 2015