Theater review: New Long Wharf show honors lives lost in Crown Heights – Middletown Press

NEW HAVEN Thirty years have passed since Anna Deavere Smith conducted dozens of interviews surrounding the tragic incidents in Crown Heights, a suburb of New York City, that highlighted an accident that resulted in the death of a 7-year-old Black child and the stabbing of a Jewish scholar visiting from Australia.

Fires in the Mirror: Crown Heights, Brooklyn and Other Identities will be unveiled dramatically at Long Wharf Theatre until Sunday.

It is a disturbing portrait of the racial differences that divide us.

Smith has woven these interviews, using the participants own words, into a personal and powerful reflection of the actions that became the Crown Heights riots in 1991.

On a distinctly African set by Diggle, with sand as a continuum of Black culture and its grounding, the remarkable actress Cloteal L. Horne creates the identity of 26 people from both the Black and Jewish community who are intimately involved in the tragedy.

From well-known personalities such as the Rev. Al Sharpton and activist Angela Davis to Orthodox Jewish women and revered rabbis, the story of the events unfolds in dramatic fashion, as each participant explains their unique perspective on difficult events.

With bare feet and only a few props, and a change in accent and personality, Horne is able to skillfully make each voice distinct and state their message of responsibility clearly. The whole picture becomes clear as so many tragedies are wrapped into one.

Each member of the community has been deeply affected by loss, from the Jewish driver who accidentally kills the little boy to the brother of the Jewish scholar who is the unfortunate victim of retribution by a gang of Black youth.

Along the way, slavery is revealed as a crime against humanity where 250 million are lost over 300 years. It is contrasted with the Holocaust and its toll of 6 million lives taken by the Nazis. Anti-Semitism is exposed as a deep-seated hatred.

The play ends with a communal call: We deserve a better world and Healing is possible.

Nicole Brewer directs this emotional outpouring of testimony.

Theater goers must show proof of vaccination and wear a mask while in the theater.

Be part of the audience that honors the lives lost in Crown Heights Brooklyn and ensures that the anger and rage that prompted it never happen again.

For tickets ($59), call Long Wharf Theatre, 222 Sargent Drive, at 203-693-1486 or visit longwharf.org. Performances are Tuesday at 7 p.m., Wednesday at 2 p.m, Thursday at 7 p.m., Friday at 7 p.m., Saturday at 2 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m.

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Theater review: New Long Wharf show honors lives lost in Crown Heights - Middletown Press

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