DEF POETRY JAM ON BROADWAY - Reviewed Log Out | Topics | Search
Moderators | Edit Profile

AALBC.com's Thumper's Corner Discussion Board » The Poetree - 2002 to 2005 Archive » DEF POETRY JAM ON BROADWAY - Reviewed « Previous Next »

Author Message
Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message

Troy

Rating: 
Votes: 2 (Vote!)

Posted on Tuesday, November 19, 2002 - 12:21 pm:   Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

RUSSELL SIMMONS DEF POETRY JAM ON BROADWAY
Conceived by Stan Lathan and Mr. Simmons; directed by Mr. Lathan; sets by
Bruce Ryan; costumes by Paul Tazewell; lighting by Yael Lubetzky; sound by
Elton P. Halley; production stage manager, Alice Elliott Smith; production
manager, Theatersmith Inc.; executive producer/general manager, Roy Gabay.
Presented by Mr. Simmons and Mr. Lathan, in association with Kimora Lee
Simmons, Island Def Jam Music Group, Brett Ratner and David Rosenberg. At the
Longacre Theater, 220 West 48th Street, Manhattan.

WITH: Beau Sia, Black Ice, Staceyann Chin, Steve Colman, Mayda Del Valle,
Georgia Me, Suheir Hammad, Lemon, Poetri and Tendaji Lathan.


Untamed Poetry, Loose Onstage

By BEN BRANTLEY

Does Con Edison know about the cast of "Def Poetry Jam"? The performers on
the stage of the Longacre Theater, where the show opened last night, are
giving off enough electric current to keep Manhattan in air-conditioning for
a century of summers. The hard-working choruses of musicals like "Thoroughly
Modern Millie" and "42nd Street" can dance until their shoes lose their taps,
but they still won't generate the energy found in this gathering of angry
young poets.

"Russell Simmons Def Poetry Jam on Broadway," to use the production's full
brand-name-wearing title, is the most singular offering in mainstream New
York theater these days, even in a season that has seen such anomalies as
"Movin' Out," Twyla Tharp's all-dancing, no-talking pop musical, and the
short-lived French bagatelle called "Amour."

Produced by the eponymous Mr. Simmons, the mighty rap recording emperor, "Def
Poetry" is basically nothing more than nine people standing onstage reciting
poems they have written. But this description, which summons clammy images of
the classroom, fails to factor in the incandescent mix of exuberance,
arrogance and exhibitionism with which each performer is invested.

The poets of "Def Poetry" flaunt their words the way Fosse dancers flaunt
their bodies, in muscle-flexing struts, slides and sashays. Listen to the
following declarations: "I wanna hear a poem where ideas kiss similes so
deeply that metaphors get jealous." "I'm the mentally buff Chinese Hulk
Hogan/ disciplined, determined and deadly."
And, "Spoken word is about to leave the ground like a plane, chain ganging,
clanging like a school boy with a pan."

These lines, like most in the show, sound better than they read. You need to
experience firsthand the body language that makes the verbal language spin
and the voices that seem to get high off their own inflections. This is
poetry for the stage, not the page, and it exists completely only in the
moment it is being performed.

People can complain that much of what is said in "Def Poetry Jam" is
aggressively preachy, on the one hand, and narcissistically whiny, on the
other. But don't let anyone tell you it's not theater.

Directed by Stan Lathan with a keen ear — and, almost as important, eye —
for flow and variety, "Def Poetry" is descended from the HBO television
specials of the same title. These in turn featured talent culled from the
cafes, theaters and cultural centers that stage slams, competitive shows that
turn the performance of poetry into an athletic event.

(Such places, which range from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe in New York City to
Da' Poetry Lounge in Los Angeles, are cited regularly in the performers'
biographies, which are, it can safely be said, unlike any others found in a
Playbill these days.)

You can put aside, however, any doubts that the particular skills on display
in "Def Poetry Jam" require the intimacy of a club or the magnifying
closeness of a television screen. All of the performers are radioactive with
stage presence, conferred partly by the hormonal glow exclusive to the young
and unwrinkled, partly by polemical righteousness and partly by the immortal
showbiz urge to show off.

The production, which takes place against Bruce Ryan's abstract streetscape
of a set, begins with the D.J. Tendaji Lathan spinning, scratching and mixing
records from the 1960's to the 21st century. He finds the warmth in being
cool, and he gets the audience's responsive juices flowing without seeming to
push for it. He also sets up a throbbing pulse, a sort of freewheeling
metronome for what will follow.

Yet while they trade freely on the rhythmic reflexes made popular by rap and
hip-hop, the performers who slink and saunter into view don't just roll along
in familiar grooves. Steve Colman, the show's token white-bread performer,
may exclaim, "Rock 'n' roll's O.K./but hip-hop is for the ages." But Black
Ice, who dispenses evangelical admonitions with charismatic casualness, dares
to suggest that the luxury-loving lyrics of some rap songs are more addictive
and dangerous than crack.

The show also features spirited homages to singers and musicians, from Sam
Cooke and Tito Puente (zestily performed by Mayda Del Valle and Lemon) to Jam
Master Jay, the Run-DMC disc jockey who was shot to death last month. But
while musical idols like Bob Marley and Prince (as well as poets like
Langston Hughes and June Jordan) are invoked, the show has little of the
studiously imitative gloss found among singers on talent shows like "American
Idol."

The poets all, for good or ill, exude self-created styles, which are as
distinctive as fingerprints. Rhyme and rhythm define character in "Def Poetry
Jam"; they are the tools for extracting a shape out of the muddle of social,
ethnic and physical forces that make human identity. The form of poetry
becomes a defense against formlessness.
To quote Staceyann Chin, a rail-thin Jamaican with a fat head of hair:

Imagination is the bridge between
the things we know for sure <
and the things we need to believe when our world becomes unbearable.

It allows Ms. Chin, who says that believing "in any God takes guts," to
create a liturgical, magically intoned credo of "the smaller things" in which
she can believe.

Poetry also becomes the vehicle that lets a bulky, light-footed man named
(yes) Poetri, in times of stress, turn himself into Michael Jackson (whose
last name conveniently rhymes with "relaxin' ").

"My words," as described in a collaborative poem for three voices, are
variously "a reflection of possibility" (for Georgia Me), "the Chinese t ornado" (for Beau Sia) and "a flag" (for Suheir Hammad).

There is, you should know, a lot of flag waving in "Def Poetry Jam."
Diatribes against oppressors — white running-dog capitalists in general and
George W. Bush and his associates in particular — figure prominently, and
their content isn't much different from the grievance lists of outraged
students of the late 1960's. An exception is Poetri, the show's droll natural
comedian, who finds a Ku Klux Klan-like conspiracy against the black man
among the makers of Krispy Kreme doughnuts.

Over all, the quotient of earnestness is definitely higher than that of
irony, which is kind of refreshing. For all the didacticism in "Def Poetry,"
there's a thrill in seeing young people actually work up steam about the
sorry state of the world, not just their sexual unattractiveness and weight
problems, although there's a certain amount of that as well.

And if it's content that makes "Def Poetry" worthy, to use a cringe-making
word, it's style that makes it entertainment. And it's the diversity of
styles, in artful counterpoint, that keeps the production flying. Some of the
poems, like Ms. Me's first-person narrative about a beaten wife, have the
ripping and sentimental narrative verve of an old broadsheet ballad (the same
style that is wittily rehashed by Lemon in an account of an unexpected
survivor of the Titanic).

In literary terms, the statuesque Ms. Hammad, who describes herself as a
black woman who has become a Palestinian, and the wiry Lemon are probably the
most accomplished writers, with their gifts for slyly changing and mixing
cadences and tones. But literary values are secondary here, and they don't
account for the hypnotic, incantatory music that Ms. Chin brings to her
description of lovemaking or the militant aestheticism that Mr. Sia transmits
with his kung fu dandy poses.

Mr. Lathan, the director, has paced "Def Poetry" with thematic intelligence
and old-fashioned showmanship, seasoning the evening with poetic duets and
trios as well as the expected arialike solos. For the show's finale, all the
performers are allowed to let rip at the same time, and the Babel of voices
that emerges is eerily powerful.
What you're hearing is a noise that seldom echoes through the dusty corridors
of Broadway anymore. It's the sound of youth expressing itself, at its most
intense and anxious and self-conscious and self-delighted. Older folks may
find it all a little intimidating and even irritating. But how nice to smell
springtime in the land of mothballs.
Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message

Chris Hayden

Rating: N/A
Votes: 0 (Vote!)

Posted on Saturday, November 30, 2002 - 10:17 am:   Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Troy:

have you been to the show? You know anyone else who has?

I have contacted Suheir Hammad (who is appearing therein) about it, but haven't heard anything. back with her
Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message

gfunk

Rating: N/A
Votes: 0 (Vote!)

Posted on Sunday, December 01, 2002 - 05:16 pm:   Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Happy holidays. My name is Geavonnie. my book has recently been released for
publication! You can now order “Time Out”
only online at http://www.timeoutbook.com with only a check or money order.
Go to the site and click on “Order Book Here” follow the prompts until you reach “payment options” choose check/money order and continue until you reach the end. Print out the invoice and mail your payment to the address provided. Your book will arrive in a couple of days. Credit Cards orders cannot be taken until December 6, 2002.

If you would like your book personally autographed by author
please email author at bookorders@timeoutbook.com
with your message and order number. Be the first to get your copy.
Quantities are limited.

Books will not be in stores until March
2003.

Thank you and I appreciate your support.
Part of the proceeds of this book will go to the fight against Breast
Cancer.


Don’t forget to refer a friend and help make “Time Out” a best seller.

Geavonnie.

Direct Link
http://timeoutbook.com/_time_out_.html
Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message

Troy

Rating: N/A
Votes: 0 (Vote!)

Posted on Friday, January 17, 2003 - 12:18 am:   Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Hey Chris, No I have not been to the show. However reviews have been mixed from what I heard from friends. In general, if you frequented poetry readings in the past you'll find nothing new here.

peace
Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message

SkyeBlu

Rating: N/A
Votes: 0 (Vote!)

Posted on Tuesday, February 25, 2003 - 04:13 pm:   Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Hi! This is my first time at this site. I'm a poet from STL, I host a spoken word event every 1st sunday of the month and I'm a poetry critic for The Written Word Magazine(I'm looking for midwest poets to review and possibly feature).

I saw the Broadway show in Dec. and I must say it was excellent. The montage of each poets original works really "gelled" well together. I enjoyed it so much I wanted to return! Also I am truly glad the "Poet's Voice" can be heard on an even larger scale. There was some of everybody up in the place--black, white, pink, green, old, new, known and unknown. The night I was there I got a chance to chat with Mos Def's mom who was coming to check it out because she heard such great things about it. She said she really enjoyed it:-)As did everyone I spoke with that evening--a lot of which who were returning not just for the second time, but for 3rd and 4th!!!
Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message

Troy

Rating: N/A
Votes: 0 (Vote!)

Posted on Monday, December 22, 2003 - 11:27 pm:   Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Hi SkyeBlu: I'm glad you enjoyed the show! It was here at the Apollo a little while ago (Fall 2003) and I still did not make it.

It is funny though, I remember being excitied seeing Deaf Poetry on TV the first time. It was nice seeing the popular poets doing their thing on TV. It was the same kind of excitement I felt when they started playing rap videos on TV. But the excitement, for me, was not the same for the Broadway show installment.
Top of pagePrevious messageNext messageBottom of page Link to this message

Young_flame1
Newbie Poster
Username: Young_flame1

Post Number: 3
Registered: 12-2005

Rating: N/A
Votes: 0 (Vote!)

Posted on Wednesday, December 28, 2005 - 10:21 am:   Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Hey People....

I'm "Young Flame", a poetess out of Chicago...I have been to the show twice and each time I must say I truly enjoyed it. AWESOME!

Topics | Last Day | Last Week | Tree View | Search | Help/Instructions | Program Credits Administration
Our Mission
To promote the diverse spectrum of literature written for, or about, people of African descent by helping readers find the books and authors they will enjoy.  We accomplish our goals through AALBC.com, our related platforms, and strategic partnerships.
Main Sections
Profiled Authors
Book Lists
Book Reviews
Writers’ Resources
Movie Reviews
Celebrity Interviews
Events
Discussion Forums
Current eNewsletter
Fun Stuff
Founder’s Blog
About Us
Started in 1997, AALBC.com (African American Literature Book Club) is the largest, most frequently visited web site of its kind. Learn more.

About Our Webmaster & Founder
Affiliated Websites
Huria Search
Edit 1st
Domains for Authors
ABLE
Power List Bestsellers
AALBC.com's Book Club Archive
Customer Service
About AALBC.com
Subscribe
Marketing Kit
FAQ
Contact Us
Advertising Rates
Advertiser Login
Privacy Policy
Affiliates