Crumbs from the Table of Joy
Crumbs from the Table of Joy is a play written by Lynn Nottage.
Production history
The play premiered Off-Broadway at the Second Stage Theatre from May 9, 1995, through July 1, 1995. Directed by Joe Morton, the cast featured Kisha Howard (Ernestine), Nicole Leach, Daryl Edwards (Godfrey), Ella Joyce and Stephanie Roth. The play was commissioned by Second Stage, as part of their program for teen audiences.[1] Ben Brantley, in his review for The New York Times wrote that the play "has an adolescent quality, suggestive of a playwright still struggling to emerge from studied imitativeness into her own mature voice."[1] Other reviews were more positive. The New York Post wrote: "Imagine a pairing ... between Tennessee Williams and Lorraine Hansberry, a memory play about a black family, a glass menagerie in the sun." The Chicago Sun-Times called Nottage's family drama "a complex, thought-provoking play."[2]
The play was produced at South Coast Repertory, Costa Mesa, California, from September 17, 1996, through October 20. Directed by Seret Scott the cast featured Dorian Harewood as Godfrey. The Press Enterprise reviewer wrote "Seret Scott has directed a strong, frequently moving and frequently amusing production."[3][4]
The play has received many regional productions in the US, including Steppenwolf Theatre, Chicago, Illinois, March 5–30, 1996[5] and Crossroads Theater Company, New Brunswick, New Jersey in March 1998.[6] It was produced at Center Stage, Baltimore, Maryland, from May 5 - June 11, 2006[7] and at the Goodman Theatre, Chicago, Illinois, from June 6–25, 2006.[8]
Plot
The play takes place in Brooklyn in 1950. An African- American man, Godfrey Crump, grieving over his wife's death, finds new meaning in religion. He moves his family, Ernestine, a 17-year-old and Ermina, 15 years old, from Florida to Brooklyn. Their Aunt Lily espouses Communist sentiments and Godfrey's new wife is not only a white woman, but German.[7]
Nottage has said of the play (in the booklet that accompanied the Center Stage production, page 4): "The 1950s was such a moment in American history in which I felt so much change...everything I had seen was in black and white. And I wanted to make it colorful. So I started writing Crumbs from the Table of Joy to try to understand that era."[7]
References
- Brantley, Ben. "Though a melodrama, life is not a movie" New York Times, June 22, 1995, p. C18, ISSN 0362-4331, accessed January 27, 2016 (subscription required)
- Nottage, Lynn. "Script, Review Excerpts" Crumbs from the Table of Joy, Dramatists Play Service Inc, 1998, ISBN 0822215721, Back Cover
- Foreman, T.E., Press Enterprise, Riverside, CA, September 29, 1996, Pg. E03
- "Listing" Archived 2012-09-19 at Archive.today South Coast Repertory, accessed May 14, 2009
- "Listing" Archived 2011-05-26 at the Wayback Machine steppenwolf.org, accessed May 14, 2009
- Klein, Alvin. "A Family's Journey, Literal and Otherwise", The New York Times, March 22, 1998
- "'Crumbs from the Table of Joy' Play Booklet" Archived 2016-03-10 at the Wayback Machine Center Stage, accessed January 26, 2016
- "'Crumbs from the Table of Joy' Listing" goodmantheatre.org, accessed January 26, 2016
- Nottage, Lynn. Crumbs from the Table of Joy (1998), Dramatists Play Service, Inc, ISBN 0-8222-1572-1