Project1VOICE presents Us Supporting Us A Juneteenth celebration of the history of Black Artistic Endeavor
For Immediate Release
June 2, 2021
Press Contact: Nina Ward
Project1VOICE presents
Us Supporting Us
A Juneteenth celebration
of the history of
Black Artistic Endeavor
200th anniversary remembrance of
NYC’s African Grove Theatre
(June 1, 2021) - Project1VOICE, an organization dedicated to supporting theatre and the performing arts by people of African descent, will commemorate its 10th anniversary with Us Supporting Us, a free three-day online event for Juneteenth.
Us Supporting Us begins June 19, 2021 with a 200th anniversary celebration of the African Grove Theatre, the first Black theatre company in the United States. The theatre was founded by William Alexander Brown, a free Black man from the West Indies, and was in operation at several locations in Lower Manhattan and Greenwich Village from 1821-1826, until it mysteriously burned down.
In addition to an in-depth conversation about the legacy of the African Grove Theatre, Us Supporting Us events will include an award ceremony honoring the outstanding achievements of Black creatives and a staged reading of Autumn’s Harvest by Dominique Morrisseau.
All events will be hosted on Project1VOICE’s new virtual performing arts center (VPAC), an online portal which will be renamed in honor of each event.
For the three-day event
Project1VOICE will rename the VPAC The African Grove. Subsequent gatherings
will be renamed to pay homage to the countless shoulders on which we all stand.
All Project1VOICE online events will have an ASL interpreter.
Erich McMillan-McCall, Founder and Director of Project1VOICE, has dedicated the past 10 years to uplifting other Black creatives and providing education on the contributions of Black artists throughout the history of the United States and beyond. With Project1VOICE’s new virtual performance platform, programming and initiatives, Mr. McMillian-McCall hopes to continue this necessary work and draw additional support.
“I believe that the key to continuing our robust and rich history of Black theatre in this country will depend on four areas of action: Sustain, Endow, Access and Thrive. McMillan-McCall explains. “This is how we will endure and exceed. These three days are intended to connect us to our varied and robust past, present and future. During these three days we will be commemorating the ‘emancipation’ of our collective and individual voices, paving the way for the better future that is always ours to claim.”
A recent recipient of a generous gift from The Black Seed/Mellon Foundation, Project1VOICE will use the funds
as intended: to plant the seeds of growth for Black creatives and arts
professionals by honoring Black theatre artists, actively engaging and hiring
Black people and specifically Black women for the organization’s initiatives,
and using their platform to encourage support for Black creatives and performing arts
organizations.
Liberation:
African Grove Theatre, a conversation on legacy
Sunday, June 20th
- 7pm EDT
Jubilation: Project1VOICE Honors
Project1VOICE
Honors is an annual award given to organizations and individuals whose
contributions to American culture empower and amplify Black agency and
expression in the creative and performing arts. Past honorees include Douglas
Turner Ward, Irene Gandy, Linda Twine, Wilhelmina “Billie” Allen,
Wynn Thomas, The Billie Holiday
Theatre, Allen Lee Hughes and Danny Holgate. This year's
honorees will be announced closer to the date.
Community: One Play One Day - Autumn’s Harvest, for all ages
A virtual staged reading of Autumn’s
Harvest by Dominique Morisseau
will be presented on the VPAC stage, directed by Jade King Carroll, with cast members from the original production.
This play is for young audiences.
Biographies:
Dominique Morisseau is the author of The Detroit Project (A 3-Play Cycle) which includes the following plays: Skeleton Crew (Atlantic Theater Company), Paradise Blue (Signature Theatre), and Detroit ’67 (Public Theater, Classical Theatre of Harlem and NBT). Additional plays include: Pipeline (Lincoln Center Theatre), Sunset Baby (LAByrinth Theatre); Blood at the Root (National Black Theatre) and Follow Me To Nellie’s (Premiere Stages). She is also the Tony-nominated book writer on the Broadway musical Ain’t Too Proud – The Life and Times of the Temptations (Imperial Theatre). Dominique is an alumna of The Public Theater Emerging Writer’s Group, Women’s Project Lab, and Lark Playwrights Workshop and has developed work at Sundance Lab, Williamstown Theatre Festival and Eugene O'Neill Playwrights Conference. She most recently served as Co-Producer on the Showtime series “Shameless” (three seasons). Additional awards include: Spirit of Detroit Award, PoNY Fellowship, Sky-Cooper Prize, TEER Trailblazer Award, Steinberg Playwright Award, Audelco Awards, NBFT August Wilson Playwriting Award, Edward M. Kennedy Prize for Drama, OBIE Award (2), Ford Foundation Art of Change Fellowship, Variety’s Women of Impact for 2017-18, and a recent MacArthur Genius Grant Fellow.
The Black Theatre
Network is composed of artists, educators, scholars, students and theatre lovers
who are dedicated to the exploration and preservation of the theatrical visions
of the African Diaspora. For 30 years, the Black Theatre Network has collected,
processed and distributed information that supports the professional and
personal development of its membership (composed of individuals engaged in the
full range of theatre professions, professional and community theatres and
organizations, and academic institutions). www.blacktheatrenetwork.org
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