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"JITNEY"
CenterStage
Baltimore, MD (410) 332-0033
www.centerstage.org
January 8-February 14, 1999

review by David Sobelsohn

Ridin' All Over

In 1979 August Wilson had a job at the Science Museum of Minnesota, writing scripts for actors who roamed the museum's anthropology floor in native costume. Wilson had written hundreds of poems and short stories
but--except for a musical satire cobbled from some of his poems--no original works for the stage.

One of the museum's actors invited him to attend a play. Afterwards, Wilson thought: "I can write that." Working in a local fish-and-chips, sometimes writing on paper napkins, he composed "Jitney!," his first realistic drama.

The rest, as they say, is theater history. "Jitney!" earned Wilson a playwriting fellowship, and he quit his museum job. He went on to write six more plays, each portraying the African-American experience in a different decade of the 20th century ("Jitney!" representing the 1970s). Each of the six after "Jitney!" won the New York Drama Critics Circle Award, and two--"The Piano Lesson" (1990) and "Fences" (1987)--received
the Pulitzer Prize.

But after a smash premiere in Pittsburgh (in 1982) and a successful staging in St. Paul (in 1985), "Jitney!" stalled. Recently, starting with a June 1996 Pittsburgh revival, Wilson has revised the play (and removed
its title's punctuation). A newly retuned "Jitney" runs at Baltimore's CenterStage through February 14.

"Jitney" derives its name from the unlicensed, independently owned taxis (sometimes called gypsy cabs) that bring passengers to parts of Pittsburgh avoided by licensed cabdrivers. Like Wilson's other plays, "Jitney" has
just one set: a dilapidated storefront used as a jitney dispatch station. Service requests come via a pay 'phone hanging on a support pillar; off-duty drivers play checkers at a worn desk, or recline on a faded green sofa. David Gallo's splendid design includes a transparent outside wall, through which one can see cars parked rather too close together on a decaying, steeply graded street typical of Pittsburgh's Hill District,
where the playwright grew up and where he has set nearly all his plays.

Jim Becker (Paul Butler) runs this particular jitney service. Its drivers include the gossipy, meddlesome Turnbo (Stephen McKinley Henderson); the alcoholic ex-tailor Fielding (Anthony Chisholm); the no-nonsense Doub
(Barry Shabaka Henley); and the ambitious, hardworking Vietnam vet Youngblood (Russell Hornsby). Three plot lines intertwine: Youngblood shops for a home to surprise his girlfriend, Rena (Michole Briana White); after 20 years' imprisonment for murder, Becker's son Clarence ("Booster") (Keith Randolph Smith) tries to reconnect with his estranged father; and everyone faces imminent dislocation as the city announces plans to
demolish the block for urban renewal.

"Jitney" has many of the qualities that make August Wilson one of America's leading playwrights. His dialogue has wit, poetry, and wisdom: you always learn something from an August Wilson play. Many of his characters have interesting and complex, if sometimes irritating, personalities.


The CenterStage production features a fine cast. Butler brings needed stubbornness to the difficult role of Becker. Chisholm (as Fielding) and Henderson (as Turnbo) have terrific timing and delivery. But even veteran
Wilson director Marion McClinton can't coax credible passion from the play's only romantic couple, Youngblood and Rena. Sound designer Rob Milburn did well with the 1970s music, less well with car sound effects--too often absent--and the ringing telephone, which when unanswered sometimes obscured portions of the dialogue.

The script has a variety of faults, notably a clumsy exposition and improbable character shifts. Moreover, it lacks focus, with underdeveloped or even superfluous characters and a meandering plot with several red herrings, notably Youngblood's Vietnam service and his supposed flirtation with Rena's sister. The most poignant relationship, between Becker and Booster, doesn't even surface until late in act I.

"Jitney" also travels ground Wilson has covered more effectively elsewhere. Like "Joe Turner's Come and Gone" and "Two Trains Running," "Jitney" portrays a cross- section of black America in a gathering place
where troubled characters vent their emotions. Like "Fences," "Jitney" has a proud father who, in nearly the same language as "Fences," disowns his son, one of whom (in "Fences" it's the father) has served time for
homicide. Like "Two Trains Running," "Jitney" takes place in a Hill District business facing urban renewal; one of the characters in "Jitney" (set in 1977) even mentions the diner demolished in "Two Trains Running"
(set in 1969). Like "Fences," "Two Trains," and "Seven Guitars," "Jitney" ends with a funeral. From "Two Trains" Wilson even recycles a key prop--a chalk board, now with drivers' names instead of menu items; a stock character--a numbers runner who angers management by using the business's only pay telephone to take bets; and a repeated line of dialogue: "That boy ain't got good sense."

Perhaps it's unfair to criticize an author's first play for containing elements he treated more skillfully in later efforts. After all, that's the way it's supposed to work. Seen in that light, "Jitney" provides an intriguing glimpse of the early development of a playwright destined to become a leader of his generation.

And maybe, just maybe, Wilson's repetition makes a political point: that the changing decades of the twentieth century have left things more or less the same for the black man in America.

An off-stage character in "Two Trains Running" is quoted as saying "If you drop the ball, you got to go back and pick it up." In revising "Jitney," August Wilson picked up the ball. We should applaud his achievement and
look forward to his next play. Let's hope it has more focus, and covers more new ground, than "Jitney."

www.centerstage.org

-the end-

contact Sharon Kennedy at muffett@shirenet.com for questions or help
© 1995 Sharon Kennedy. Request permission of author to copy and use.
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