The entire play takes place in the living room of the Younger family in a shabby but well cared for apartment on Chicago's South Side. Matriarch Lena lives there with her two adult children, after raising them there with her deceased husband Walter. The family includes brother Walter Lee, his wife Ruth and their son Travis, and sister Beneatha. They all have dreams, and the arrival of an insurance check worth $10,000 (almost $90,000 in today's money) has them all wanting to make their dreams come true, if they can only agree on whose dream to pursue. Lena wants her family to have a house they can call their own, with a garden where she can grow a plant or two, and a yard where Travis can play. Walter Lee wants to buy a liquor store so he can be his own boss and support his family. Beneatha wants to be a doctor (pretty impressive dreams for a young black woman in the '50s), is discovering her African identity, and is torn between two suitors. This is a family that loves each other deeply; they all want what's best for the family, but can't agree on what that is. Further complications arise, including an unexpected pregnancy, a betrayal by a business partner, and most shockingly, the arrival of a white man named Mr. Lindner from the "neighborhood improvement society" who wants to buy them out to prevent a black family from moving into the all-white neighborhood. How each family member reacts to these complications determines what kind of person they want to be and the future they will have.*
Each one of these characters feels very real and very human, thanks to Lorraine Hansberry's writing and the performances of this terrific cast, most of whom are new to the Lyric Arts stage. Charla Marie Bailey reigns supreme as Mama Lena. Dana Lee Thompson brings a depth of humanity to Ruth, the hardest working member of the family. Camrin King is a delightfully spirited Beneatha, 10-year old Leonard Searcy Jr. is adorable as Travis, and Don Maloney's Mr. Lindner is maliciously polite. In the performance I attended, understudy John A. W. Stephens filled in for Leonard Searcy Sr. as Beneatha's Nigerian suitor Asagai, and did a wonderful job. Last but not least, Doc Woods really owns the role of Walter Lee, alternately empathetic and infuriating, and deliveres some of the most powerful monologues of the play with passion and desperation. The entire cast works together really well as a family under director Austene Van, who brings out all of the humor, heart, and gravity of the piece. It really isn't hard to draw parallels with today's world.
Dana Lee Tompson, Camrin King, and Doc Woods on the set of Raisin (photo by Twin Cities Headshots) |
A Raisin in the Sun should be required viewing for all Americans, so if you haven't seen it, get yourself to Anoka (it's really not that long of a drive). And even if you have seen it, it's never a bad time to revisit this classic whose themes of generational conflict, racial discrimination, and a family dreaming of a better life for themselves still resonate. Continuing through June 16.
*Plot summary borrowed from what I wrote about Park Square's production.