5 Black Playwrights to Check out for Black History Month

In honor of Black History Month, we’d like to talk about some of the most influential and important black American playwrights. These artists helped shape American theater and left a profound impact on the arts. Whether it’s your first time enjoying, or you’re returning to a favorite classic, go check out these beloved works by some of America’s greatest authors

Aubrey Lyles and Flournoy Miller

Aubrey Lyles and Flournoy Miller (F.E. Miller) were a popular comedic duo between 1905 and 1932. They are considered some of the most important figures in the history of black American musical theater.

Lyles and Miller were childhood friends from Tennessee, who began performing together at an early age. In 1921, Miller’s Broadway show, Shuffle Along, was so popular and long-running that it caused traffic jams on West 63rd St.

In 1923, the duo’s play Runnin' Wild debuted the wildly popular “Charleston” dance and became one of the most popular shows of the decade.

Alice Childress

Alice Childress grew up in Harlem, New York and began her playwriting career in 1949. In her debut play Florence, she also performed the starring role. Childress was the first black woman to have had a play professionally published.

Her 1955 play, Trouble in Mind, won an Obie Award for Best Original Play. In 1973, her young adult novel A Hero Ain’t Nothin’ but a Sandwich became widely popular and was adapted into a feature film.

Childress published 15 plays and 5 novels throughout her career, including musical productions that she wrote with her composer husband. She is the only black woman to have written, produced, and published plays for four decades.

Langston Hughes

Langston Hughes was a renowned poet, author, playwright, and social activist. He was one of the most prominent leaders of the Harlem Renaissance and contributed to the creation of the “jazz poetry” genre.

In 1931, Hughes decided he wanted to create theater “for the people.” As part of this mission, he co-founded the New York Suitcase Theater in Harlem, which focused on creating interracial plays and performing for workers in labor organizations. His play Don't You Want To Be Free? became the longest running play in Harlem at the time.

Ten years later in Chicago, Hughes founded a group called The Skyloft Players, which existed to support black playwrights and help bring “the black perspective” to theater. Hughes gained a worldwide reputation for his literary genius and powerful writing during the civil rights movement. Today he is still considered one of the most important and influential American authors and thinkers.

Lorraine Hansberry

Lorraine Hansberry was the first black female author to have a play performed on Broadway. Hansberry grew up in Chicago where her family suffered under segregation. Her most well-known play, A Raisin in the Sun tells a similar story of a black family in South Chicago facing racial segregation and financial hardship.

A Raisin in the Sun debuted on Broadway in 1959 and won The New York Drama Critics' Circle award, making Hansberry the youngest playwright to receive this honor. Today, many critics consider A Raisin in the Sun to be one of the best plays of all time.

Lonne Elder III

Lonne Elder III grew up in an impoverished family during the Great Depression and was orphaned at a young age. His aunt and uncle then raised him in New Jersey before he moved to Harlem, New York as an adult.

After serving two years in the army, Elder began pursuing acting and playwriting. Remember Lorraine Hansberry’s debut play, A Raisin in the Sun? Lonne Elder III was cast as the starring role in that original production! Elder also received direct encouragement from Langston Hughes regarding his talent as a writer.

In 1969, Elder’s play Ceremonies in Dark Old Men told the story of a Harlem barber and his family. This work received many accolades, including a Drama Desk Award for Most Promising Playwright and a Pulitzer Prize nomination.

Shortly after this success, Elder pursued a career in Hollywood. His adaptation of William H. Armstrong's novel Sounder received four Academy Award nominations, including Best Adapted Screenplay, making Elder the first black man to receive this honor.

We are forever grateful to these brilliant playwrights for sharing their stories and talent with the world. As we celebrate Black History Month, let’s remember to appreciate their legacy. And go read or watch their plays!

How to Write a Play

7 Steps to Writing a Great (or not so great) Play

There is this "Ding". You get an idea. Be it good or bad, it's an idea that can be nurtured. Is it a great idea? Maybe, but you are about to make it awesome. Below, I've listed out some helpful tips on how to write a play.

1) Genre: Write What You Love and LIke

I love humor, silly characters, odd lyrics & a love story. I have written a straight drama, but continued to interject my comfort zone quirks. Makes it real. This is your call, but the closer to you the subject feels, the more real the characters and their conversations are. In your mind. For now.

2) Choose Your Audience

Really take a moment and think about who your audience will be. Who are you aiming at? Kids, teens, adults, older, all of them. This will have a huge impact on the structure of your dialogue.

3) Do Your Homework

If you are writing about a notable figure, a time in history, a battle, a place. DO YOUR HOMEWORK. It makes writing about it so much easier and very fulfilling.

4) Story-line: What is it All About?

You have the ding and it's time for you to fill it out. Beginning middle and end. Sounds easy, sometimes it is, most importantly though, does it flow? If you find the story boring, then your audience will be snoozing in their seats. Find the twists, the humor, the sadness, the laughter, the love, the pain, the end. Have a board to put your characters on and move them around. I do. Is this weird?

5) Listen to Your Characters

I cannot stress enough that you cannot write for your characters, they make you write for them. If the dialogue feels forced, you are having trouble making them talk or you are just writing for writing’s sake. STOP IT. Go away. Put the pen down. Do anything other than write. They will talk to you. Usually in the middle of the night. So have pen and paper by your bed to write down all that they are saying. You really do hear voices in your head when you are a writer.

6) Determine the Desired Length of the Piece

How long should your play be? It's up to you. Depends on how many acts, pages written, songs (if any) dances (if any). Rule of thumb. 2 minutes a page. So 60 pages would be roughly 2 hours.

7) Read Your Work

Find a bunch of friends and sit around and read. It's fun, they will critique it, not always nice by the way. But be prepared to listen to constructive criticism. It's about the play now, not you. You want it to work right?

Whatever you do as a writer, have fun. Whether you're learning how to write a play, or writing a novel, or even a speech. Every blank page is another chance to fill it with life! How cool is that!?

Behind the Scenes: Jackie Mellor-Guin

Jackie Mellor-Guin is a local playwright, director, and real estate, agent. A founding member of Theatre Britain, in Dallas Texas, Jackie has written/directed more than 17 pantomime adaptations and one world premiere play. Several of her plays have recently been performed at Olive Branch Theatricals including Little Red Riding Hood (2018), King Arthur (2019), and A Cowboy Christmas Carol (2019).

What is Backdrop9? 

Backdrop9 is a resource blog for theater production teams designed to give the stage to community leaders so they can share their insights, knowledge, and expertise with the local theater community. 

In 1947, Cheryl founded The Actor’s Studio, which provided training for actors. The Actor’s Studio is still active today, and is a renowned group that has trained many of America’s most respected actors, including Marlon Brando, James Dean, Paul Newman, Marilyn Monroe, Al Pacino, Jane Fonda, Robert De Niro, Dustin Hoffman, Jack Nicholson, and many more.

Curator: Olive Branch Theatricals

Olive Branch Theatricals is a theater company located in Santa Clarita. We are dedicated to the community by providing quality theatre and live production. Our mission is to have a presence in the local community, and we exhibit that through our various programs, including our sensory-friendly theatre programour deaf theatre programour ticket sponsorship program, and our community singing group, Portfolio