Angry, Raucous & Shamelessly Gorgeous: filmed live at Hartford Stage
By Pearl Cleage
Directed for the stage by Susan V. Booth
It’s not too late to catch this bold and funny show!
For a very limited time only, you can stream Angry, Raucous & Shamelessly Gorgeous from your home.
Digital tickets are available now through Sunday, February 20 for $25 per household. Once you’ve purchased a ticket, you’ll be able to log into your account on our website to access your personal digital content and view the show.
More detailed instructions can be found here.
Grab some popcorn, a cozy blanket, and get ready to laugh and scream and scheme with Anna, Betty, Kate, and Pete.
Captions for this recording are available in both English and Spanish.
ABOUT THE STORY:
In Angry, Raucous & Shamelessly Gorgeous, pioneering and imperious actor Anna Campbell returns to the U.S. after being in a self-imposed exile for 25 years. Her groundbreaking Black feminist theatre piece — a controversial collection of monologues performed in the nude — is set to be revived as the centerpiece of a performance art festival in Atlanta. What promises to be both a triumphant homecoming and a much-needed career resuscitation turns sour when the diva discovers that Pete, an inexperienced younger woman and an adult entertainer, is set to recreate Anna’s legendary performance. Angry, Raucous & Shamelessly Gorgeous is a bold and funny story by one of America’s preeminent Black female playwrights that explores ambition, post-feminism, the generational divide, activism, and who has a right to tell our stories.
ABOUT THE PLAYWRIGHT:
Pearl Cleage is an Atlanta-based writer whose works include three novels, What Looks Like Crazy On An Ordinary Day (Avon Books, 1997), I Wish I Had A Red Dress (Morrow/Avon, 2001), and Some Things I Never Thought I’d Do, (Ballantine/One World, August, 2003); a dozen plays, including Flyin’ West, Blues for an Alabama Sky, Hospice and Bourbon at the Border; two books of essays, Mad at Miles: A Blackwoman’s Guide to Truth and Deals With the Devil and Other Reasons to Riot; and a book of short fiction, The Brass Bed and Other Stories (Third World Press). She is also a performance artist, collaborating frequently with her husband, Zaron W. Burnett, Jr., under the title Live at Club Zebra. The two have performed sold out shows at both the National Black Theatre Festival in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and The National Black Arts Festival in Atlanta, Georgia.
She is a frequent contributor to anthologies and has been featured recently in Proverbs for the People, Contemporary African American Fiction , edited by Tracy Price-Thompson and TaRessa Stovall and in Mending theWorld, Stories of Family by Contemporary Black Writers, edited by Rosemarie Robotham. She is a Contributing Writer to Essence Magazine, and in 1998, her novel, What Looks Like Crazy On An Ordinary Day was an Oprah Book Club pick and spent nine weeks on The New York Times bestseller list.
Cast
Cynthia D. Barker
as
Kate Hughes
Terry Burrell
as
Anna Campbell
Shakirah DeMesier*
as
Precious “Pete” Watson
Marva Hicks*
as
Betty Samson
*Members of Actors’ Equity Association, the Union of Professional Actors and Stage Managers in the United States.