‘Ma Rainey’ belting it out at 20

  • By Mike Murray / Herald Writer
  • Thursday, January 20, 2005 9:00pm
  • LifeGo-See-Do

Seattle playwright August Wilson paints on a big canvas: the entire 20th century. His subject is the history of black Americans.

Wilson is the author of a cycle of plays that document and illuminate that history, a decade-by-decade cannon of plays that have earned him a worldwide audience and recognition and countless theater awards including Pulitzer Prizes for “Fences” (1986) and “The Piano Lesson” (1990).

Wilson has been called America’s greatest working playwright and a modern-day Shakespeare, and this year he completes the cycle with the opening of the tenth and final play.

The work that began this remarkable odyssey is “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,” and on the 20th anniversary of its premiere, the Seattle Repertory Theatre is mounting a new production that opens Wednesday.

Wilson filters the black American experience, a long and arduous struggle for equality and real freedom, through many lenses. In “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” it’s the music industry of the Roaring ’20s.

The Ma Rainey in this play was a real person. Gertrude “Ma” Rainey, “Mother of the Blues,” was a legendary singer in the early days of the Chicago blues who had a profound influence on American music and singers in the Jazz Age.

The action takes place over a single day in a Chicago recording studio. The year is 1927 and Ma Rainey is here with her band to cut a record.

She’s a rare thing in racist and segregated America of the 1920s: a black woman who has achieved recognition and success in the white world. She can sing the blues.

Ma Rainey has an attitude, but the white men who own the recording studio deal with it because she makes them money.

“As soon as they get my voice down on them recording machines, then it’s just like I’d be some whore and they roll over and put their pants on,” she says.

Wilson examines big themes such as blacks’ struggle for empowerment and equality by focusing on individual characters and events: The contentious recording session, Ma Rainey wanting it her way and the back-stage bickering among the black musicians who quarrel and spar with each other, ultimately with tragic results.

The Seattle Rep has long been a staging ground for the plays of August Wilson, a Pittsburgh native who made Seattle his home several years ago. And Jonathan Wilson returns to the Rep to direct this production.

Wilson, a professor of theater and drama at Loyola University in Chicago for nearly 30 years, directed August Wilson’s “Seven Guitars” at the Rep in 1998.

“I remember directing a production of (‘Ma Rainey’) in Chicago in the late 1980s,” Wilson said in a telephone interview. “The reception was just overwhelming. It was very hard to shut it down; it ran for six months.”

Twenty years on, the play still resonates with audiences, Jonathan Wilson said.

“It teaches black Americans about their own history, the world of black musicians and how they were treated in the 1920s,” he said. “It has a power about it that stays with you the rest of your life.”

Among the challenges of staging “Ma Rainey” is casting. The players must be actors first, and then musicians. “When you put these two talents together … that’s a nationwide search,” the director said.

He is reunited in this production with Cynthia Jones, who appeared in the Rep’s production of “Seven Guitars.” Jones has the voice and the acting chops needed to portray Ma Rainey.

August Wilson is a poet as well as a playwright, and the poet comes through in the language.

As the actors burrow into the words, “they feel and believe that the language is almost like a musical composition,” Jonathan Wilson said.

“The speeches themselves are arias,” he said. Doing his plays “is akin to doing the works of Shakespeare or any of the great poets.”

In the line of duty: Seattle Children’s Theatre continues its 30th anniversary season with the world-premiere production of “The Red Badge of Courage,” a stage adaptation of the historic Civil War novel by Stephen Crane that opens tonight.

“The Red Badge of Courage” brings to life Crane’s novel of a young soldier’s coming-of-age during wartime. Published in 1895, “The Red Badge of Courage” is noted as being the “first modern war novel,” told from the point of view of an ordinary young soldier. His name is Henry Fleming, and as he marches into his first battle, his conflicting feelings about courage, fear and duty come into play. First he runs from battle, but redeems himself in one astonishing act of courage.

Joe Sutton adapted the book for the stage; direction is by Linda Hartzell, Seattle Children’s Theatre artistic director. Performances run through March 5 at the Charlotte Martin Theatre.

Shakespeare in love: Seattle Shakespeare Company presents the Bard’s frothy romantic comedy, “Love’s Labour’s Lost,” in an updated production at the Center House Theatre, Seattle Center.

The company puts this work in a more modern context, advancing the time to 1905, where the King of Navaree has sequestered himself away from the world and with three close buddies has sworn off women while he studies.

It’s at this moment that a pretty young princess and her three ladies-in-waiting arrive who can’t be resisted. Will the King and his friends stick to their guns? Will they waver? It’s a romance, remember.

This is the second production in Seattle Shakespeare Company’s 2004-05 season. Aaron Levin directs, with performances running through Feb. 13.

Chris Bennion photo

Thomas M. Brimm (left), Don Mayo, director Jonathan Wilson, Cynthia Jones, Chic Street Man and Alvin Keith in Seattle Repertory Theatre’s production of August Wilson’s “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom.”

Chris Bennion photo

Lathrop Walker in Seattle Children’s Theatre’s “The Red Badge of Courage.”

Where to see it

“Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom”: A Seattle Repertory Theatre production Wednesday through Feb. 19 at the Bagley Wright Theatre, Seattle Center. $10-$46, 206-443-2222, 877-900-9285, www.seattlerep.org.

“The Red Badge of Courage”: A Seattle Children’s Theatre production tonight through March 5 at the Charlotte Martin Theatre, Seattle Center. $14-$28, 206-441-3322, www.sct.org.

“Love’s Labour’s Lost”: A Seattle Shakespeare Company production through Feb. 13 at the Center House Theatre, Seattle Center. $18-$26, 206-733-8222, www.seattleshakes.org.

Where to see it

“Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom”: A Seattle Repertory Theatre production Wednesday through Feb. 19 at the Bagley Wright Theatre, Seattle Center. $10-$46, 206-443-2222, 877-900-9285, www.seattlerep.org.

“The Red Badge of Courage”: A Seattle Children’s Theatre production tonight through March 5 at the Charlotte Martin Theatre, Seattle Center. $14-$28, 206-441-3322, www.sct.org.

“Love’s Labour’s Lost”: A Seattle Shakespeare Company production through Feb. 13 at the Center House Theatre, Seattle Center. $18-$26, 206-733-8222, www.seattleshakes.org.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Life

Brian Loomis and Michelle Moch browse for a live Christmas tree from Adopt A Stream on Tuesday, Dec. 7, 2021 in Everett, Wa. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Adopt A Stream kicks off annual holiday tree fundraiser

Visit the stream center on weekends through Dec. 23 to purchase a potted pine or spruce to support the foundation’s educational programs.

Cirque Musica, 9 to 5, Northwest Perspectives, and more

Music, arts and more coming to Snohomish County

Our “Evergreen State” of Washington filled with native conifers like Douglas Fir, Western Hemlock and Red Cedar, among others. (Sunnyside Nursery)
Conifers Large and Small

With old man winter approaching shortly, December presents a perfect opportunity for… Continue reading

Sweet and spicy, Honey Sriracha Shrimp is a no-fuss fall classic for seafood lovers

Honey Sriracha Shrimp is a deliciously sweet and spicy dish we are… Continue reading

Information panels on display as a part of the national exhibit being showcased at Edmonds College on Nov. 19, 2025 in Lynnwood, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Edmonds College hosts new climate change and community resilience exhibit

Through Jan. 21, visit the school library in Lynnwood to learn about how climate change is affecting weather patterns and landscapes and how communities are adapting.

Stollwerck Plumbing owner J.D. Stollwerck outside of his business along 5th Street on Nov. 5, 2025 in Mukilteo, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
‘Happy 1 year anniversary of bridge withdrawals’

Residents of Everett and Mukilteo live life on the edge … of the Edgewater Bridge.

Many outdoor gems, such as Camellias, bloom in the winter, some of which offer fragrance as a bonus. (Sunnyside Nursery)
Holiday Gifts for Gardeners

With the holiday season now in full swing and Christmas just around… Continue reading

Kicking Gas Campaign Director Derek Hoshiko stands for a portrait Thursday, Sep. 7, 2023, in Langley, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Climate justice group Kicking Gas is expanding efforts to Snohomish County

The nonprofit aims to switch residents to electrical appliances and can help cover up to 75% of installation costs.

May Sinclaire, Dakota Stone’s mother, practices punching her body shield.
Whidbey boxer has inspiring story of her own

Though a recent Hollywood film explores the career of professional female boxer… Continue reading

The 2025 Lexus RX 350h luxury hybrid SUV.
2025 Lexus RX 350h delivers high mpg and good value

The midsize luxury hybrid SUV has nearly best-in-class fuel economy and bang for the buck.

The back patio area and deck on Oct. 23, 2025 in Mukilteo, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
$6 million buys ‘Wow’ and a gleaming glass mansion in Mukilteo

Or for $650,000, score a 1960s tri-level home on Easy Street in Everett. Dishwasher included.

Oven-Roasted Chicken Shawarma. Food stylist: Hadas Smirnoff. (Linda Xiao/The New York Times)
Five weeknight dishes: Creamy butternut squash noodle soup, shrimp and bacon burritas and more

Here’s something I’ve never done until now: plan ahead for the holidays.… Continue reading

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.