Archive

AUGUST WILSON’S

GEM OF THE OCEAN

Citizen Barlow enters the home of the 285-year-old Aunt Ester who guides him on a spiritual journey to the City of Bones.

AUGUST WILSON’S

JOE TURNER’S COME AND GONE

August Wilson’s Joe Turner’s Come and Gone vividly captures an emotional piece of the African American experience during the early days of the Great Migration. Haunted by the past and desperate to find his missing wife, Herald Loomis arrives at a Pittsburgh boarding house with his young daughter. As he encounters the other residents of this transient home, Loomis’s search becomes a powerful odyssey of self-discovery, rich with spiritual release and resonance. 

AUGUST WILSON’S

MA RAINEY’S BLACK BOTTOM

August Wilson’s electrifying drama about music, ambition, and power in 1920s Chicago. When Ma Rainey and her band gather for a recording session, tensions rise, truths are revealed, and the fight for respect takes center stage. 

AUGUST WILSON’S

THE PIANO LESSON

This Pulitzer Prize-winning masterpiece, presented as part of Baltimore’s August Wilson Celebration, tells the story of a pair of siblings and the fate of their cherished family heirloom: a piano carved with images of their ancestors previously owned by the family’s former enslavers. Set in 1930s Pittsburgh, the play weaves history and spirituality together in a haunting narrative that explores the conflict between protecting one’s heritage and forging a path into the future.