Sam White didn鈥檛 fall in love with Shakespeare by choice.
She fell in love with the Bard of Avon because her mother busted her for listening to Salt-N-Pepa鈥檚 鈥淧ush It鈥 when she was just 8 years old.
鈥淢y mother made me read the complete works of Shakespeare as punishment,鈥 White laughs. 鈥淓ventually, I started to like it and enjoy it. My mother planted the seed of theater and Shakespeare.鈥
That seed grew into , a nonprofit organization White founded in 2013 that produces live productions at various sites throughout the city in an effort to make the Bard鈥檚 work more accessible.
The first performances took place shortly after the city of Detroit filed for bankruptcy. Next month, Shakespeare in Detroit, which has engaged more than 14,000 audience members, will celebrate its 10th anniversary with free performances of The Tempest in Campus Martius Park.
White knew her mom would show up for those first performances at Grand Circus Park, but she didn鈥檛 expect over 500 people to attend as well.
In those early days of bankruptcy, there was discussion about the Detroit Institute of Arts and its vast collection being used as collateral to pay off debts. White says it was a critical moment, 鈥渁 wake-up call for Detroiters that art is essential to life in Detroit.鈥
White has made art and theater essential in her life, too. It鈥檚 taken her from being a local kid from Seven Mile and Evergreen to becoming the first African American woman to direct a play at the in Ontario, one of the most prestigious theater institutions in North America.
It remains rare for any American director to direct at Stratford.
鈥淚 have so many people that I grew up with in my neighborhood and in my school that have not had the opportunities that I鈥檝e had,鈥 White says. 鈥淣ow it鈥檚 my job to always come back to Detroit and say, 鈥楾his is what I鈥檓 doing internationally, and you can do the same thing.鈥
鈥淚 won鈥檛 be the last person from Seven Mile to have an international career,鈥 White says.
White is directing Wedding Band at Stratford, which has its opening night on July 14 and will be running at the festival through Oct. 1 at the Tom Patterson Theatre.
Wedding Band was written during the Civil Rights era by actor-writer-playwright Alice Childress, who holds the rare designation of being the only African American woman to have written, produced, and published plays across four decades. Her work continues to resonate with audiences today, with her canon enjoying a renaissance in recent years.
The play explores a relationship between a Black seamstress and a white baker against the backdrop of the First World War, the 1918 flu pandemic, and the deeply rooted racism of the Deep South in Charleston, South Carolina.
While their interracial love is a driving force of the play, White says, it鈥檚 the relationship between four women in the story that drives White.
鈥淚 remind the cast about this all the time. While the subject matter and many moments of the play can be quite intense, the play is not a tragedy.
鈥淲e have four entrepreneurial women who drive it. I feel very lucky to tell the story of these incredible women, and we get to see a real love story with the middle-aged Black woman as the protagonist of a play,鈥 White adds. 鈥淭hat never happens in American or Canadian theater, so I鈥檓 very excited to direct this play and tell this story.鈥
White says she was attracted to this play because it doesn鈥檛 let the monolithic narrative of 鈥渙vercoming the racial odds鈥 dictate the larger story. There鈥檚 beauty and hope and complexity in these characters, reflecting a reality of individualism in Black America that鈥檚 often whitewashed off the stage and off the screen.
She nods to the power of Childress鈥 work as the impetus.
鈥淪he didn鈥檛 negate the tragic circumstances. The beauty of the story, however, is that the character is radiantly happy at the end of the play,鈥 White says. 鈥淭hat radiance is the thing that has sustained African Americans in this country for centuries. We鈥檝e found [it] in church, in community, in singing,听in the food that we eat and the sisterhood that we have. It鈥檚 quite incredible to tell a story like this that doesn鈥檛 lean into the tragedy but rather celebrates the radiant joy of these women.鈥
Last December, White鈥檚 mother passed away. When we talked, she was in the middle of rehearsals for Wedding Band with her first Mother鈥檚 Day without her mom looming on the calendar.
鈥淟et me tell you 鈥 I鈥檓 so happy that I had the mother that I had because I鈥檓 a kid from Seven Mile and I鈥檓 directing at one of the finest theatrical institutions in North America,鈥 White says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 because my mother gave me the completed works of Shakespeare. It shaped my life. It shaped my connection to theater. It shaped the way that I tell stories.鈥
It shaped White as a person, too. Her family didn鈥檛 travel much when she was a kid, but theater was able to take her to places she could only dream of. Her mom made sure to feed her the classics and take her to see shows like A Chorus Line at the Fisher Theatre.
鈥淏ecause she exposed me to so many things, I always knew there was a life beyond where I came from,鈥 she says. 鈥淪he was a good one, even though I was mad at her when she made me read all 37 plays in Shakespeare鈥檚 canon. I鈥檓 more grateful than ever that she gave me that.鈥
There鈥檚 one thing White鈥檚 mom, Janet, couldn鈥檛 change about her, though.
鈥淚 will say that I still listen to Salt-N-Pepa,鈥 White laughs.
This story is from the July 2023听issue of 黑料网 Detroit magazine. Read more in our digital edition.
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