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Reviewed by Brian Egeston Having recently lost a grandmother, my senses of the role that strong Black women play in our communities and families has been heightened. We often refer back to Hattie McDaniel’s portrayal of Mammy in Gone With the Wind as a significant feat in Black film history. On February 12th 2005, many television viewers had the opportunity to witness another amazing celebration of the Black women, and a celebration of the extended Black family, during the television debut of Lackawanna Blues presented by HBO Films. The film’s cast is comprised of a veritable honor roll of some of the most talented and significant Black actors working today. The film also served as a career screen performance by S. Epatha Merkerson. Already a Tony Award nominee and a series regular for twelve seasons on Law & Order, Merkerson has established an extensive resume. But as the lead character in Lackawanna Blues, Rachel "Nanny" Crosby, Merkerson delivers a performance second only to an actual grandmother.
Lackawanna Blues is the screenplay adaptation of Ruben Santiago-Hudson’s autobiographical one-man stage play. Set just before desegregation, the film revisits an African-American community when all they had was each other. It is a trip back to days in which cornbread and beans was a feast for kings and a jukebox and a bottle of whiskey was the only thing needed to turn a living room into a nightclub. Lackawanna Blues takes place mostly in Nanny’s home which serves as a rooming house, juke joint, restaurant, beauty parlor, and an orphanage of sorts to Rueben Jr. (Santiago’s Hudson’s childhood character). When Reuben’s parents are no longer capable of taking care of him, Nanny takes the boy in as her own and he joins a house filled with wayward and eclectic drifters in Nanny’s stable of extended family members. From a one-armed ax-swinger to a rake-swinging schizophrenic, the young boy learns the lessons of life in the strangest classroom imaginable. Acclaimed stage director, George C. Wolfe, is at the helms of this project and he drives it with amazing splendor in his feature film directorial debut. From the film’s fast-paced opening, there is a rhythm that flows from the music into the dialogue and into the action and continues through various scene transitions. At times, the movie plays out as an opera that doesn’t know it’s supposed to be a blues song and instead transforms itself into a lovechild of be-bop and gospel. It swings, it hits, it slams, it jams and then it starts all over again. With such a vast ensemble of actors, who on other projects have garnered
every inch of the spotlight, Wolfe manages to showcase each talent with just the
proper amount of seasoning and allows cast members to simmer for just the right
length of time. The film bears names such as Delroy Lindo, Jeffery Wright,
Terrence Dashon Howard, Louis Gossett Jr., Jimmy Smits, and Liev Schreiber.
Another Hollywood marquee name attached to the project, yet not on the screen,
is Halle Berry who serves as one of the executive producers. Wolfe is quoted as saying, “I hope they [viewers] find themselves somewhere in the story.” While everyone from various generations may not find themselves in the story, they may find someone from their past within the film. Purveyors of the written word, more importantly of the Black written word, and Black culture may find a ghostlike comparison to the film’s characters with that of their own ancestors. The actors deliver spot-on dialect so convincing it’s easy to forget they’re watching a movie and instead believe the fallacy that they’re peeking through the window of a deceased grandmother’s house or the screen door of a great aunt. Hollywood has a knack for well…Hollywooding a culture of which they have no concept. But Lackawanna Blues is so real, so indicative of a time and a culture; this film serves as a standard for how to transform a place, a time and a people onto the screen. The food is real. The way the food is described is real. The way to food is served is real. The way the food is devoured by potbellied old men is real. But perhaps the most realistic facet of the film is the portrayal of community. Lackawanna Blues revisits the painful question of integration’s affect on Black culture. Through the giving and stern sprit of Nanny, we have the opportunity to reexamine our matriarchs and how they are an intricate part in--not only our success--but also our survival. From the milk of her bosom to the stash in her bra, from the grace of her stance to weight on her feet, from the balm of her touch to the leather on her strap, from the candy in her purse to the grease on her stove, from the peas of her porch to the pallets on her floor, from the scars on her face to the forgiveness in her heart, she has made us who we are and what we shall become. Lackawanna Blues reminds us that what’s missing is the matriarchs.
Related Information Lackawanna Blues also features poet
Saul Willams as "Lonnie"
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