playwright Lorraine Hansberry |
A new documentary, Sighted
Eyes/Feeling Heart, attempts to reorient our understanding of
Hansberry by placing the success of Raisin in the context of
Hansberry’s overall life and career. Written and directed by Tracy
Heather Strain, the film airs on PBS on January 19. (I should disclose
that I viewed the film as preparation for an interview that I
conducted with Strain for my podcast on theatre history.)
Lorraine Hansberry (front row, 3R) at a party in honor of Broadway debut of A Raisin in the Sun (Gordon Parks/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images) |
It’s impossible for the film to
escape the gravitational pull of Raisin, given its
disproportionate importance as the only entirely finished play of
Hansberry’s curtailed career, but it does manage to cast her
intentions for the drama in a different light. As Kael and Wolfe’s
aforementioned criticisms indicate, it’s often assailed for being
too safe, focusing on the middle-class aspirations of a black family
in Chicago and operating in a realist mode that recapitulates some of
the less inspiring devices of old-fashioned rent-day melodramas and
Arthur Miller at his most unbearably wholesome. However, placing the
play in the context of Hansberry’s radical politics helps to
reframe it, at least in terms of understanding Hansberry’s aim
instead of the end result. Amiri Baraka, a onetime critic of the play
(who had changed his name from Leroi Jones in the years after its
premiere), later
came to see it as “political agitation,” an attempt to deal
with “issues of democratic rights and equality . . . not as political
abstractions, but as they are lived.” Such statements
suggest that, if nothing else, we should perhaps shift our point of
comparison from Miller’s work to another of Hansberry’s
contemporaries, Clifford Odets, and to see the work as attempting to
operate in the exhortatory mode of a work like Awake and Sing!
Strain draws on a range of documents for the film, from the court case that Hansberry’s father fought against residential segregation in Chicago to the letters that she wrote to The Ladder, the first major lesbian publication in the United States. In addition, Strain has marshaled an impressive array of talking heads, from predictably essential figures such as Sidney Poitier and Ruby Dee (who both appeared in the 1961 film of Raisin) to more surprising individuals such as Edie Windsor, the late activist who knew Hansberry and was the plaintiff in the landmark legal decision overturning the ban on same-sex marriage in the United States. (The presence of Dee, Windsor, and Baraka has at times an unintentionally chilling effect – it’s jarring to see these now-deceased individuals as living, breathing presences onscreen.) The overall result is a look at Hansberry that, while it might not entirely change your perspective on her most famous work, will at least shift it.
Strain draws on a range of documents for the film, from the court case that Hansberry’s father fought against residential segregation in Chicago to the letters that she wrote to The Ladder, the first major lesbian publication in the United States. In addition, Strain has marshaled an impressive array of talking heads, from predictably essential figures such as Sidney Poitier and Ruby Dee (who both appeared in the 1961 film of Raisin) to more surprising individuals such as Edie Windsor, the late activist who knew Hansberry and was the plaintiff in the landmark legal decision overturning the ban on same-sex marriage in the United States. (The presence of Dee, Windsor, and Baraka has at times an unintentionally chilling effect – it’s jarring to see these now-deceased individuals as living, breathing presences onscreen.) The overall result is a look at Hansberry that, while it might not entirely change your perspective on her most famous work, will at least shift it.
– Michael Lueger teaches theatre classes at Northeastern University and Emerson College. He's written for WBUR's Cognoscentipage and HowlRound. He also tweets about theatre history at @theaterhistory.
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