This Friday & Saturday Night at 8:00 PM and Sunday at 3:00 PM

The Caribbean American Repertory Theatre West
Presents
SPEAK OF ME AS I AM
A One Man Musical
Starring 
KB SOLOMON 
As
PAUL ROBESON

Barnsdall Gallery Theater
4800 Hollywood Blvd, Hollywood 90027

Performance Dates:
Friday, August 27th & Saturday, August 28th ~ at 8:00 PM
Sunday, August 29th ~ at 3:00 PM

Friday, September 3rd & Saturday, September 4th at 8:00 PM
Sunday, September 5th at 3:00 PM

Directed by Jeffrey Anderson-Gunter
Music Director Kirk Taylor

For Ticket Information Call: 323-960-5772
www.plays411.com/speakofme  

BUY TICKETS
<https://www.plays411.net/newsite/boxoffice/cart.asp?show_id=2461&skin_show_
id=&orgin=guest>  
$25.00 All Performances 
$20.00 Group rate (10 per group) 
$15.00 seniors and students (ID)Use Promo

www.kbsolomon.com 

"This is a fantastic historical musical of the life of Paul Robeson. 
I've seen it four times and loved it every time! 
KB Solomon is Paul Robeson!"  
Frank Dorrel 

KB Solomon brings to light Robeson's political stand and reflects upon the
price Robeson paid.   KB Solomon narrates this amazing story by way of
thought provoking dialogue and sings twenty-one spiritual, patriotic and
popular songs, most of which Robeson recorded.  His rare basso profundo
sound is astounding as he portrays Paul Robeson back from the great beyond
to set the record straight.
"There can be no greater tragedy than to forget one's origin and finish
despised and hated by the people among whom one grew up.  To have that
happen would be the sort of thing to make me rise up from my grave."  - Paul
Robeson, 1938.
If that would happen, Robeson would certainly smile while sitting front row
center in Speak Of Me As I Am.
KB Solomon draws Paul Robeson back across stormy rivers and into present
life in his amazing one man musical play, "Speak of Me as I Am."
Paul Robeson -20th Century Renaissance man, a hero in any century who fell
into political disfavor, blacklisting and then non-personhood because he
refused to remain silent about the economic and racial inequities in the
world.
Robeson's story is  an important and particularly American tale. Today, that
paradigm has changed. If music is the universal language, then Paul Robeson
was its soul filled accent. Today, no one speaks the language more
brilliantly than Basso Profundo, KB Solomon.


Old Man Robeson Keeps Rolling Along - by Ed Rampell -12/21/2008

This year has been a year of progressive biopics, bringing Che Guevara,
Harvey Milk and Richard Nixon back to life on the screen (lauding the first
two, reviling the latter). Add to this distinguished company Speak Of Me As
I Am, a leftist bio-play starring the stirring K.B. Solomon in an inspiring
one-man show about Paul Robeson that is perfect for the holiday season.

The son of a slave, Robeson was a Renaissance Man, an all-star athlete at
Rutgers who earned a law degree and went on to become an actor (his most
famous role was as a character of the Renaissance, Othello, from whom the
play's title is taken), singer and probably most importantly, a
pro-Communist black militant who stood up to "whitey," be he a Southern
racist or German fascist.

The first act of Speak of Me As I Am tells much of Robeson's story through
film clips, songs performed live accompanied by a pianist and cellist and
most of all by Solomon's commanding presence. We see how Robeson went from
all-American to "un-American," the star of stage, screen and concert hall's
annual salary of $100,000 reduced to $2,000 per year when he was blacklisted
during the HUAC-McCarthy era.

Accused of being a Communist, Robeson was denied the right to perform at
home, and his passport was seized by the State Department, preventing the
internationally acclaimed celebrity from accepting the numerous gigs he was
offered abroad. Although the play doesn't mention it, one of Robeson's
greatest "crimes" was declaring during the Cold War that African Americans
wouldn't fight for the USA against the Soviet Union, about 20 years before
another black activist, Muhammad Ali, refused to serve in Vietnam because no
Viet Cong had ever called him the N-word.

Robeson died in the 1970s, and for today's generation, the closest they'll
come to "meeting" this extraordinary man is through this show written and
produced by Solomon and Krys Howard.

Solomon's performance is a marvel not to be missed. The towering basso
profundo opera singer has the icon's stature, mannerisms and smile down, and
his mellifluous voice is a delight that sometimes had the audience singing
along to numbers such as "I Dreamed I Saw Joe Hill Last Night." Deftly
cutting from the spoken to the sung word to tell Robeson's saga, Solomon's
renditions of classics like "Porgy's Plenty of Nothing," "The House I Live
In," "Danny Boy" and but of course, Robeson's signature tune, "Old Man
River," shall have you tapping your tootsies and perhaps tearing up, as your
inner self is transported heavenward. It's almost as if this life force,
which tirelessly stood up for the "little people" against injustice, has
come back to life.

Indeed, this is the premise of Speak of Me As I Am - Robeson returns from
heaven (where Solomon wittily observes he can't find J. Edgar Hoover or Joe
McCarthy) to tell his story. In particular, Robeson seeks to redeem himself
against charges that he was unpatriotic, insisting that he was a real
American in the revolutionary tradition of 1776, fighting for truth, justice
and the democratic way. The play glosses over Robeson's relationship with
the Communist Party and Soviet Union, which he was accused of being a stooge
for. Indeed, during a visit to the USSR Robeson did confront the Stalinists
over the imprisonment of an artist or intellectual, whom I believe was
Jewish.

This incident is powerful ammunition against those who denigrate Robeson as
a Stalin apologist, and could be incorporated into Act II. In this much
shorter second act, which seems to be a work in progress, the modern day
Robeson comments on today's recession and the election of America's first
black president.

I called Speak of Me As I Am a one-man show, but in fact the play makes
clever use of an enchained black mannequin onstage, so that at times it
almost feels like a cast of two. Photos of famous radicals and infamous
reactionaries, from Thomas Jefferson, Frederick Douglas and John Brown to
Hoover, McCarthy and Harry Truman, also decorate the set and are also put to
good use.

Speak of Me As I Am joins the illustrious company of Che, Milk and
Frost/Nixon, as well as the play Marx in Soho by people's historian Howard
Zinn as a work of art that brings great personalities and issues vividly
back to life. This is one of the greatest things art can do. By the end of
Speak of Me As I Am you, too, will feel Robeson and Solomon have got the
whole wide world in their hands. Don't miss this life affirming theatrical
experience, which will be performed from time to time in 2009 as Solomon and
Howard seek to bring Robeson's thrilling story to a theater near you.
Ed Rampell












[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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