| Poverty Is No Gimmick Sunday, September 24, 2006 - Mary E. Montoro, Socal.com Writer |
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The multi-award winning East Harlem resident takes the audience back to 1970s
The dream starts to materialize for Jimmy when one of his nude portraits of Alexis is accepted for a major gallery show. Minor success consumes Jimmy leaving Alexis way in the background. Jimmy moves forward while Alexis continues to read books with torn pages in the library. Luckily, she has the head librarian Ms. Innis to confide in. Ms. Innis sees something special in Alexis and nurtures her need to read and write. She gives Alexis a book written by James Baldwin a However, this doesn’t mean that Alexis is free from her inner and outer demons. The kids call her fat doofus, her mother berates her growing weight gain, and Clarence looks at her as a future sexual conquest. Up to this point, the show is light with humor mixed with some harsh realities. As a young girl, Alexis is already exposed to living in an unsupportive environment. Self-acceptance is a long and unsteady journey she’s taking on. Toward the end, Orlandersmith dives into the dark side of growing up, which includes sexual abuse and shattered dreams. She puts her mind and body describing graphically Alexis’ pain. Her powerful movements will leave you crying and mourning for Alexis’ innocence. As painful her ordeal is, Alexis is able to see past the hurt and torment and reaches out for her American Bandstand dream. Orlandersmith magnificent way with words and bold expressions paint a vivid heart-breaking picture of young black girl trying to find her way. She mixes the lighter side with tragedy but always emits a positive outlook. As an actress, she puts her whole being into her individual characters. The way she changes her voice from and 8-year old girl’s to an articulate 30-something adult, how she moves her body like a finely tuned instrument and place fierce emphasis into her words to make her point is a remarkable sight to witness and experience. Orlandersmith is a woman with a lot of heart and commanding presence who freely shares her extraordinary gift of story to everyone especially to the theater community who truly needs it. The Gimmick plays at The Fountain Theatre, |
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