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One Women Show
Article by Jon Kaplan in the Toronto NOW
I'M JUST SITTING AT THE DERBY WAITING FOR MY SHIP TO COME
IN written and performed by Anne-Marie Woods. Presented as
part of Omiala at the Harbourfront Centre's Lakeside Terrace,
235 Queens Quay West. July 24 and 25, Saturday 5:30 pm, Sunday
4:30 pm. Free. 416-973-4000. www.harbourfrontcentre.com
Anne-Marie Woods is sharing a bit of her Halifax hometown
history with Toronto audiences. In the appropriate setting
of Harbourfront Centre's Lakeside Terrace – where else
can you get so much water in T.O.? – she's remounting
her Fringe hit I'm Just Sitting At The Derby Waiting For My
Ship To Come In, as part of Omiala: A Festival of New Black
Culture.
The concept of home is the first-time multidisciplinary festival's
connecting theme.
"As a teen in Halifax, I noticed that all these American
navy men would swarm the city," recalls the actor/ singer/dancer.
"Suddenly, women would appear, too, and the clubs and
streets would fill up with couples.
"Why, I wondered, would women date sailors – people
they wouldn't see beyond a few days?"
While in university, Woods, whose family came from Trinidad,
dated Caribbean students. Then, after graduation, she found
herself not dating at all. There were no prospects in sight.
And then she realized why those women had gone for the sailors.
"I'd been mulling over the idea for a few years, while
I was doing one-woman shows at schools. Then I spent a year
at a black theatre school in Philadelphia where I saw that
audiences didn't rush to see works by Shakespeare or black
playwright August Wilson. Instead, they were attracted to
what were called chitlin-circuit plays, popular theatre works
that spoke to a grassroots audience."
I'm Just Sitting is in the same vein, a largely improvised
piece about a lonely woman.
"I guess for some people the show isn't very funny,"
says the radio and stage performer, who's been in Toronto
for three years and appeared in the remount of The Adventures
Of A Black Girl In Search Of God.
"But the fact is that the chromosome base in Nova Scotia
just doesn't seem to produce enough black men. It's a serious
issue, especially for black women, but there's no black male-bashing
intended by the show."
Woods got an enthusiastic response from women, though, and
the premiere production – a combination of song, movement
and text – was an audience favourite at the Atlantic
Fringe.
She's written five one-woman shows, including a follow-up
to I'm Just Sitting called Still Sitting At The Derby, in
which her character returns as a 75-year-old.
"And let me tell you," she laughs, "I'd never
thought about senior citizens seeing themselves onstage. They
loved it and came in busloads."
Convoluted titles seem to be a Woods specialty. Her latest
show, to be workshopped here and in Nova Scotia this summer,
is True Confessions Of A Single Woman While Waiting For Her
Big Break: The Off Off Off Off Off Off Broadway Musical.
But it's not just commercial success she's after. Woods's
solo school performances deal with black history, peer pressure
and bullying, topics she's eager to speak about.
"It's important for a woman of Afri-can descent to be
in the schools, talking to kids about things I've been through
or understand.
"I feel like a teacher without a teaching degree; my
curriculum has no boundaries. I've also run a young company
in Nova Scotia called Imani Women's Artistic Project, an interdisciplinary
training group for women of African descent. I hope to start
a similar company here."
Woods is only part of the theatre contingent at Omiala. Also
worth checking out are Nicole Stamp's better parts, a stream-of-consciousness
social commentary that draws on spoken word, song and comedy,
and New York performer Michelle Matlock's satiric The Mammy
Project, inspired by Nancy Green, the first black woman who
played pancake icon Aunt Jemima
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