Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Charles Gordone

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American dramatist and playwright (1925–1995)

Charles Gordone
Gordone in 1970
Gordone in 1970
Born
Charles Edward Fleming

(1925-10-12)October 12, 1925
DiedNovember 16, 1995(1995-11-16) (aged 70)
OccupationActor, director, playwright, producer, educator
EducationLos Angeles City College
University of California, Los Angeles
California State University, Los Angeles (BA)
Columbia University
New York University
Notable awardsPulitzer Prize for Drama (1970)
Spouse

Charles Edward Gordone (October 12, 1925 – November 16, 1995) was anAmerican playwright, actor, director, and educator. He was the firstAfrican American to win the annualPulitzer Prize for Drama and he devoted much of his professional life to the pursuit of multi-racial American theater and racial unity.[1][2][3]

Biography

[edit]

Early years

[edit]

Charles Edward Fleming was born inCleveland, Ohio to Charles and Camille Fleming (née Morgan), of African, Native American, and European heritage. He grew up inElkhart, Indiana, with two brothers, Jack and Stanley, and a sister, Shirley. He attendedElkhart High School.[4] Camille Fleming later remarried William L. Gordon and the couple had a daughter, Leah Geraldine.

In his 20s, Gordone served in the Air Force, and was discharged at the rank of second lieutenant.[5] After his career in the Air Force, Gordone moved to California, where he married his first wife Juanita Barton in 1948. Together they had two children, Stephen Gordone and Judy Ann Riser. The couple later parted ways and Barton ensconced himself in theater atLos Angeles City College andCalifornia State University, Los Angeles. He then moved to New York City, where he waited tables and pursued an acting career.

In the late 1950s, Charles met his second wife, Jeanne Warner, inGreenwich Village, New York City. In the 1960s, they had one daughter together, Leah-Carla Gordone. During the 1960s revolution, "open marriages" were common, and Charles met artist Nancy Meadows. Together they had a son, David Brent Gordone, yet Charles Gordone remained with Jeanne Warner raising their daughter Leah-Carla in New York City over the years while Nancy Meadows left her position with theWashington Post and traveled around with her son David as a member ofWavy Gravy'sHog Farm (a 1960s hippie communal/caravan group that coordinated light shows for major concerts around the U.S., including the first Woodstock Concert).

Career

[edit]

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Gordone continued acting and began directing. At one point, he sang and played guitar in a calypso band. He co-founded both the Committee for the Employment of Negro Performers and the Vantage Theater inQueens. His acting credits included Brother Jerro inThe Trials of Brother Jerro Bohem, Hickey inOf Mice and Men, and The Valet inJean Genet'sThe Blacks (1961–66) alongsideJames Earl Jones,Maya Angelou,Cicely Tyson, and many other Black actors who went on to changeHollywood. In the 70's, Gordone's distinctive voice guided him to four film collaborations with controversial animation directorRalph Bakshi; as Crazy Moe inHeavy Traffic, Preacher Fox inCoonskin, along with two uncredited vocal performances inWizards andHey, Good Lookin'. In 1987, Gordone appeared in the movieAngel Heart, starringMickey Rourke,Lisa Bonet andRobert De Niro. He also assisted with the casting of the '60s feature filmNothing But a Man, starringIvan Dixon,Abbey Lincoln, and Julius Harris.

Mr. Gordone's first play, A Little More Light Around the Place, was co-written withSidney Easton in 1964. It was an adaptation of Mr. Easton's book of the same title.[6]

It was during his employment as a waiter in a Greenwich Village bar that Gordone found inspiration for his first major work as a playwright,No Place to Be Somebody (Alexander Street Press), for which he won the 1970Pulitzer Prize for Drama.[7] Written over the course of seven years, the play underwent one major change in the course of its production: the omitting (by Gordone himself) of an imaginary character named Machine Dog. This character can still be found in the actual play versions (i.e. the rare, out-of-print Bobbs-Merrill and Samuel French editions, as well as the currently available Alexander Street Press version). Not only was Charles the first playwright of African-American descent to receive the Pulitzer, butNo Place to Be Somebody was the firstOff-Broadway play (Joseph Papp's The Public Theater) to receive the award.

No Place is the story of Black bar owner (Johnny Romero) trying to carve out his piece of the American Dream in a New York City neighborhood where most venues are run by the Mafia. Johnny's best friend (Gabe Gabriel) is a light-skinned black actor/writer who is too white-looking to land black roles and too ethnic-looking to get any white roles, and this causes him great angst. Romero is brimming with arrogance, and a "get-over" mentality, while Gabriel appears intent on holding high morals, and the two of them are always at odds. It was often said that both Johnny and Gabe represent Gordone's alter egos.

Described as a "Black-black comedy",No Place to Be Somebody soon hit Broadway running, under the production of Gordone's wife Jeanne Warner-Gordone and partner Ashton Springer (Broadway producer ofBubbling Brown Sugar). Subsequently, with Gordone as director,No Place played to packed houses with diverse audiences. From 1970 to 1977, the play toured nationally, with Gordone as author/director for all three separate companies. Jeanne coordinated, booked, and managed the touring companies, as little Leah-Carla traveled with her often-on-the-road mother. A theatrical legacy was being forged.

Personal life

[edit]

In 1981, Gordone moved back toCalifornia, where he met his last wife and leading lady Susan Kouyomjian inBerkeley. Gordone worked with Kouyomjian for three years at her theater,American Stage. There, he directed classics such asAugust Strindberg'sMiss Julie andTennessee Williams'A Streetcar Named Desire.

In 1984, Gordone returned to New York City to resume work on his stageWesternRoan Brown & Cherry. Soon after, Kouyomjian joined him inHarlem, where they resided together.

After relocating toTaos, New Mexico, in 1987 for a fellowship at the D. H. Lawrence Ranch, residing in the cabin once occupied byD. H. Lawrence, Gordone went on to teach Theater History and Theater atTexas A&M University. Over a period of eight years, through his teaching and directing many of the university's stage play productions, he advanced racial diversity in the arts at theCollege Station, Texas campus, which had been segregated for 100 years, up until 1963. During his residency as a Professor of Theater Arts, Charles Gordone joined the multi-racial Western Revival, involving poets, dancers, artists and singers, and invited them into A&M classrooms as part of his "American Voices" program.[8]

Gordone was awarded membership in theActors Studio.[9]

On November 16, 1995, Gordone died ofliver cancer. The cowboy poets and musicians of the Texas Panhandle honored him with a prairie funeral at sunset and scattered his ashes across the legendaryXIT Ranch. In New York City, simultaneously, fellow actors, playwrights, and directors gathered to hold a vigil memorial for him at The Public Theater. Charles's daughter, critically acclaimed singer/songwriter/musician (Butterfly Child,Dancing on the Dragon, andPhoenix From The Ashes: Rise CDs) and author (The Motorgirl Memoirs on Amazon.com)Leah-Carla Gordone,[10] spoke, sang, and played her guitar at the event, where Charles's wife, Jeanne, was present, along with many former cast members ofNo Place to Be Somebody.

In 1996, theNational Endowment for the Arts profiled, at length, Gordone's work for integration at Texas A&M University, for "strengthening the diverse bonds of our cultural heritage." On March 2, 2009, Jeanne Warner-Gordone died at the age of 70, leaving in her wake a book entitledTo and From the Pulitzer: Charles Gordone's Quest for an American Theater, which details herNo Place days, primarily containing numerous in-depth recollections by Chuck's closest colleagues, friends and family members.

Legacy

[edit]

The Texas A&M Creative Writing Program has establishedThe Charles Gordone Awards to commemorate Gordone by offering cash prizes each spring in poetry and in prose to an undergraduate and graduate student. Efforts continue to establish a permanent memorial on theTexas A&M University campus.[11] In 2011, "Legacy of a Seer," an exhibition of portraits of Gordone painted byRobert Schiffhauer was on display at the Wright Gallery at theTexas A&M College of Architecture.[8]

Awards

[edit]

Bibliography

[edit]
  • 1964A Little More Light Around the Place
  • 1967No Place to Be Somebody: A Black-Black Comedy
  • 1969Worl's Champeen Lip Dansuh an' Watah Mellon Jooglah
  • 1970Chumpanzee
  • 1970Willy Bignigga
  • 1970Gordone Is a Muthah
  • 1975Baba-Chops
  • 1976Under the Boardwalk
  • 1977The Last Chord
  • 1978A Qualification for Anabiosis
  • 1983The Block
  • 1983Anabiosis

References

[edit]
  1. ^Gussow, Mel (December 31, 1969)."Theater: 'No Place to Be Somebody' Opens Run"(PDF).The New York Times. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2012.
  2. ^"No Place to Be Somebody". The Matrix Theatre Company. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2012.
  3. ^Pogrebin, Robin (November 19, 1995)."Charles Gordone Dead at 70; Won a Pulitzer for His First Play".The New York Times. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2012.
  4. ^"Elkhart Grad Won Pulitzer Prize". Elkhart Community Schools. September 12, 2007. RetrievedDecember 19, 2008.
  5. ^Nelson, Emmanuel S. (editor).African American Dramatists: An A-to-Z Guide, "Charles Gordon (1925–1995)" by Page, Yolanda W., Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut · London, 2004, page 177.ISBN 0-313-32233-3.
  6. ^The A to Z of African American Theater, Anthony D. Hill & Douglas Q. Barnett, Scarecrow Press; 111 edition (September 2, 2009)
  7. ^"Drama"Archived August 13, 2010, at theWayback Machine. The Pulitzer Prizes. Retrieved November 12, 2013.
  8. ^abRollfing, Phillip (April 28, 2011)."'Legacy of a Seer: A&M architecture professors' art honors playwright, professor, racial unity advocate'". RetrievedJune 22, 2011.
  9. ^Garfield, David (1980). "Strasberg Takes Over: 1951–1955".A Player's Place: The Story of The Actors Studio. New York: MacMillan Publishing Co., Inc. p. 93.ISBN 0-02-542650-8.Various directors and playwrights (Frank Corsaro, Martin Fried, Jack Garfein, Michal V. Gazzo, Israel Horovitz, Liska March, Arthur Penn, Eleanor Perry, Frank Perry, Sidney Pollack, Mark Rydell, Carl Schaeffer, Alan Schneider, and John Stix have also been granted membership on the basis of their contributions to the Drama World)
  10. ^Leah-Carla Gordone Music.
  11. ^Casanova, Amanda (February 2, 2008)."Just Call Me a North American mestizo". RetrievedDecember 19, 2008.[permanent dead link]
  12. ^"Academy Awards". American Academy of Arts and Letters. 2008. Archived fromthe original on October 13, 2008. RetrievedDecember 19, 2008.

External links

[edit]
1918–1950


1952–1975
1976–2000
2001–2025
International
National
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Charles_Gordone&oldid=1337940656"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp