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June 17 - 23, 2021
VOL. 70, No. 24
www.tsdmemphis.com
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COVID-19 UPDATE
As COVID restrictions come down, Memphians are happy to get out by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
Playwright Katori Hall poses for a portrait in front of the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre in New York on Sept, 21, 2011. Hall won the Pulitzer Prize for drama for her play “The Hot Wing King.” (AP Photo/Charles Sykes, File)
‘P-Valley’ creator and Memphis native captures Pulitzer Prize
by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell
Special to The New Tri-State Defender
Award-winning playwright Katori Hall, who recently won a 2021 Pulitzer Prize for drama, always was a go-getter. “So thankful for this recognition of The Hot Wing King,” Hall tweeted after the announcement. “Hugs to my amazing NY theatre home Signature Theatre and my director Steve Broadnax III who helmed a magnificent cast and crew. Shout out to my brothers Wayne and Charles whose love inspired this. It’s Memphis made, mane!” She was a laser-focused and determined
young lady at Craigmont High School, according to her then-senior guidance counselor, Janet Thompson. “I knew Katori well,” said Thompson. “She would drop by almost daily with requests for transcripts and recommendations as she completed her college applications. “Katori was Craigmont’s first African-American valedictorian in the school’s history. Katori would talk about wanting to spread her wings and move beyond North Memphis.” And move beyond North Memphis, Hall did. It was announced last week that she had
won a Pulitzer for her stage play “The Hot Wing King.” Hall’s work beat out two other finalists: “Circle Jerk” by Michael Breslin and Patrick Foley, and “Stew” by Zora Howard. The Pulitzer committee released a statement, calling “The Hot Wing King” a “funny deeply felt consideration of Black masculinity and how it is perceived, filtered through the experiences of a loving gay couple and their extended family as they prepare for a culinary competition.” The production was running at Pershing Square Signature Center in New York City
On June 4, a big line-dancing brought dozens out to the North Branch Library on Vollintine. This past Saturday, more than 100 patrons came back to celebrate at the “I Love Music and Museum Jam Session.” “Since the pandemic hit, we have only been able to sponsor virtual events online to keep everyone safe,” said Johnnie Mosley, a librarian at the North Branch. “We missed our community, and they seem to have missed us just as much. “Everyone was just happy to get out after being shut up for a year,” she said. Last Saturday, the last vestiges of restriction were lifted off businesses and other public venues, with an updated health directive taking effect Saturday at midnight. That means everyday people are enjoying freedom from business restrictions too. Shelby County declared that more than 70 percent of Shelby County residents have immunity status, either by vaccination, or by surviving the virus and carrying COVID-fighting antibodies in their blood. Larry Springfield, who opened the SugaShack on Beale Street in the early days of the pandemic, was elated things are “beginning to get back to normal.” “We opened on May 29 of last year, so we started out being restricted by the health mandates,” he said. “We were closing at 10 p.m. on weekdays, and at midnight on the weekends. “Now, we are open until 1 a.m.,” Springfield said. “It got hard, but we are coming out
SEE COVID ON PAGE 2
SEE PULITZER ON PAGE 2
How BLP Studios was born to tell ‘our’ stories by Karanja A. Ajanaku kajanaku@tsdmemphis.com
Venturing to bring home to me the practicality of building an 85-acre movie campus owned by African Americans, Jason Farmer had me imagine telling – via a film – the story of The New Tri-State Defender. “If I wanted to shoot the story about the TriState Defender, I can’t come down to your office for 10 days or 14 days and shoot,” he said. “I have to work around your schedule, maybe two or three o’clock in the morning, maybe two, three o’clock in the afternoon, and that may or may not fit with everything.” The more practical thing is to come out to BLP Film Studios, take soundstage number two, go in and build out the Tri-State Defender offices, he said. “Now you can shoot around the clock and you can tell the story about the Tri-State Defender, get in and out and get that project done. …Heretofore, Memphis has not had that capacity.” That’s the path envisioned for Black Lens Productions (BLP) Film Studios by the founder/CEO. Farmer’s partners are Chief Financial Officer Carolyn Henry and Cecelia Barnes, general counsel. The inspiration is Farmer’s college-age son, Jason Farmer II, whose mid-
dle-school desire to be a creative in the film industry is the stuff of which, well, movies are made. BLP Film Studios is for real. Farmer and crew have secured land in Whitehaven, gotten the OK from the Land Use Control Board, lined up public and private support and now are nailing down the finance details. I had lots of questions, too many, in fact, for the time allotted me. Among the basics was one that drew this answer: “We are currently on course to break ground … late fall of this year. …The complete buildout of the facility will take 24 to 30 months. It’s a phased project. So we can have some working facilities as early as this time next summer.” I’d learned that Farmer, a seasoned business man with no previous movie-industry experience, had roots in the Foote Homes. I asked what he wanted to be as he grew up in that public housing development. He mentally took me to 413 Vance (Ave.), Apt. C. in the shadows of Progressive Baptist Church. The funeral home that processed the remains of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. after he was assassinated was right out the front door. His blue-collar, working-class family received commodities at Historic Clayborn Temple. Many of
SEE STUDIO ON PAGE 2
Now in charge! … The first woman to lead the Memphis Police Department was welcomed on Monday (June 14) as she began her first day on the job. Mayor Jim Strickland pins new Memphis Police Chief Cerleyn “C.J.” Davis with the symbol of her authority. (Photo: Twitter) BLP Film Studios founder/CEO Jason Farmer, with partners Carolyn Henry (left) and Cecelia Barnes, at the 85-acre Whitehaven site on course to house the second-largest, Black-owned film studio in the United States. (Courtesy photo)