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ARTS + ENTERTAINMENT FEBRUARY 29, 2024
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TURNING ‘RUBY’ INTO GOLD Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe produces its first homegrown musical. MONICA ROMAN GAGNIER ARTS + ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
I
n the 25 years since he founded Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe in Sarasota, Nate Jacobs has
won numerous awards and national recognition for producing Black-themed plays and musicals and for creating original musical revues. Now, Jacobs has achieved a new milestone with WBTT’s latest production, “Ruby.” The musical, about a prosperous Black woman in 1950s Florida who killed a white physician, is a fully realized musical, not a revue like many of WBTT’s popular shows. “It can travel anywhere in the legit theater world after it closes in Sarasota,” Jacobs says. In show biz speak, “legit” doesn’t mean legal or kosher. It means a professionally produced stage play with a script and, in the case of a
Images courtesy of Sorcha Augustine
Ashley Elizabeth Crowe stars as Zora Neale Hurston, Catara Brae and Maurice Alpharicio play Ruby and Sam McCollom and Larry Alexander plays Dr. Adams in Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe’s original production of “Ruby,” directed by WBTT founder Nate Jacobs.
musical, songs with lyrics. It’s a big deal. “Ruby” director Jacobs credits WBTT’s evolutionary leap to his brother, Michael Jacobs, with whom he wrote the book for “Ruby” and who wrote the lyrics, and to composer Nehemiah Luckett. On “Ruby,” Luckett gets credit for “additional music.” But his contribution is immense, Jacobs says, because of his experience with orchestral arrangements. The music for “Ruby” was written by Nate Jacobs, Brennan Stylez and Antonio Wimberly. The idea for the show came from one of WBTT’s patrons, who kept emailing Nate Jacobs and former WBTT CEO Christine Jennings. Her idea? A play about a 1950s murder case covered by famed Black author Zora Neale Hurston. Jacobs couldn’t immediately recall the patron who brought the idea for “Ruby” to his attention, but says he’s grateful for her persistence. It took some prodding, but when Jacobs finally delved into the details of Ruby McCollum’s murder of Dr. C. Leroy Adams on Aug. 3, 1953, in Live Oak, Florida, he was hooked. After watching a documentary on the case, Jacobs enlisted the help of his brother, a semi-retired lawyer
Larry Alexander plays Dr. Adams and Catara Brae plays Ruby McCollum in Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe’s original musical, “Ruby.”
who has since moved to Sarasota from the Baltimore-Washington, D.C., area. “Of course, I decided to
write a musical,” Jacobs laughs. The “of course” is because Jacobs loves music and has created and
adapted many successful revues for WBTT, including the holiday spectacle “Joyful! Joyful!,” “Marvin Gaye: Prince of Soul” and “Cotton Club Cabaret.” Jacobs saw no reason why murder couldn’t be the subject of a musical. “The story of Ruby McCollum and her husband, Sam, is the stuff of Greek tragedy,” he says. “It’s a rise and fall.” The rise was when the McCollums moved to Live Oak, buying a mansion and living with the trappings of wealth unusual for a Black family in that time and place. Their lifestyle inspired admiration among Live Oak’s Blacks but also provoked envy and distress among whites, to hear Jacobs tell the story. The fall came after Ruby McCollum walked into her doctor’s office and shot him to death in broad daylight. In the wake of the shooting, it came to light that the McCollums were involved in illegal liquor sales and gambling. According to Jacobs, there was plenty of schadenfreude in Live Oak after Ruby’s arrest and the revelation of the family’s shady sources of income. “The whites were happy to see Ruby and her husband go down,” Jacobs says. Meanwhile, the town’s Blacks were SEE RUBY, PAGE 2
IF YOU GO
‘RUBY’ When: Through April 7 Where: Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe, 1012 N. Orange Ave. Tickets: $20-$50 Info: Visit WestcoastBlackTheatre.org.