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Thursday, May 1, 2025

DC playwright looks at T&T folklore

by

20130511

In Jan­u­ary, ac­tress and play­wright Mar­juan Canady took the warmth of the is­lands to the Wash­ing­ton DC win­ter when her play Callaloo: A Jazz Folk Tale opened at the Elling­ton The­atre. Callaloo, which fea­tures the mu­sic of Eti­enne Charles' al­bum, Folk­lore (2009), is a jazz, dance play telling the sto­ry of a young boy named Win­ston who trav­els to To­ba­go to vis­it his grand­moth­er. On the trip Win­ston learns a les­son about bal­ance in life as he be­comes en­trapped by folk­loric fig­ures such as Pa­pa Bois, La Di­a­b­lesse, the soucouyant and the douen.

Canady was in­spired to write the piece when she saw Charles in con­cert in 2012.In a re­cent e-mail to the T&T Guardian she ex­plained: "I im­me­di­ate­ly saw a sto­ry to his mu­sic. He per­formed a song called Duenne and the mu­si­cal­i­ty and rich­ness in sto­ry and char­ac­ter in­spired me to cre­ate the play to his mu­sic. It was not very dif­fi­cult to see the con­nec­tion be­tween Eti­enne's mu­sic and dance and the­atre." With­in three months Canady be­gan re­search­ing the work and craft­ing Callaloo. She read aca­d­e­m­ic jour­nals and books and stud­ied art, mu­sic, dance and doc­u­men­taries deal­ing with folk­lore. Canady al­so car­ried out nu­mer­ous in­ter­views with her rel­a­tives and oth­er Trinida­di­ans based both in the US and T&T who "be­lieved and knew per­son­al ex­pe­ri­ences of the folk­lore." These in­ter­views were a cru­cial part of her re­search. "This was very im­por­tant as these folk­loric tra­di­tions have sur­vived be­cause of our an­ces­tors. They have al­so tak­en on new forms and mean­ings with the mi­gra­tion of Caribbean peo­ples through­out the world. Callaloo is the sto­ry of how a first gen­er­a­tion Caribbean-Amer­i­can boy un­der­stands the im­por­tance of these sto­ries in his con­tem­po­rary life," she said.

As a Wash­ing­ton DC na­tive with a Trinida­di­an moth­er and black Amer­i­can fa­ther, Canady was close­ly tied to the sub­ject mat­ter and saw her­self as Win­ston (she al­so plays Win­ston in Callaloo). "I am that Caribbean-Amer­i­can kid who iden­ti­fies with be­ing Caribbean in an Amer­i­can at­mos­phere. I grew up in DC but prac­ticed Caribbean cus­toms, and for most Caribbean-Amer­i­can kids grow­ing up in the States, you de­vel­op a dual iden­ti­ty. You be­long and don't be­long at the same time," she added. This was an iden­ti­ty her co-per­former Vanes­sa Evans, who is Ja­maican-Amer­i­can, al­so un­der­stood. Evans plays the grand­moth­er while both she and Canady split the roles of the folk­lore char­ac­ters even­ly. Al­so on board were di­rec­tor Na­tal­ie Carter, chore­o­g­ra­ph­er Mare­sa D'Amore-Mor­ri­son and cos­tume de­sign­er Win­ston Black.

The sto­ry be­came even more im­por­tant when Canady re­alised that many of her Tri­ni fam­i­ly mem­bers did not know much about T&T. "Through mi­gra­tion and as­sim­i­la­tion many of my Caribbean rel­a­tives for­got their his­to­ry or chose to not re­mem­ber. I see this to be detri­men­tal to pre­serv­ing our his­to­ry and cul­ture. I think this is why telling the sto­ries of T&T's folk­lore was so im­por­tant to me. There was pow­er in the sto­ry. The sto­ry is what got us through slav­ery, made sense out of chaos and al­lowed us to be free and cre­ative in a con­strict­ed world." This very im­por­tant sto­ry will be per­formed in Ju­ly at the Per­form­ing Arts Marathon Fes­ti­val fea­tur­ing Charles and his band live. Canady is al­so work­ing with an il­lus­tra­tor to pro­duce the Callaloo chil­dren's book to be pub­lished lat­er this year.

For more in­for­ma­tion about Callaloo: A Jazz Folk­tale vis­it: www.mar­juan­canady.com and­www.callaloothe­p­lay.com


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