2011 ended with the my being released from the hospital and having a cast on my leg for another six months. We produced the documentary for the 50th anniversary of the Better Boys Foundation and continued to produce the Teen Talk Radio Theatre training program and radio show. In May, 2012 I joined the staff of the DuSable Museum of African American History as Director of Educational Services and Public Programs.
These are the programs produced at the DuSable Museum since my arrival last May!
Sixteen Pieces Programming
International Symposium of Yoruba Nationalists in the United States
The
Yoruba: From Home in Africa to Home in the New World – Panel discussion
U of C Graham School AXIS Porgy and Bess panel Discussion
Forgotten History
Lecture Series - Ifa: The Ultimate Mnemonic System An examination of
concepts and beliefs in relation to the Yourba quest for knowledge,
understanding, and wisdom.
Fly Girl Conversation with
Vernice Armor, the first African American Female Marine fighter pilot
Girls Take Flight Daylong event featuring
Dr. Mae Jemison designed to empower young girls through the remarkable stories
of courage of African American women in aviation and aerospace history.
Family Day Celebration - A day celebrating
families in our community with live performances, storytelling, art making,
films, and new exhibitions.
Table of Brotherhood Panel – Served on the
panel discussion for the Chevrolet’s
Table of Brotherhood project, in preparation for the Dr. Martin Luther King memorial
weekend in Washington, D.C.
The Sky is Not the
Limit The Sky is Not the Limit featured a panel
of Chicago-land aviators, aviation enthusiasts, and aviation historians
discussing African Americans in flight from Bessie Coleman and the Tuskegee
Airmen to present day history-makers.
The Ugandan
Orphans Choir
The choir consisted of 5 girls & 5 boys who are orphans from Uganda;
their show featured: singing, drumming and while bringing awareness and hope to
poverty stricken children around the world.
Dark Girls
Documentary and Lecture “Dark Girls” from directors, Bill Duke and D.
Channsin Berry, and panel discussion explored the deep-seated biases and
attitudes about skin color.
The Black Power
Mix Tape At the end of the 1960’s, numerous Swedish
journalists came to the US, drawn by stories of urban unrest and revolution.
Filming for close to a decade, they gained access to many of the leaders of the
Black Power movement – Stokely Carmichael, Bobby Seale, Angela Davis, and
Eldridge Cleaver among them – capturing them in intimate moments and remarkably
unguarded interviews.
Forgotten History
Lecture Series Gallery lecture with Roy Lewis about his photographic exhibit entitled EVERYWHERE
with Roy Lewis
Forgotten History
Lecture Series featuring Dr. Charles Smith, “Bringing the Outsiders Inside” Dr. Charles Smith
- panel discussion “Bringing the Outsiders Inside.
The Fourth Sunday,
Musical The Fourth Sunday Musical was the official opening for the Spread The
Word Gospel Exhibit. The evolution of Gospel to the World! Participating gospel
artist included: The Victory Travelers, The Pilgrim Jubilee, the Yancy Family
and more.
Educator’s Open
House DuSable
Museum Educator’s Open House and Artist Showcase - Free to teachers, Principals and staff!
Celebration of Dr.
Burroughs Founders Day The celebrated Congo Square Theatre company
headlined a series of artist and performers as they presented a staged reading
of poetry written by Dr. Margret Burroughs
Forgotten History
Lecture Series - History through the Lens Preeminent photographers and film
producers spoke about their field and inspiration
KInyawanda
Film Premiere presented in collaboration with AFFRM.COM
and the Ice Theater
Pre-Kwaanza
Celebration - The Harambee Pre-Kwanzaa Festival is an exciting musical celebration of
family, community and culture, featuring Kwame Steve Cobb and Chavunduka, performing
songs from their highly acclaimed recording, Seven Principles. Their dynamic
multi-media, concert presentation teaches the Seven Principles of Kwanzaa.
Kwaanza Forgotten History Lecture Series: Dr. Maulana Karenga Forgotten History Lecture Series featuring Dr.
Maulana Karenga Professor and
Chair. Department of Africana Studies. California State University--Long Beach
and the founder of Kwanzaa.
Discovering DuSable Digitally The Virtual Story of Jean
Baptist Point DuSable
A digital multimedia based
outreach program designed for middle school students, teachers and parents.
This program affords all who are exposed, the opportunity to explore the life
and times of Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable on-line, by utilizing a three-dimensional
website, a virtual game and viewing short films. Discovering DuSable Digitally
infuses 21st century virtual and computer skills into traditional learning,
offering a form of interaction by engaging students in website and video game
navigation, research and early Chicago content learning with high interest
activities
Emergency –
One Man Show January 5&6
Award-winning
artist Daniel Beaty portrayed 40 characters who all respond to a stunning
phenomenon: a slave ship rises out of the Hudson River in front of the Statue
of Liberty. Beaty melds slam poetry, multi-character transformation and song to
present a stirring, critically acclaimed commentary on modern black life.
King Day – DuSable Museum
held its annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration. The theme for this
year’s event was “Moving Beyond the Dream”. The day filled with electric live
performances, films and family activities. The celebration began at 10 am and
lasted till 7pm. The theme “Moving Beyond the Dream” took in to account that
just as it takes a village to raise one child, it takes a whole community to
define, nurture, and create a leader. Walking through the DuSable galleries
during King Day 2012 were historic personalities as part of our newest feature,
“Walking with Heroes”. “Walking with Heroes” brought actors to reenact historic
and notable figures and their unique connection to Dr. King and the Civil
Rights Movement. Actors portrayed Negro and Major League Baseball star, Jackie
Robinson, civil rights activist Rosa Parks, aviatrix Bessie Colman, a porter
from the Pullman Sleeping Car Company and Nichelle Nichols (Lieutenant Uhura
from Star Trek). The DuSable Mobile
Museum also made its first King Day appearance.
Invisible
Man: In its Time and Ours Symposium
Ralph
Ellison Symposium featuring: Adam F. Bradley, a scholar of African
American literature and a writer on black popular culture; author of Ralph
Ellison-In-Progress, Yale University Press, 2010. John Wright,
professor of English and African American Studies at University of Minnesota;
author of Shadowing Ralph Ellison, University Press of Mississippi,
2006. Lawrence Jackson, professor of English and African American
Studies at Emory University; author of Ralph Ellison: Emergence of Genius,
University of Georgia Press, 2007. Hortense Spillers, Gertude Conway
Vanderbilt Professor of English at Vanderbilt University, author of Black,
White, and in Color: Essays on American Literature and Culture, University
of Chicago Press, 2003.
Mr. Rickey
Calls A Meeting
Lookingglass
Theatre’s post-performance panel discussion held in conjunction with its
production of Ed Schmidt's “Mr. Rickey Calls A Meeting” featured Dr. Carol
Adams and Director of Education and Public Programs Pemon Rami for “The Rise
and Demise of the Negro Leagues: What Was Lost, and At What Cost”?
Reel Black Love: Black Romance in Film – Screening and Discussion
– In Kiss
& Tell: Black Romance in Film, a star-studded line-up of over 70
African American actors, directors, and producers point out memorable romantic
moments of blacks in cinema, expound on key elements of a romantic film, and
also identify icons (Dorothy Dandridge, Sidney Poitier, Denzel Washington) and
celebrate the resurgence of black romance on film in the 1990s. Following the
screening of the film, Pemon Rami, Director of Education and Public Programs
(DuSable Museum), led a panel discussion and audience Q&A that included
commentary from Darryl Pitts, the producer of the film.
The Trillion-Dollar Question – Panel Discussion - The Trillion
Dollar Question, was an essential and timely
discussion inspired by the findings exposed in “The State of the African
American Consumer,” a recent consumer report by Nielsen, which revealed that
the buying power of African Americans is expected to reach $1 trillion by
2015. Panelists included Cheryl
Pearson- McNeil-Sr. V.P. of Public Affairs and Government Relations for
Nielsen; Tom Burrell – Founder and Chairman Emeritus of Burrell Communications;
Ken Smikle-President and Founder of Target Market News; Ron Carter- Chairman of
Black Wall Street Districts of Chicago and Publisher of the South Street
Journal; Naomi Davis -President and Founder of BIG: Blacks in Green; and Donna
Gaines - Immediate past President & CEO for the Alliance of Business
Leaders and Entrepreneurs (ABLE) and President of Donna Gaines & Associates
DuSable Day - DuSable Day honored the memory and legacy of the “Father of
Chicago,” Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable, Chicago’s first settler, and marked our
city’s 175th birthday! This day long celebration featured
performances by Rafo International Combo, Viva Panama Folkloric Dance Group,
Estampa Colombiana Folkloric Dance Ensemble, The Lira Ensemble’s African
American/Polish American Concert, The Hyde Park Youth Symphony, and also tours
of the DuSable Mobile Museum and many other great activities for the family.
Songs of DuSable “Songs
for DuSable,” our DuSable Day concert, featured the incomparable Douglas Ewart
& Inventions! This awe
inspiring musical tribute, honoring the memory and legacy of the “Father of
Chicago,” Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable, showcases stellar compositions
dedicated to DuSable’s experiences in Eschikago (Chicago).
Quilting with Needles & Threads – Saturday, March 17, 2012 –
10:30AM-12:30PM
The
DuSable Museum presented a quilt-making workshop in collaboration with the
members of the Needles & Threads Quilters Guild. Guild members instructed
participants on the African American Tradition of Quilt Making. Each member of
the workshop constructed an artistic 12”x12” square which could be combined
together to create a larger quilt.
My Sister’s Keeper – For generations,
black women’s organizations have significantly impacted the African American
community as well as civil society itself. In honor of the continued contributions of the oldest and
most distinguished Black women’s groups, The DuSable Museum presents My Sister’s Keeper: The Significance and
Legacy of Black Women’s Organizations.
During this lively and timely
discussion, state leaders from Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Theta, Zeta Phi
Beta, Sigma Gamma Rho, and also from The Order of the Eastern Star, National
Council of Negro Women, The Links Incorporated, and the Top Ladies of
Distinction will share the history of their great organizations and offer
insight on the responsibility of maintaining the mission of their founders as
well as the daily task of promoting and demonstrating sisterhood.
21st Century Sistah: The Role of Today’s Black Woman in
Business, Relationships, & Home – The DuSable Museum and The Talk of Chicago 1690 WVON present – 21ST
CENTURY SISTAHS: Chicago’s Women In Business and Media Discuss the Role of
Today’s Black Woman in Business, Relationships, and Home.
Heroes in
the Hood
program produced in collaboration with the Chicago Crusader newspaper and Go
Airport Express/
Journey of Hope Exhibit
Gallery Talk and Reception Dr. Carolyn Mazloomi curator of the Journey of Hope Quilt exhibit in honor
of the Presidency of Barak Obama
Restless
City Film Premiere presented in collaboration with AFFRM.COM
and the Ice Theater
Walt Whitman
and the Soul Children Concert with special guests from Sweden, Voices of
Unity.
My TV and Speaking engagement:
WGN – 2 shows
WVON – 4 show
WCIU – 3 shows
Michael Colyer’s radio show LA
Juneteenth Celebration Thompson Center
Sara Lee Corporation
William Blair and Associates
Lewis University
Chicago State University
Ashaki Festival