THEATRE PREVIEW
KEITH GLOVER AND KEB’ MO’ WITH
“THUNDER KNOCKING ON THE DOOR” AT OLD GLOBE THEATRE
Published in
KPBS On Air Magazine July 1999
In every culture, in every native folklore,
there’s a mischievous Trickster, a supernatural being given to capricious acts
of sly deception. Often the imp is a
wily animal: coyote, fox, raven, hare.
In Africa, the trickster often takes human shape, and it’s this
tradition that inspired playwright/director Keith Glover to create his
seductive shapeshifter, the magical blues-guitar player Marvell Thunder,
central character in “Thunder Knocking on the Door” (coming to the Old Globe’s
Festival Stage, July 10-August 14).
“I wrote this more as a fairy tale than a
folktale,” says the affable 33 year-old Glover (whose 1996 play, “In Walks Ed,”
was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize).
“Folktales are usually darker; fairy tales are
inherently lighter, happier, more innocent and childlike. And that’s what I was aiming for. I wanted to get away from the
social/political realism of most black theater, and go back to the beauty, the
magic, the mysticism of Africa and Egypt.
“Telling
this story and using the blues were not separate issues. African language is very musical, and so is
the dialogue of this play. I wrote the
lines to be spoken in the rhythm of the blues.
There’s still a certain tonality in how African Americans speak. We haven’t lost that.
“People think the blues is sad and
simplistic. But it’s really deep and
complex. It has so many colors and emotions. You play the blues when you’re sad
to get out of that state. If
you’re happy, it makes you happier. A
lot of babies got made from listening to the blues! It celebrates life. And
playing the blues is giving yourself over to something bigger than you. That’s what this play is about.”
Glover’s life was always steeped in music. His father, a jazz musician, actually made
the magical guitars used in the show.
In the play, those two guitars were bequeathed, along with his musical
gift, to the twins, Glory and Jaguar, Jr., by their blues-whiz father. Now the conjurer Thunder has appeared to
challenge the progeny of the only man who could ever out-lick him on the Delta
blues guitar. The showdown is a cutting
contest.
“It’s really a test, a rite of passage,” Glover
explains. “To determine if you’re ready
to join the tribe. It comes out of the
music tradition, of the young trying to stand beside, or even out-do, the older
generation.”
And if you can’t cut it, you get cut.
In 1996, when the play was commissioned by the
Alabama Shakespeare Festival, Glover scored the piece with blues standards. But
he decided he needed original music, written by someone “living the blues
tradition.” He chose Keb’ Mo’.
The multitalented Kevin Moore (Keb’ Mo’ is his
onstage persona) wrote songs and played music all his life (acoustic, electric
and slide guitar, as well as banjo), but he was late coming to the blues. When, at age 43, he released his 1994 debut
album, it won the Grammy Award for Country/Acoustic Blues Album of the
Year. His next two CDs were named Best
Contemporary Blues Recording, and he received a W.C. Handy Award for Acoustic
Blues Artist of the Year in 1997 and 1998.
When he met Keith Glover, Moore was impressed by
the playwright’s “intensity, focus and passion. I liked the story, and he was so energetic, articulate, so
passionate about the work. I’ve got
more of a quiet intensity. But there’s
a certain spot I get to, that it’s gotta be right, there’s only one way to do
it. And when I see that in another person, it draws me in. I really like the
theater, where people are totally into the work. In the music business, it’s all about ambition… But I decided to make music strictly for the
love of it.”
Seems like that decision paid off -- for Moore’s
solo career and for “Thunder Knocking on the Door.” While making the rounds of regional theaters, the revised musical
broke a 12-year house attendance record at the Arena Stage in Washington, and
won the Helen Hayes Award for Best Musical.
Glover is pleased with the changes (“I needed a
funk injection”), but he and his collaborators (Keb’ Mo’ and Anderson Edwards)
are still tweaking the piece, all the way to its proposed November opening in
New York.
“We want to really connect with the audience. They’re part of the process, too. If they’re
reading their program or sitting on their hands, we haven’t done our job. We
want them to feel good, to have a good time.
But we really want to knock their socks off. When that happens, we’ve truly made magic.”
©1999 Patté Productions Inc.