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Has Chicago theater actually changed since 2020?

Chicago Theater Faces Persistent Equity Concerns Four Years After George Floyd Protests

Chicago, IL – Four years after the nationwide reckoning sparked⁤ by the murder of George Floyd, Black actors and directors ​in Chicago’s theater scene‌ report limited substantive change in the types‌ of roles offered and who is offering them, despite increased industry-wide awareness‍ of racial ‍inequities. While acknowledging a shift in conversation, many within the community say opportunities remain largely confined to roles depicting struggle or​ past periods, and are frequently ​enough concentrated wiht a small group of established Black theater makers.

The concerns center on a persistent pattern‌ of⁤ typecasting and a lack of diverse storytelling. Actor Al’Jaleel McGhee, a Northwestern⁤ University graduate, observes that his career frequently defaults ⁣to roles​ like “man in ⁢the 1950s in a three-piece suit or, like, jail ⁢person,” spanning both television and theater.⁤ “If we’re not singing​ or crying, nobody really wants to see [us],” McGhee stated. He is currently performing a lead role as a prisoner in the Goodman Theatre’s​ “Revolution(s).”

This ​sentiment⁤ reflects a broader frustration that the ⁢post-2020 surge in ‍diversity pledges hasn’t translated into significantly expanded opportunities for Black artists beyond narrowly defined narratives. McGhee notes ​a cyclical nature to ‍the roles available,recently reprising a role from 2017 in Dominique Morisseau’s “paradise Blue” and preparing for two productions of August Wilson‘s “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” in the coming year – one at the Goodman and another directed by Lili-Anne ⁤brown.

Despite these limitations, ⁣some see the increased awareness as a foundational step. Director Lili-Anne Brown argues that​ raising ⁤awareness was the initial, crucial goal of the movement. “It’s naive to think that people in a bubble understand what is‍ going⁣ on outside of that bubble. ⁤So the first thing you have to do is make ​people aware,” she said.

However, McGhee points to a continued reliance on ‍a ​core group of Black directors -​ including Ron OJ Parson and Lydia Diamond -‍ for the majority of available work. This concentration, while valuable, underscores the need for broader systemic change within Chicago’s theater institutions to foster more equitable depiction both ⁢on and off stage.

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