P age B4 M J anuary 19, 1994 • T he P ortland O bserver ex ENTERTAINMENT G ra n d M a s k e d B a ll Garland Lee Thompson: Developing A New Generation Of Writers by S tephan D. C oleman Sitting amidst the memorabilia, logs, scripts and other historical ma­ terial in the loft that has been the home of the Frank Silvera W riters’ Workshop (FSWW) for sixteen of its twenty years. Garland Lee thompson is open and direct about his own rich and varied career. As FSW W’s ex­ ecutive director (and co-founder with Morgan Freeman, Billie Allen and Clayton Riley), Thompson has over­ seen the day-to-day operations for all except five of the twenty years it has been in existence. Created as a living tribute to actor Frank Silvera, the workshop is devoted to the nurturing o f writers of color. The impetus to start the workshop and the energy that has fueled it across twenty years are uniquely colored by Thompson’s pre-workshop history as an actor, di­ rector, stage manager and writer. A ctu ally , G a rlan d Lee Thompson’s professional theatrical debut was the result of a “fluke.” While on a visit to relatives in South­ ern California, the then-teenaged track and football athlete and dance student from Portland, Oregon, audi­ tioned as a dancer for a group of cabaret artists scheduled for a USO to u r to S o u th e ast A sia. To Thompson ’ s surprise, he was accepted into the company. As fate would have it, the tour was promptly canceled due to an outbreak of the Asiatic flu. However, the group’s business man­ ager “used a trump card” and secured an audition for 20th Century Fox Films for the entire company. “The next thing I knew,” Thompson re­ calls, still incredulous, “I was in [the filmed version of] South Pacific with some very major people, like Ray Walston, Deborah Kerr, and Juanita Hall who was a Black woman who played an Asian. It was my first paid job of any kind and a very heady Experience for a teenager.” However, after this illustrious entree in to show business, Thompson realized “I’d better settle down and study [acting] because I saw very little future in Black dance in the 50s. So I got a day job and started studying to see if I wanted to stay in this busi­ ness.” He soon landed the role of the newsboy in the L.A. production of Langston Hughes’ Simply Heavenly, a major theatre event. “Simply Heav­ enly opened up a whole world for me. We had people in that show like Helen Humes and Pauline Myers, who played my mother and gave me my first acting lesson,” he vividly recalls. Many of the elders in the play took Thompson under their wing, includ­ ing' Isabel Cooley, who remains a friend. Concurrently, Thompson contin­ ued to study formally and informally. “A1 Freeman Jr. and I were room­ mates in 1958 and I knew very quickly that he was somebody who couId teach me something.” Freeman did plays in the backyard of a quintessential early 60s L.A. coffeehouse that Thompson co-managed. Thompson exclaims, “I was just blown away by what he was doing!” During the early to mid-60s, Thompson also honed his performing skills by acting in a variety of produc­ tions, and by “sitting at the fee” of people like Cooley, Freeman, and, ev en tu ally the renow ned Frank Silvera. He attended Silvcra’s work­ shop and gradually went from student to friend to Silvera’s co-star in Blues for Mr. Charlie. Around that time, Thompson also starred in alive action short film. The Legend of Jimmy Blue Eyes about a New Orleans trumpet player’s deal with the devil. It received an Oscar nomination as “The Best Short Film.” He also appeared in an early episode of Star Trek where his dance and athletic background served him well in combat scenes with star William Shatncr. However, Thompson was already moving behind the scenes. He signed a contract to stage manager for the Inner City Cultural Center in Los Angeles. It was at Inner City that Thompson fine-tuned his production skills. “At any given time, I was in rehearsal with one play while another was running.” He stage managed or production stage managed eleven back-to-back productions. It was also at Inner C ity that T hom pson had his “ baptism by fire ,” learning all the ins and outs o f backstage p o litics. T hat b ap ­ tism also took place at the A ctors S tudio W est, w here Thom pson directed S isyphus and the B lue- Eyed C yclops, his ow n scrip t. S isyphus, w hich starred A1 F re e ­ m an, Jr. and A dolph C aesar, told the story o f an in stitu tio n alized A frican A m erican w hose alleged insanity could be a m etaphor for the psychological oppression of A frican A m ericans. Thompson’s work at Actors Stu­ dio West would become a turning point in his career. “It was at Actors Studio that I learned how to run a writers’ unit,” he notes. When the writing and directing components were closed at the studio because “Lee Strasberg wanted to focus on the big money - the Marilyn Monroes and Marlon Brandos,” the seeds had al- ready been sown in Thompson for the creation of his own writers’ work­ shop. But not yet. First Thompson was on his way to New York to stage manage The River Niger for The Negro Ensemble Company (NEC), after “other [stage managing] biggies” had been unavailable. Not the NEC’s first choice and an unknown quantity in New York,Thompson sold himself by dropping two names: Vinette Carroll and Charles Gordone. When River Nigerclosed prema­ turely in spile of its Tony for “Best Play,” Thompson did freelance stage m anaging for W ynn H andm an (American Place Theater) and Joe Papp (New York Shakespeare Festi­ val). However, he was relieved ofduty from NYSF while Papp was out of town and an individual who was ap­ parently threatened, saw an opportu­ nity to remove Thompson. Then in 1970,FrankSilveradied. “It took all of us out,” Thompson recalls in a quiet voice. Frank Silvera had been an iirtist of compelling skill, range, and dedication. Between his professional debut in 1934 and his death in 1970, the fair-skinned, char­ ismatic African-Jamaican created a body of work few actors of any race can match. Long before the term “non- traditional casting” was coined, Silvera, who debuted on Broadway in the historic American Negro Theatre (ANT) production of Anna Lucasta, played a variety of men of various ethnic backgrounds. He created the role of the Italian father in A Hatful of Rain; played the Latino General Huerta in the film, Viva Zapata; an Irishman in Longitude 49; and an African American in the play, Nat Turner. His King Lear at The New York Shakespeare Festival is still con­ sidered a major event in theatre his­ tory. Arts at Lewis & Clark College Legendary performer Isaac hayes and famed songstress Amanda Ambrose performed recently with Big Band leader Glenn Zottola at the Church of Scientology Celebrity Centre International's Grand Masked Ball for the benefit of the Hollywood Arts Council. Helping to "put the Hollywood back into Hollywood, " the glittering fundraiser was held in the Garden Pavilion, a popular performing facility built on the Church grounds in 1992. T h e S e a r c h I s On F o r “M is s B l a c k O r e g o n 19941 99 ns 17-27 years of age Single Resident of Oregon OR Full-time student in Oregon If selected you will represent the state o f Oregon in the 1994 Miss Black US. A. Scholarship Pageant in Washington, D.C. and compete for a $5,000 scholarship grand prize trip to South Africa and other prizes. Interested persons should contact: Tony Washington/Derek Rasheed, M lss Black USA Oregon State Director at (503)-288-0033. Sponsored by the Portland Observer. Call today! "BROTHERS FROM THE EAST" Derek. Rasheed Present: Julie Dash Award-winning film director of Daughters of the Dust and Illusions 1993 Maya Deren Award from the American Film Institute 1991 Sundance Film Festival Cinematography Award 1989 Jury Prize for Best Film of the Decade from the Black Filmmakers Foundation 1985 Black Cinema Society Award Lecture Friday, February 4, 7:30 p.m. Council Chamber, Templeton College Center Lewis & Clark College A dm ission $7 general; $4 students, alumni, senior citizens A CABARET Dance & Fashion Show Sat. January 29, 1994 Tickets a v a ila b le at Lewis &. Clark College, Fir Acres Theatre Box Office 503-768-7491 C elebrate Black H istory M onth at Lew is & Clark C ollege Noah Jackson 9:00 PM until 2:30 AM At the Texas A nnex 1625 N.E. A lberta St. Music by the Fantastic: Fashions Presented by: Roseland Theater Weekly Update MUSIC MILLENNIUM 32ND & E. BURNSIDE 231-8926 23RD & NW JOHNSON 248-0163 Ladysmith Black Mambazo with NW Afrikan-American Ballet Saturday, J a n .29 9pm-21 & Over Leo Kottke with Cindy Banks & Gary Valentine Thursday, Feb 3 8pm - 21 & Over Bullet Boys with Havuk and Thunderjelly Wednesday, Feb 9 8pm - 21 & Over Dave Koz with Roger Sause Friday, Feb. 11 8:30pm - 21 & Over B.B. King with Curtis Salgado & Friends Sunday, Feb. 20 8pm - 21 & Over West Coast Alternative Jam Cement, Symon/Asher, April's Motel Room and Bungee Chord Saturday, Feb. 26 8pm - All Ages Stanley Clarke Band with Dennis Springer Friday, April 1 9pm - 21 & Over For more information call 224-TIXX GEORGE ‘BridaX rVo" P°' rOe J c L s h io n s Gowns • A ccessories • Lingerie After Five Admission: Advance $5.00 single At the door: $7.00 single • • $8.00 per couple $12.00 per couple TICKET LOCATIONS: The House of Sound Records • One Stop Records t Waves Hair Design • Cynthia's Visual Results Duece & A Quarter, 12th Street Twice. The "BROTHER’S FROM THE EAST" are mighty nice. They may bo young, and they may be old, but between them both there's RIGHTEOUS SOULIll