April 14, 2022

WACO Theater Center, Newark Symphony Hall to Stream Virtual “Meet the Creators” of Black Terror Panel on April 19

Panel features a conversation between longtime creative collaborators Richard Lawson and Richard Wesley ahead of the Fall 2022 premiere of the film adaptation of Black Terror 

LOS ANGELES (April 14, 2022)WACO Theater Center, in partnership with Newark Symphony Hall and Yendor Theatre Company, announced it will be hosting Meet the Creators, a virtual conversation between longtime collaborators Richard Lawson, an actor and the co-artistic director of WACO, and Richard Wesley, dramatist, writer and associate professor of dramatic writing at NYU Tisch School of the Arts. The conversation will stream live on April 19 at 5 p.m. PST / 8 p.m. EST. 

During the discussion, Lawson and Wesley will reminisce on the Black Arts Movement, the Black Power Movement and the 50th anniversary of Wesley’s Drama Desk Award-winning play, Black Terror. Fifty years after its original production, this collaboration between Lawson and Wesley combines theater and film as it weaves together the struggles of Black liberation, past and present, and calls upon audiences to ask: What does it truly mean to be for the people?

“We’re in 2022, and we are still looking at the same thing,” said Richard Lawson. “The play itself is addressing something it is trying to get people to take a look at and 50 years later, we’re still on that same page,” Lawson continued.

Lawson has held a distinguished five-decades-long career as an actor, master teacher, public speaker, drug counselor and patented inventor. His selected films include Steven Spielberg’s Poltergeist, Walter Hill’s Streets of Fire, Coming Home with Jane Fonda and Jon Voight, Audrey Rose with Anthony Hopkins and Marsha Mason, Wag the Dog, starring Robert De Niro and Dustin Hoffman, and For Colored Girls, directed by Tyler Perry.

In addition to the play Black Terror, Wesley’s writing credits include the plays The Mighty Gents (Broadway, 1978) and Autumn (AUDELCO Award recipient for outstanding playwriting, 2017), as well as the motion pictures Uptown Saturday Night (1974), Let’s Do It Again (1975), Native Son (1984), and Fast Forward (1985). Wesley has also written episodes for the television series Fallen Angels, and 100 Centre Street, and has served as an adjunct professor at Manhattanville College, Wesleyan University, Borough of Manhattan Community College and Rutgers University.

“If I had a preference, Black Terror would be looked at as an artifact…it would be looked at as an example of where we were at one time,” said Richard Wesley. “Some of the very same things I was talking about as a 26-year-old are being experienced by today’s 26-year-olds…it’s the same anger, the same pain, the same necessity of being back in the streets fighting the same battles, struggling against the same issues all over again, and over again,” Wesley continued.

The panel is the second in a series of three virtual events that will lead up to the Fall 2022 premiere of the play-on-film Black Terror, directed by Lawson and adapted from Wesley’s play. The first virtual event took place on March 15 and featured Tina Knowles Lawson, Elaine Brown and other revolutionary women discussing the role Black women play in movements of social change.

Originally released in 1971 at the New York Shakespeare Festival’s Public Theater, Black Terror is considered a seminal work from the Black Arts Movement of the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, and has now been reimagined by Wesley and Lawson for a new generation living in the age of Black Lives Matter.

“We have to be a little bit more proactive in terms of making the difference, and I think Black Terror is going to do that,” said Lawson.

The panel will be streamed on WACO Theater Center’s website www.wacotv.com,

and Newark Symphony Hall’s YouTube: NewarkSymphonyHall and Facebook: Newark Symphony Hall.


ABOUT WACO THEATER CENTER  

WACO Theater Center is a performing and visual arts organization dedicated to the empowerment of Los Angeles artists and stories of the African diaspora. 

Founded in 2016, WACO opened its doors to the public in 2017. Located in the heart of North Hollywood’s Arts District, the state-of-the-art complex includes a 99-seat theater, an art gallery space and is the home of Richard Lawson Studios. Over its five-year history, WACO has invested in more than 700 artists and 1000 young people in Los Angeles and beyond. WACO is committed to providing a creative center where art can occur and give artists and youth a place to grow their talent and celebrate their artistry.
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ABOUT NEWARK SYMPHONY HALL  

Born in 1925, Newark Symphony Hall (NSH) has been the home of almost a century of arts and culture in what is now one of New Jersey’s oldest and largest arts and entertainment venues. NSH remains as committed as ever to providing an artistically rich experience for art lovers of all ages, while creating career pathways for people of color from around the world – and bettering both its community and the Greater Newark region. For more information, visit: newarksymphonyhall.org 

ABOUT YENDOR THEATRE COMPANY  

Yendor Theatre Company, co-founded in 2016 by Rodney Gilbert and Andrew Binger, develops, produces and celebrates works by historically resilient Black and Brown writers, women writers and writers from the LGBTQ+ community. Their work explores challenging themes such as police brutality, mental illness and racism, while also celebrating beautiful ones like forbidden love, community building and faith. For more information, visit: yendortheatrecompany.com.

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