Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Project #4 - Educators Packet

 
Fences
Educators Packet
Target Audience: Juniors and Seniors in High School

Ø  Part 1 – Things To Know

Fences - 2 Acts with 9 Scenes
5 Males and 2 Females (with some mentioned but not on stage)
Playwrite: August Wilson


Plot Summary:
Troy and Bono go to Troy's house for their weekly ritual of drinking and talking. Troy has asked Mr. Rand, their boss, why the black employees aren't allowed to drive the garbage trucks, only to lift the garbage. Bono thinks Troy is cheating on his wife, Rose. Troy and Rose's son, Cory, has been recruited by a college football team. Troy was in the Negro Leagues but never got a chance to play in the Major Leagues because he got too old to play just as the Major Leagues began accepting black players. Troy goes into a long epic story about his struggle in July of 1943 with death. Lyons shows up at the house because he knows it is Troy's payday. Rose reminds Troy about the fence she's asked him to finish building.
Cory and Troy work on the fence. Cory breaks the news to Troy that he has given away his job at the local grocery store, the A&P, during the football season. Cory begs Troy to let him play because a coach from North Carolina is coming all the way to Pittsburgh to see Cory play. Troy refuses and demands Cory to get his job back. Act One, scene four takes place on Friday and mirrors scene one. Troy has won his case and has been assigned as the first colored garbage truck driver in the city. Bono and Troy remember their fathers and their childhood experiences of leaving home in the south and moving north. Cory comes home enraged after finding out that Troy told the football coach that Cory may not play on the team. Troy warns Cory that his insubordinance is "strike one," against him.
Troy bails his brother Gabriel out of jail. Bono and Troy work on the fence. Bono explains to Troy and Cory that Rose wants the fence because she loves her family and wants to keep close to her love. Troy admits to Bono that he is having an affair with Alberta. Bono bets Troy that if he finishes building the fence for Rose, Bono will buy his wife, Lucille the refrigerator he has promised her for a long time. Troy tells Rose about a hearing in three weeks to determine whether or not Gabriel should be recommitted to an asylum. Troy tells Rose about his affair. Rose accuses Troy of taking and not giving. Troy grabs Rose's arm. Cory grabs Troy from behind. They fight and Troy wins. Troy calls "strike two" on Cory. Six months later, Troy says he is going over to the hospital to see Alberta who went into labor early. Rose tells Troy that Gabriel has been taken away to the asylum because Troy couldn't read the papers and signed him away. Alberta had a baby girl but died during childbirth. Troy challenges Death to come and get him after he builds a fence. Troy brings home his baby, Raynell. Rose takes in Raynell as her own child, but refuses to be dutiful as Troy's wife. On Troy's payday, Bono shows up unexpectedly. Troy and Bono acknowledge how each man made good on his bet about the fence and the refrigerator.
Troy insists that Cory leave the house and provide for himself. Cory brings up Troy's recent failings with Rose. Cory points out that the house and property, from which Troy is throwing Cory out, should actually be owned by Gabriel whose government checks paid for most of the mortgage payments. Troy physically attacks Cory. Troy kicks Cory out of the house for good. Cory leaves. Troy swings the baseball bat in the air, taunting Death. Eight years later, Raynell plays in her newly planted garden. Troy has died from a heart attack. Cory returns home from the Marines to attend Troy's funeral. Lyons and Bono join Rose too. Cory refuses to attend. Rose teaches Cory that not attending Troy's funeral does not make Cory a man. Raynell and Cory sing one of Troy's father's blues songs. Gabriel turns up, released or escaped from the mental hospital. Gabe blows his trumpet but no sound comes out. He tries again but the trumpet will not play. Disappointed and hurt, Gabriel dances. He makes a cry and the Heavens open wide. He says, "That's the way that goes," and the play ends.
Ø  Character List

Ø  Troy Maxson  -  The protagonist of Fences, a fifty-three year-old, African American man who works for the sanitation department, lifting garbage into trucks. Troy is also a former baseball star in the Negro Leagues. Troy's athletic ability diminished before the Major Leagues accepted blacks. Hard-working, strong and prone to telling compelling, fanciful stories and twisting the truth, Troy is the family breadwinner and plays the dominant role in his over thirty-year friendship with fellow sanitation worker, Jim Bono. Troy's character is the centerpiece that all of the other relationships in Fences gather around. Troy is husband to Rose, father to Lyons, Cory, and Raynell, and brother to Gabriel. Troy is a tragic-hero who has excessive pride for his breadwinning role. Troy's years of hard-work for only meager progress depress him. Troy often fails to provide the love and support that would mean the most to his loved ones.
Ø  Cory Maxson  -  The teenage son of Troy and Rose Maxson. A senior in high school, Cory gets good grades and college recruiters are coming to see him play football. Cory is a respectful son, compassionate nephew to his disabled Uncle Gabriel, and generally, a giving and enthusiastic person. An ambitious young man who has the talent and determination to realize his dreams, Cory comes of age during the course of the play when he challenges and confronts Troy and leaves home. Cory comes home from the Marines in the final scene of the play, attempting to defy Troy by refusing to go to his funeral, but Cory changes his mind after sharing memories of his father with Rose and Raynell.
Ø  Rose Maxson  -  Troy's wife and mother of his second child, Cory. Rose is a forty-three year-old African American housewife who volunteers at her church regularly and loves her family. Rose's request that Troy and Cory build a fence in their small, dirt backyard comes to represent her desire to keep her loved-ones close to her love. Unlike Troy, Rose is a realist, not a romantic longing for the by- gone days of yore. She has high hopes for her son, Cory and sides with him in his wish to play football. Rose's acceptance of Troy's illegitimate daughter, Raynell, as her own child, exemplifies her compassion.
Ø  Gabriel Maxson  -  Troy's brother. Gabriel was a soldier in the Second World War, during which he received a head injury that required a metal plate to be surgically implanted into his head. Because of the physical damage and his service, Gabriel receives checks from the government that Troy used in part to buy the Maxson's home where the play takes place. Gabriel wanders around the Maxson family's neighborhood carrying a basket and singing. He often thinks he is not a person, but the angel Gabriel who opens the gates of heaven with his trumpet for Saint Peter on Judgment Day. Gabriel exudes a child-like exuberance and a need to please.
Ø  Jim Bono  -  Troy's best friend of over thirty years. Jim Bono is usually called "Bono" or "Mr. Bono" by the characters in Fences. Bono and Troy met in jail, where Troy learned to play baseball. Troy is a role model to Bono. Bono is the only character in Fences who remembers, first-hand, Troy's glory days of hitting homeruns in the Negro Leagues. Less controversial than Troy, Bono admires Troy's leadership and responsibility at work. Bono spends every Friday after work drinking beers and telling stories with Troy in the Maxson family's backyard. He is married to a woman named Lucille, who is friends with Rose. Bono is a devoted husband and friend. Bono's concern for Troy's marriage takes precedent over his loyalty to their friendship.
Ø  Lyons Maxson  -  Troy's son, fathered before Troy's time in jail with a woman Troy met before Troy became a baseball player and before he met Rose. Lyons is an ambitious and talented jazz musician. He grew up without Troy for much of his childhood because Troy was in prison. Lyons, like most musicians, has a hard time making a living. For income, Lyons mostly depends on his girlfriend, Bonnie whom we never see on stage. Lyons does not live with Troy, Rose and Cory, but comes by the Maxson house frequently on Troy's payday to ask for money. Lyons, like Rose, plays the numbers, or local lottery. Their activity in the numbers game represents Rose and Lyons' belief in gambling for a better future. Lyons' jazz playing appears to Troy as an unconventional and foolish occupation. Troy calls jazz, "Chinese music," because he perceives the music as foreign and impractical. Lyons' humanity and belief in himself garners respect from others.
Ø  Raynell Maxson  -  Troy's illegitimate child, mothered by Alberta, his lover. August Wilson introduces Raynell to the play as an infant. Her innocent need for care and support convinces Rose to take Troy back into the house. Later, Raynell plants seeds in the once barren dirt yard. Raynell is the only Maxson child that will live with few scars from Troy and is emblematic of new hope for the future and the positive values parents and older generations pass on to their young.
Ø  Characters mentioned in the Script but not actually cast:
Alberta -  Troy's buxom lover from Tallahassee and Raynell's mother. Alberta dies while giving birth. She symbolizes the exotic dream of Troy's to escape his real life problems and live in an illusion with no time.
Bonnie -  Lyons' girlfriend who works in the laundry at Mercy Hospital.
Mr. Stawicki  -  Cory's boss at the A&P
Coach Zellman -  Cory's high school football coach who encourages recruiters to come to see Cory play football.

Mr. Rand  -  Bono and Troy's boss at the Sanitation Department who doubted that Troy would win his discrimination case.

Miss Pearl  -  Gabe's landlady at his new apartment.


Playwright: August Wilson (April 27, 1945 - October 2, 2005)

One of the most influential writers in American theater. He is best known for his unprecedented cycle of 10 plays, often called the Pittsburgh Cycle because all but one play is set in the Pittsburgh neighborhood where August Wilson grew up. The series of plays chronicle the tragedies and aspirations of African Americans during each decade of the 20th century. After his father died in 1965, August Wilson officially changed his name to honor his mother. That same year, he purchased his first typewriter and began to write poetry. Drawn to the theater and inspired by the civil rights movement, in 1968 August Wilson co-founded the Black Horizons Theatre in the Hill District of Pittsburgh with his friend, Rob Penny. His early work failed to gain much attention, but his third play, "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom" (1982), about a group of black musicians discussing their experiences in racist America, won August Wilson wide recognition as a dramatist and interpreter of the African American experience.






Production History
“Fences” is part of Wilson’s great decade-by-decade cycle of the African-American experience in the 20th century, largely set (as “Fences” is) in the Hill District of Pittsburgh. It shares with more adventurous works like “Joe Turner’s Come and Gone” and “Seven Guitars” a specific sense of the history that brought its characters to their point in time. That includes handed-down recollections of slavery and more immediate memories of the northward migration from cotton country.
The original production of “Fences” was the most financially successful play in the Wilson cycle, propelled in part by a Tony-winning turn by the star, James Earl Jones. In 2004 Ms. Hays was a savior of sorts to another Wilson play, stepping in with an investment of nearly $1 million when a Broadway production of Wilson’s “Gem of the Ocean,” which is chronologically first in the cycle, had run into a severe budget shortfall.

Part II – Things to do and think about

Here are a list of 5 questions you should ask yourself after reading the play “Fences”

A. August Wilson names the family Maxson.   The name Maxson is a combination of the Mason-Dixon Line.  What is the Mason-Dixon Line? Where is the Mason-Dixon Line?  Why is this line appropriate for the play?
Follow this link to read about The Mason-Dixon Line and print out a map of the line:
http://geography.about.com/od/politicalgeography/a/masondixon.htm

B. Troy says, “Death ain’t nothing but a fastball on the outside corner.” What is the meaning of mixing a baseball metaphor and death for Troy?  How does Troy view death?

C. The play takes place in 1957.  Find at least 10 major events that happened in the United States in 1957 that had newspaper headlines.  What was going on in 1957 regarding racism? (Hint: Look into Little Rock, Arkansas & Martin Luther King & President Eisenhower)

D. Fences is named such because the fence in the yard is both a literal fence in the Maxson yard and a figurative one representing what for each of these three family members: Troy, Rose, and Cory

E. Having read the play and considering the time period of 1957, what problems did the character Troy cause for himself and what problems did he have that were out of his control?


Part III - Exploring Further

Read this review of Denzel Washington as he plays Troy Maxson in 2010.  It is interesting to think that actors who are loved by their fans can cause some problems for audiences when viewed as a “bad guy” or … does it matter?

Read and listen to the videos of James Earl Jones (the original Troy) as he speaks of his family life and the racism his grandmother held against white people.  He speaks of how he overcame that in his own life after moving north from Mississippi.

Look at this cover of Time Magazine in 1957.  Who is the man on the cover?  Read this article for more information on the Civil Rights Movement.

Blues and Jazz was popular in 1957.  Follow these links to find jazz and blues music that was popular in 1957.

Watch this YouTube video of an interview with author August Wilson.  He speaks about being an African American and his culture.   He defines the terms “black” and “white” and speaks about his culture.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=loMoBHNGbrE

Program Notes:


Fences by August Wilson, centers around the tragic character, Troy, who lives in the changing times when American racism meets the Civil Rights Movement.  Troy never gets to become the person he dreamed to be, but his life represents the lives of many African American men who sacrificed for those who come behind him to have the chance to live their dreams. Symbolizing this time period in America, Wilson gives Troy the last name of “Maxson” which stands for a shortened version of the Mason-Dixon Line in southern Pennsylvania where the play is set. The Mason-Dixon Line was the imaginary dividing line between the free states and the slave states in the 1800’s.
Wilson set Fences during the baseball season of 1957 when Hank Aaron led the Milwaukee Braves to the World Series. During 1957, Aaron and other African American athletes proved they had the talent, the desire, and the drive to compete with White athletes in American.  Many, like Hank Aaron, excelled and were widely praised by the White community for their abilities.  Troy was a baseball player who never got to experience his own dream of professional baseball, but in Fences we see Troy excited to know that players like Aaron get to have successful careers in the leagues. Wilson hopes to express the sorrow Troy experiences during this time of changing racism as Troy and other characters witness Aaron’s successes, recall their own glory times, but know now they are too old to get to experience what Aaron does.
Fences takes place in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where August Wilson grew up. Troy Maxson and his family moved to Pittsburgh to begin a new live free from Southern racism. Many African Americans like Troy and his friend Bono did whatever they could to survive and even spent time in jail for the crimes they committed to get to a place of living free from the racism their elders had gone through. Troy and the other characters in Fences live lives that prove that the consequences of being sons and grandsons of slaves without resources and financial help to pull themselves out of their poverty and their lack of opportunities such as Troy not being able to play major league baseball. During the eight years of the play Fences, the audience sees how Troy and his family are subjected to the division (or Fence) that even occurs in the African American Community of those who lived the sad lives that paved the way for a better future for the younger African Americans.  Troy’s tragic character full of sadness and anger suffocates the hope his son has for a future in football and costs him a relationship with his son in Fences. Troy’s wife loves him and her family and is willing to do whatever it takes to keep them together and she represents many African American housewives of her time.
Welcome to 1957-1965 and to the home of the Maxson family!  Enjoy the jazz and blues of the time period when America was in a cold war with the USSR, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs the Civil Rights Law, Martin Luther King, Jr. makes the cover of Time Magazine, school segregation laws are abolished in America, and Hank Aaron leads the Milwaukee Braves to the World Series.  African American musicians like Sam Cooke appear on television on such shows as the famous Ed Sullivan Show where white stars like Elvis Presley and Buddy Holley are regulars. Pretend to drive in the new Chevrolet Impala with its long sleek body and tail fins while listening to the music of Presley and Cooke on your radio.  Enjoy turning on your imaginary television to view the brand new American family television series called Leave It To Beaver and compare your memories of that family with that of the Maxson family.  Visually picture the casseroles and steak suppers that were popular for that time period and settle back to enjoy your time with the Maxson’s. Watch as the Maxson’s build a fence in their yard as other fences in America are coming down.  Decide for yourself whether Troy’s fences are really there or whether he causes many fences to divide him from his wife, children, family, and friends.  Ponder how we could have been better to the Troy Maxsons in America.  After all, wasn’t slavery abolished long before Troy’s birth? Didn’t President Abraham Lincoln make all men free long before Troy and Bono went to work for the city of Pittsburgh in the garbage and sanitation department?  Why couldn’t it have been Troy who led the Milwaukee Braves to the World Series?  To hear him tell it, he could have knocked home runs over any Fences.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Dramaturgy Project #3

Production History: Fences

Basic Facts
Play Makers Repertory Company
Paul Green Theatre
Chapel Hill, NC
10/27/10 – 11/14/10
Stage Director: Seret Scott
Costume Designer: Helen Q. Huang
Lighting Designer: Peter West

Review Capsule #1
“Troy is a daunting role, challenging its interpreters with the character's shaggy dog stories, pent up rages and domineering personality. TV and film actor Charlie Robinson fulfills all these requirements, bringing great humanity to Troy's virtues and flaws, a truly stellar performance.”


Review Capsule #2
“The language of the characters, the family dynamics and the family portrait that is drawn is so rich and full of life.
Julie Cooper, The Daily Tar Heel, 10/28/10















Basic Facts
American Stage
Raymond James Theatre
St. PetersBurg, FL
09/23/09 – 10/11/09
Stage Director: Timothy Douglas

Lighting Designer: Joe Oshry
Costume Dessigner: Ben Judah

Review Capsule #1
Evander Duck Jr. gives a riveting performance as Troy, swinging from the garrulous charm of a natural-born storyteller to the resentful rage of a black slugger born "too early" to benefit from the desegregation of Major League Baseball to a fierce kind of shaman doing a soliloquy to "Mr. Death." Troy is an enormous, complex role, and the bearded, barrel-chested Duck inhabits it completely.

John Fleming
Times Performing Arts Critic

September 29, 2009

Review Capsule #2
American Stage Theatre Company has hit another home run with "Fences," the company's  
third production from August Wilson's 10-play Century Cycle. Each play chronicles a decade of the African American experience, nine of which are set in Pittsburgh's Hill District. "Fences," Wilson's sixth installment, takes place from 1957 to 1965 and examines the struggles of the Maxson family.

KATHY L. GREENBERG Tribune correspondent


Published: September 29, 2009







Basic Facts
Cygnet Theatre Company
Cygnet Theatre
San Diego, CA
01/26/08 – 02/24/08
Stage Director: Delcia Turner Sonnenberg
Lighting Designer: Eric Lotze
Sound Designer: George Ye

Review Capsule #1
A visit to Cygnet Theatre to see August Wilson’s Fences allows the audience an extended visit with the Maxon’s, long enough to see the good, the bad, and the ugly. It’s an opportunity to sit on their front porch and listen in on private moments that speak to a family in love and then a family who has fallen out of love and into crisis mode. Wilson sculpted his “Hill District” characters so skillfully that they easily breathe with the reality of life; they are richly vivid and naturally flawed.
http://www.sdtheatrescene.com/w-agora/view.php?bn=sdtheaterinfoforums_reviews&key=1201620073


Review Capsule #2

"Death ain't nothing but a fastball on the outside corner" says Troy Maxson, the central figure in August Wilson's Pulitzer Prize-winning play Fences , currently on stage at Cygnet Theater. Troy is a mix of bravado and nurtured bitterness, and he taunts death throughout the play. And He claims to have wrestled with both death and the devil, though it's clear as this story unfolds, Troy's personal demons aren't giving up the fight.

Angela Carone

http://www.kpbs.org/news/2008/feb/01/august-wilsons-fences-at-cygnet-theater/





Basic Facts
Pittsburgh Public Theater
Hazlett Theatre
Pittsburgh PA
04/08/99 – 05/16/99
Stage Director: Marion Isaac McClinton
Set Designer: David Gallo
Lighting Designer: Tom Sturge

Review Capsule #1
The play, about a fierce garbage hauler whose earlier dreams in the Negro baseball league were thwarted, was a hit at the Pennsylvania nonprofit in 1989, with Redwood. The actor subsequently played the role in seven different productions.

Kenneth Jones and David Lefkowitz
Playbill.com

http://www.playbill.com/news/article/44873-Redwood-Stars-in-Pittsburgh-Public-Fences-Going-Up-April-16-May-16



Review Capsule #2
Directing the revival of "Fences" that opens for previews Thursday, is Marion McClinton, previously director of Wilson's "Jitney" and "Seven Guitars" at the Public, but also author of the searing "Police Boys" that played at the Public in 1995. Tackling the lead role of Troy in "Fences," as he did at the Public in 1989, is John Henry Redwood, known also to Public audiences as the author of "A Sunbeam" (1991) and "The Old Settler" (1998). And playing Troy's older son, Lyons, is Glover, new to Pittsburgh, with impressive playwriting credits.

Christopher Rawson, Post-Gazette Drama Critic

Tuesday, April 06, 1999













Basic Facts
Cort Theatre
New York, NY
April 26, 2010 - July 11, 2010
Produced by: Carole Shorenstein Hays and Scott Rudin
Director: Kenny Leon
Lighting designer: Brian MacDevitt
Set designer: Santo Loquasto

Review Capsule #1
Set in 1957 in the backyard of the Maxsons' modest house, the play depicts the first playful but increasingly charged confrontations between Troy and his family, with a major plot point involving the building of a fence that has all too symbolic meaning.


Review Capsule #2
Under Kenny Leon's fast and forward-leaning direction, Washington has some difficulty modulating his theatrical intensity early on. And the residue of his Hollywood glamour works against his character. Troy, an ex-Negro League baseball player struggling to live up to his family responsibilities as a sanitation man in 1950s Pittsburgh, has been shortchanged by history, whereas Washington enters to deafening entrance applause and exits the theater to a pack of autograph hounds. 










Statement: Producing the Play Fences
                After reading the Fences script I see a few problems within the text that might cause a problem for the production.  The first and potentially largest problem might be the language used if the right cast was not picked out to represent the characters.  Since Fences is set in 1957 during some of the initial American school segregation law changes and the beginning of Martin Luther King’s Civil Rights Movement there could be potential for dragging an audience through some tough memories about that time period.  The nigger word written in the text could potentially cause the audience to be very uncomfortable and depending on how the director advises the cast during some of those scenes could be problematic for the show and its ratings.  Another problem with the text could be the sexual innuendos associated with the affair of Troy and the child that comes to live with him after her mother’s death.  This might be too mature for some audiences.  The character playing Troy’s brother who is mentally disabled in the war could also cause some difficulty in how the audience perceives the stereotype of a Black family with a disabled member that is “used” for his financial money to aid the whole family.  The director of Fences will need to consider the community and its own Black history and climate concerning these areas.
I see some Production Problems with this show. Fences is written to be cast as an all Black cast. This might cause some concern with the other races on a college campus.  There may be other multi-cultural shows that get requested to even out the opportunity for students to perform during the year Fences is produced.   This could cause some difficulty for a campus in that it could look like there is division among races.  The director and producer will need to think this through about what is best for their campus theatre.  There may also be a problem about whether there are enough Black actors on a campus with talent enough to pull off the full power of Fences.  Fences needs an elaborate set with costumes, furniture, a fence, a yard and porch, perhaps even a car all dating from 1957.  Some of these items might be difficult for a college campus to acquire or build.  The theme of adultery and the fighting between the son and his father, Troy may be upsetting to the audience also because it could appear to be abusive.   Though real fences are needed for the set, the real meaning of Fences is the racism issue and the audience can’t get too caught up in the fences on the set so as to distract from the fences in life racism can cause.
Here are some solutions that other Theater venues have done to prevent such concerns for the audience.  Major characters played Troy with vibrant bitterness and anger, but managed to make Troy appear tragic rather than abusive in his life within the racism problems of 1957.  His behaviors almost seem to be symptoms of his anger about not getting to be a famous baseball player and ending up as a garbage collector instead.  The audience can feel sorry for Troy and at the same time see him for his lies and abusiveness, too, if a strong actor is cast in the role.  Casting Denzel Washington and James Earl Jones were ways some productions achieved the perfect Troy mix for the character.  Gabriel’s character should be played in such a way as to cause Troy’s character to feel both guilt and love for him since he is his bother.  Rose and Troy, played by Viola Davis and Denzel Washington, brought such power in their opposite personalities and their love for each other that the flaws of Washington’s Troy character in his anger and adultery still caused the audience to feel love and compassion for him through Rose and her silent wisdom.
There were mixed reviews from critics about which actor carried Fences to please the audience.  In the Broadway production of Fences starring Denzel Washington there was some strong positive reviews for Denzel Washington’s strength and powerful voice in the part of Troy. 
The story itself wasn’t praised as much as the power Mr. Washington had in pulling the show together due to his strength as an actor and his ability to get into “Shakespearean” mode as he spoke.  
This review was by Ben Brantley of The New York Times and can be found at http://theater.nytimes.com/2010/04/27/theater/reviews/27fences.html.   According to Howard Pousner, of the Atlanta Arts and Culture blog, actress Viola Davis is the one Washington has to keep up with in this play. 
According to Tom O’Neil, Washington should land a Tony for his portrayal of Troy. 

Monday, June 13, 2011

Dramaturgy Project #2

PROJECT #2
THE WORLD OF THE PLAY



Micro Veiw
1. Average 1957 American Costs:
House Price $2,330
Car Price $2,749
Yearly Wages $4.550.00
Gallon of Gas 24 cents
Pound of Bacon 60 cents
2. Some 1957 Events in the USA:
Martin Luther King, Jr., leads nationwide reform against racial segregation and discrimination in the US
3. Some 1957 Culture:
New Name for the 1957 Generation who loved “Beat” Music: Beatnik
Films: The Ten Commandments, Around the World in Eighty Days, Twelve Angry Men, Jailhouse Rock (Elvis Presley), The Bridge on the River Kwai, The Three Faces of Eve
Songs: Young Love, Tonight, Wake Up Little Susie, That’ll Be the Day, Jailhouse Rock
Theatre: West Side Story and The Music Man open in New York
4. Morality Example of 1957:
And God Created Woman, a film starring Bridgette Bardot, becomes a controversial sensation. Many American communities ban the film for its sexual material.
5. Some 1957 Foods and Typical Menu in American Culture:
Stuffed eggs (deviled eggs), Meat loaf, Tuna casserole, Green bean casserole, American lasagna,
Baked ham with glaze,  Angel food cake, Cherries Jubilee
6. Pennsylvania Racial Issue in 1957:
“They have a right to live the same as any other American.  The violence last night was horrible.  I hope it ends,” one neighbor said about a black family moving into Levittown about protests by white neighbors on August 15, 1957.  This protesting by whites resurrected Pennsylvania’s historical racial discrimination problems. http://www.portal.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/community/events/4279/civil_rights_movement/532945

7. Business and Economy:
Teamsters union expelled from the AFL-CIO for failing to deal with organized crime.
Cars are purchases on credit. http://www.thepeoplehistory.com/1957.html
8. Religion:
"In God We Trust" is stamped on U.S. currency of all denominations. http://www.answers.com/topic/1957#ixzz1PNZIdcsw

9. Retail Stores:
The first Toys "R" Us store opens at Washington, D.C. and the first shopping mall opens in the Minneapolis        http://www.answers.com/topic/1957#ixzz1PNasZowt
10 . Transportation:
The Edsel introduced by Ford Motor Company competes with the General Motors Oldsmobile. The Chevrolet Impala is introduced by General Motors. New York retires its last trolley car.  Three U.S. Air Force jets flying at more than 500 mph complete nonstop round-the-world flights.

Macro Veiw

1. Orval Faubus, the governor of Arkansas, calls out the National Guard to stop nine black students from attending a Little Rock high school.  Federal Troops are then sent by President Eisenhower to force the integration of schools in Little Rock, Arkansas, after Governor Faubus and local Little Rock authorities refused to comply with court-ordered desegregation.
2. United States Senator Strom Thurmond speaks and filibusters for 24 hours and 27minutes against civil rights. President Eisenhower later signs the first civil rights bill since Reconstruction.
3. The USSR (Russia) satellite called Sputnik was the very first satellite launched into Space and is considered the first event of the Space Age. Later in the year, the USSR launches Sputnik II with a dog (Laika) and this is the first animal launched into orbit.
4. The Treaty of Rome creates the European Economic Community known as the Common Market.
5. "American Bandstand," begins on the ABC television network
6. The International Atomic Energy Agency is formed by the United Nations (UN), US performs multiple nuclear tests at in Nevada,  USSR announces a successful test of its intercontinental ballistic missile, 1st launching in Kazachstan (R7 "Semiorka"-rocket), USSR performs multiple nuclear tests in the atmosphere. The Cold War between the USA and the USSR is considered a threat and The Gaither Report calls for more missiles and fallout shelters to be established in the USA.

7. Some historic Black athletes and musicians get recognized. Althea Gibson becomes the first Black woman to win Wimbledon. Jackie Wilson, releases his 1st solo single "Reet Petite", Cleveland Browns' fullback Jim Brown sets club record of 237 yards rushing, Sam Cooke (Black) and Buddy Holly and Crickets debut on Ed Sullivan Show and Sam Cooke's "You Send Me" reaches #1 on the music charts. Henry Aaron wins the National League MVP.

http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1957?p=3

8. The first pacemaker was designed, the theory of superconductivity was proposed, and the first artificial heart was designed.
9. Several Ku Klux Klan members force a Black truck driver  named Willie Edwards to jump off a bridge into the Alabama River and Edwards  drowns.
10. South Vietnam was attacked by Viet Cong Guerrillas

Sounds and Images

1. http://www.baseball-statistics.com/Ballparks/Pitt/forbes-fans.gif











Since Fences takes place in Pittsburg,1957 and the Baseball talk throughout the show. I thought this would be a good picture to have of the Pittsburgh Pirates Forbes Feild during 1957.











Here is a picture of a Bike leaning up against a Pittsburgh home in 1957.










7. "Whispering Bells"--by The Dell-Vikings--The perfect Doo Wop Song in my opinion. This song has everything from a tremendous beat to harmonious perfection. The Dell-Vikings were a group from Pittsburgh, PA whose songs were recognized finally in 1957. This song peaked at #11 in the mid-summer of that year.    http://hubpages.com/hub/Top-TEN-Classic-Doo-Wop-Songs-of-All-Time

8. "Blue Moon"--The Marcels--Yet another group from the fertile city of Pittsburgh, PA . The Marcels were made up of 7 singers who blended really well together. They reached way back to 1935 to give this song a Doo-Over as it performed just like the prior song jumping to #1 in 1961 and staying there for 3 weeks. http://hubpages.com/hub/Top-TEN-Classic-Doo-Wop-Songs-of-All-Time






Statement:

The World of Fences
Audience Notes
            Fences was written by August Wilson and set in 1957 Pennsylvania.  America was involved in a race to Space with the USSR and there was an intense Cold War beginning between Americans and Russians. The racial war between Whites and Blacks in America raged on with several landmark events taking place: Racial outbursts about a Black family moving into a Pennsylvania neighborhood, Martin Luther King, Jr., began to lead the nation against discrimination, Eisenhower sent troops to uphold Black students’ rights to integrate a high school in Little Rock, Arkansas, and Eisenhower signed the Civil Rights Law of 1957. “They have a right to live the same as any other American.  The violence last night was horrible.  I hope it ends,” one neighbor said about the Black family moving into Levittown, Pennsylvania, against protests by white neighbors.  This protesting by whites resurrected Pennsylvania’s historical racial discrimination problems. Martin Luther King, Jr. was traveling and speaking for civil rights while Senator Strom Thurman filibustered against in Congress against it.  Black athletes like baseball’s Henry Aaron were celebrated for their abilities. Althea Gibson, a Black female, wins The Wimbledon and Cleveland Browns' fullback Jim Brown sets their club record of 237 yards rushing.  Black musicians like Sam Cooke hit the music charts with number one songs alongside Elvis Presley and Buddy Holly. Presley performs for the seventh time on the famous Ed Sullivan Show while Sam Cooke debuts on the show with Buddy Holly and the Crickets. The White world of American Bandstand and Leave It To Beaver were coming face to face with Communism concerns during the time an ever increasing Black Community was demanding equal rights. Nat “King” Cole had a television show just like Phil Silvers.  Meatloaves, tuna casseroles, barbeque ribs, glazed hams, and grilled steaks were being eaten at Americas’ dinner tables.  West Side Story opened in New York City bringing violence to the stage and actress Bridgett Bardot starred in a sexually controversial movie. Acceptable films at the movies were : The Ten Commandments, Around the World in Eighty Days, Twelve Angry Men, Jailhouse Rock (Elvis Presley), The Bridge on the River Kwai, and The Three Faces of Eve. The Ku Klux Klan drowned a black truck driver in the South while other men were deciding whether they wanted to buy the new Chevrolet Impala or a Ford Edsel. Credit for cars was a new thing and everyone wanted one of the new cars with long tailfins.  In God We Trust was stamped on all currency and dozens of mobsters were arrested in New York City. Jets flew in excess of 500 miles per hour around the world and the United States tested nuclear bombs in Nevada as Russia launched its first ballistic missile into space and tested multiple nuclear tests in Earth’s atmosphere.  America heard cries for fallout shelters in the media.  Yearly wages in America were approximately $4550.00 and houses cost approximately half that amount.  Cars could be purchased for $2749.00 and gasoline to run them with was a mere 24 cents a gallon. The police began using portable radar detection devices to catch speeders. Some very important firsts occurred in the world of Science in 1957.  The first pacemaker was designed, the theory of superconductivity was proposed, and the first artificial heart was designed. Hurricane Audrey followed by a tidal wave hit the coasts of Texas and Louisiana. The House for Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) convicts a number of writers and playwright's for Un-American Activities / Communist party membership. The Teamsters Union was expelled from the AFL-CIO for failing to deal with organized crime. Songs like Young Love, Tonight, Wake Up Little Susie, That’ll Be the Day, and Jailhouse Rock played in households on new hi-fi stereos and in car radios as people drove to work. The term “Beatnik” became popular for the young crowd that listened to music with beats. Deviled eggs were a popular dish and, why not, since eggs were available for 28 cents a dozen. The most popular books read in 1957 households were On the Road by author Jack Kerouac; Atlas Shrugged by author Ayn Rand; and The Cat in the Hat by the beloved Dr. Seuss. The Treaty of Rome created the European Economic Community known as the Common Market. The very first Toys R Us stored opened where toys of 1957 such as the slinky and hula hoops were likely sold. South Vietnam was attacked by Viet Cong while families tuned into their evening televisions to view Perry Mason and Maverick