the sundance kid with the carmel tan trying his best 2 make a difference, Quentin Vercetty

  • October 30, 2009 8:07 pm

Quentin VerCetty SPOKEN ART vol. 1 EPK from Quentin Vercetty on Vimeo.

Introducing Quentin Vercetty, a hungry cat who thinks Spoken Word Artists could use more exposure in Toronto.  Peep his work from across Toronto this year. Quentin is both a spoken word Artist and a visual Artist, he does Spoken Art,m check it.


Beats. Mind. Movement

  • October 30, 2009 2:53 pm

BMM Fin.001

  • October 26, 2009 1:22 pm

unitedblackstudentsconference

Jane St. Rally Against Poverty (Oct. 23, 2009)

  • October 21, 2009 8:09 pm

JnF rally Oct 23rd

Mathieu Da Costa: First to Arrive book launch Oct. 23, 2009

  • October 21, 2009 6:44 pm

Mathieu Da Costa book launch

It is unbelievable how many excellent children’s books that relate to Black Canadian history.  For those that are unsure, Mathieu Da Costa was the first person of African descent to arrive in Canada.  As far back as 1605, Da Costa arrived in Canada working as a translator for  European colonialist like Samuel de Champlain.   The Canadian government (no because of lobbying by members of the African Canadian communities) has recently taken an interest in Da Costa organizing a yearly contest. Having gone to school in Scarborough as a youth I had never heard of Da Costa, I was a grown man before I became aware of his historical importance.  Check out this short film called Ghost of Da Costa, it really helps fill in the missing pieces of our history.  Wish this was made 20 years ago…


A Single Rose.. Mustafa Ahmed

  • October 20, 2009 12:27 pm

Yellowman (October 31- November 14)

  • October 19, 2009 5:24 pm

YellowmanNN_thumb_0

Yellowman
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This seminal play is an edgy and provocative examination of the complexities of inter-racial prejudice, centering around the relationship between Eugene, a light-skinned black man, and Alma, a dark-skinned black woman. Yet Yellowman is much more than a story about race and prejudice. Its a love story and a tale about families and the damage they inflict upon their members. Black or white, you will recognize the shades of gray. Weyni Mengesha is a Dora nominated director whose credits include: Director & Composer for the hit play da kink in my hair (Toronto, NYC & London); director/dramaturge for dbi.youngs blood.claat (2006 Dora Award for Best New Play), and director for A Raisin in the Sun (Soulpepper/Theatre Calgary). She is the recipient of the 2008 Toronto Arts Council Foundations RBC Emerging Artist Award.

Start: Oct 31 2009 – 8:00pm
End: Nov 14 2009 – 10:30pm
Location: Berkeley Street Theatre, Upstairs
26 Berkeley Street
Toronto, ON, Canada

If you are just hearing about Weyni get up on that!  She is definitely one to be proud of, making all kinds of waves in the theatre communities and beyond.  Check out a recent interview (july 09) where Weyni highlights the importance of her Ethiopian roots, her artistic vision and her connection with Selam Youth Festival. Also, make sure you come out and support Yellowman

My Name is Phillis Wheatley (Oct 30, 2009)

  • October 14, 2009 4:56 pm

Phillis Wheatley

The Committee To Commemorate and Memorialize the Abolition of the Slave Trades (CMAST) and KidsCan Press Present Governor General Award Nominee and Planet Africa Renaissance Award Winner, Dr. Afua Cooper, in the Launch of Her Two New Books: My Name is Phillis Wheatley and My Name is Henry Bibb: Stories of Slavery and Freedom. These historical novels are based on the lives of two enslaved American children Henry Bibb and Phillis Wheatley, who as adults overcame great odds to effect their freedom and went on to change literature and history.

When: Fri. 30 Oct. 2009

Place: William Doo Auditorium, New College, University of Toronto, 45 Willcocks Ave, at Spadina, Toronto, ON.

Time: 7p.m.

Fee: $10

Special Guests: Ian Kamau, Um’knondé, Keisha-Monique.

www.kidscan.com

Secrets of a Black Boy (review)

  • October 5, 2009 11:58 pm

Secrets of a Black Boy community trip
Secrets of a Black Boy community trip

by: Mark Campbell

This past weekend, I attended Secrets of a Black Boy, a play about 5 young black men written by Darren Anthony (trey anthony’s younger brother). I was lucky enough to travel with 35 young people from a variety of community organizations such as, Young Diplomats, Remix Project, Yorktown Child & family Services, Breaking the Cycle, Nia Centre, 180 Change Street, the Eritrean Youth Coalition, Toronto Community Housing, and Beyond the Lyrics. Check the pics here.

We were all lucky to witness this momentous event, five young black men on stage, doing their thing. It was fitting to see this after January 20th, the year keeps getting better. Darren Anthony & cast did an admirable job, despite having to live in the shadow of the massively successful Da’ Kink in my Hair. I must say though, it’s nice to see siblings supporting each other and ensuring they pull each other up, no crabs in a bucket here, straight up.

Secrets of a Black Boy is set in a community center in Regent Park that is slated to be demolished. The play takes us through a variety of issues via interesting soliloquies on topic such as spouse abuse, overpolicing, fatherhood and homosexuality. Al St. Louis played the elder statesmen Sheldon, who organizes a last dominoes game and who, through his words and actions, clearly articulates the human cost of Toronto’s massive gentrification project…. Lawrence Heights you next! Get familiar.

darren anthony chantal and donya

Samson Brown, played the young braggadocios Biscuit, a convincing depiction of the teenage black male in today’s society. His youthful playfulness and general exuberance kept the play lively and funny. At the point where Biscuit is being taught about good music, as opposed to the ever popular Weezy, I was really hoping to hear some Public Enemy, Pharohe or Tribe Called Quest, as the counter offer of good hip hop (it does exist, I promise). Instead, Sheldon impressed upon Biscuit the Legendary James Brown’s The Payback, a sampler’s goldmine which also played nicely into the hands of an older generation that has yet to hear anything worthwhile from the boom bap generation’s sonic creations.

Meanwhile, Sean, played by Shomari Downer, was by far the most controversial, elaborating-for an extended period of time-on my he loves white women. His explanation centered around feeling needed by white women and positioned his love for white women as a reaction to rejection by black women. A bit simplistic for my liking. If the play were striving for realness (as it claimed) then I think we should’ve also heard of some of the deeply embodied societal structures that teach everyone, man and woman, to love certain kinds of hair, skin tones and facial features.

Besides tackling issues around gentrification and the black man/white woman taboo Secrets also touched upon the issue of fatherlessness in the black community. I am very tired of hearing the media and all kinds of ‘experts’ blame ‘broken households’, more helpful at this point would be a discussion of the wider social constructions that continually make any kind of demonstration of black masculinity a contraband. So that for those that subscribe to the ‘provider, protector’ motto born out of industrialization, they quickly learn that western society was never designed for the equal participation of all men in European constructions of masculinity and its tightly regulated society. The landed gentry still stands on guard.

The Q & A at the end provide a much need opportunity for people to ask questions and seek clarification on some of the cleverly covered topics in Secrets. While I didn’t ask any questions, I was wondering where was the African presence in the play? There was no clear connection to the Continental African experience.

I found the end of the play to be the most powerful as Sheldon chants “We are here” and is joined by all the actors in a haunting, yet demanding refrain. Hopefully, Secrets will illuminate for the rest of Toronto society that we are STILL here, despite all of the ridiculous ways black life is circumscribed on the daily.

Thr Price of Sugar (film screening)

  • October 2, 2009 4:49 pm

price of sugar

October 9, 2009
Robert Gill Theatre, 214 College Street, Third Floor
4:00-5:30 Documentary Screening
5:30-6:00 Open discussion

SHORT SYNOPSIS

Just a few miles inland from the tourist-filled beaches of the Dominican Republic, hidden from view, thousands of dispossessed Haitians have toiled under armed-guard harvesting sugarcane, much of which ends up in U.S. kitchens. They work grueling hours and frequently lack decent housing, clean water, electricity, education or healthcare. “The Price of Sugar” follows Father Christopher Hartley, a charismatic Spanish priest, as he organizes some of this hemisphere’s poorest people, challenging powerful interests profiting from their work. The Vicini family which owns some of the sugar plantations on which the film was shot has filed a lawsuit against the filmmakers in an attempt to block the film’s release. This film raises key questions about where the products we consume originate and at what human cost they are produced.

This documentary is presented as part of The Commodification of Illicit Flows: Labour Migration, Trafficking and Business conference.

Please visit www.utoronto.ca/cdts for more details on the documentary and the conference.