The Devil's Music: The Life & Blues of Bessie Smith
By Angelo Parra
Directed by Joe Brancato
Musical arrangements & starring Miche Braden
Mosaic’s Season Three launches with this hit Off-Broadway musical celebration of the legendary Bessie Smith, whose life was as large and outrageous as her talent. Starring Miche Braden, reprising the role she originated Off-Broadway, The Devil’s Music re-imagines Bessie’s final electrifying evening after she and her band are turned away by a whites-only theater. This is a musical celebration not to be missed, packed with a trove of Bessie’s all-time hits—songs like “I Ain’t Got Nobody,” “St. Louis Blues,” and “Tain’t Nobody’s Bizness If I Do.”
Vicuña & An Epilogue
An area & world premiere by Jon Robin Baitz
Directed by Robert Egan
From the Pulitzer Prize-finalist and Tony-nominated playwright of Other Desert Cities, comes this hit, Trump-inspired satire about an Iranian tailor and his apprentice who struggle to make a custom-suit out of vicuña wool for an unlikely customer—a real-estate tycoon preparing for the final presidential debate. Originally produced to acclaim during the 2016 election, this newly updated version is followed by a world premiere epilogue drawn from the playwright’s own headline-making experience in DC on the night of the inauguration at the hands of a Trump supporter. Baitz reimagines the incident as experienced by the tailor’s apprentice, Amir, who comes to be a witness to history, only to find himself a casualty of it.
The Real Americans
In rep with Draw the Circle
Written & performed by Dan Hoyle
Directed by Charlie Varon
Inspired by 100 days travelling in a van through small-town America, actor/journalist Dan Hoyle enacts a multi-character encounter with the people at ground zero of our country’s growing economic inequality and polarized politics. Hoyle’s quest to “break the liberal bubble” sends him on an unforgettable journey into the lives of the real Americans: union coal miners, rural drug dealers, anti-war Veterans, and closeted gay creation theory experts...among others. Part of the series "Transformational Journeys: Inspired Singular Explorations."
Draw the Circle
Written & performed by Mashuq Mushtaq Deen
Directed by Chay Yew
Gender transition can be a test for any household—but when Mashuq Mushtaq Deen comes out to his conservative Muslim family, traditional values and Western ideals collide in an hilarious and moving immigration journey unlike any other. Told entirely from the point of view of family and friends, yet performed by Deen himself, Draw the Circle is a moving story about survival, transition, and unconditional love. Part of the series "Transformational Journeys: Inspired Singular Explorations."
Queens Girl in Africa
World premiere by Caleen Sinnette Jennings
Directed by Paige Hernandez
Mosaic’s first commission brings the world premiere sequel to Caleen Sinnette Jennings’ “sweet-spirited solo show” which the New York Times described as one of the breakout hits of DC's first Women's Voices Theatre Festival in 2015. Now part of the 2018 Women’s Voices Theater Festival, Queens Girl in Africa picks back up with Jacqueline Marie Butler as she and her family sail to Nigeria following the assassination of her father’s close friend, Malcolm X. Performed by Helen Hayes Award-winner Erika Rose (In Darfur, An Octaroon, Unexplored Interior…), this is a touching coming-of-age story of a woman finding her place in Civil War-torn Nigeria. Part of Mosaic’s new Locally Grown initiative, and concluding the series "Transformational Journeys: Inspired Singular Explorations."
Paper Dolls
American premiere by Philip Himberg
Directed by Mark Brokaw
Based on the film by Tomer Heymann
In Association with Stanley Buchthal and Bob and Co, Ltd
This vibrant and thought-provoking musical illuminates the world of five Filipino guest workers in Tel Aviv who care for elderly Orthodox men by day—and headline a drag show by night! Based on the true story behind a 2006 Israeli documentary, Paper Dolls is a rich, unforgettable karaoke musical about the challenges that migrant workers face while yearning for citizenship. This American premiere plays as part of the 2018 Voices From a Changing Middle East Festival.
Hooded, Or Being Black for Dummies
By Tearrance Arvelle Chisholm
Directed by Serge Seiden
Back by popular demand, Tearrance Arvelle Chisholm’s “breathtakingly on-point new comedy” (Washington Post) returns for a special encore remount after its sold-out run became one of the first breakout DC hits of 2017. This irreverent examination of growing up Black in America features two unlikely allies—Marquis and Tru. Suspecting that Marquis has lost his “blackness,” Tru pens a manual entitled Being Black for Dummies which sends the two on a whirlwind journey through a world of cheerleaders, 2Pac, Nietzsche, Apollo, and Dionysus.
The Vagrant Trilogy
By Mona Mansour
Directed by Mark Wing-Davey
In dramaturgical collaboration with The Public Theater
The life of a displaced Palestinian family spanning four decades, and the trenchant pull of home. The Hour of Feeling introduces us to Adham who journeys to the UK on the eve of the Six Day with his new wife, Abir, to deliver a career-defining lecture. In The Vagrant, Adham, up for professorship, must respond to terrorist incidents in London and Lebanon. Part of the 2018 Voices From a Changing Middle East Festival.