The Adventures of A Black Girl in Search of God
By Djanet Sears and Leslie Sanders
()
About this ebook
From Governor General's Literary Award–winning playwright Djanet Sears comes a beautiful and deeply moving story set in present-day Negro Creek, a two-hundred-year-old black community in Western Ontario. Rainey Baldwin-Jackson, a country doctor, struggles to come to terms with the loss of her daughter, the disintegration of her marriage, and an eccentric elderly father on an astonishing crusade.
Djanet Sears
Djanet Sears is an award-winning playwright and director and has several acting award nominations to her credit for both stage and screen. She is the recipient of the Stratford Festival's 2004 Timothy Findley Award, as well as Canada's highest literary honour for dramatic writing: the 1998 Governor General's Literary Award. She is the playwright and director of the multiple Dora Award winning production of Harlem Duet (Scirocco Drama, 1997), which was workshopped at the Joseph Papp Public Theatre in NYC, where Djanet was the international artist-in-residence in 1996. Her other honours include the 1998 Floyd S. Chalmers Canadian Play Award, the Martin Luther King Jr. Achievement Award, the Harry Jerome Award for Excellence in the Cultural Industries, and a Phenomenal Woman of the Arts Award. Her most recent work for the stage, The Adventures of a Black Girl in Search of God (Playwrights Canada Press, 2003), was shortlisted for a 2004 Trillium Book Award and enjoyed a six-month run in the fall/winter of 2003/2004, as part of the Mirvish Productions season. Her other plays include Afrika Solo, Who Killed Katie Ross, and Double Trouble. Djanet is the driving force behind the AfriCanadian Playwrights' Festival, and a founding member of the Obsidian Theatre Company. She is also the editor of Testifyin': Contemporary African Canadian Drama, Vols. I & II, the first anthologies of plays by playwrights of African descent in Canada (Playwrights Canada Press, 2000 & 2003). She is currently an adjunct professor at University College, University of Toronto where she teaches playwriting.
Read more from Djanet Sears
Harlem Duet Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5'da Kink in my hair: Voices of Black Womyn Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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The Adventures of A Black Girl in Search of God - Djanet Sears
The Adventures of a Black Girl
in Search of God
We, Africans in America, come from a people tied to the Earth, people of the drums which echo the Earth’s heartbeat.... People tied to soil and wind and rain as to each other...
—Aned Kgositsile; Part Of Each Other, Part Of The Earth
He destroys both the blameless and the wicked.
—Job 9:22
If this Being is omnipotent, then every occurrence, including every human action, every human thought, and every human feeling and aspiration is also His work; how is it possible to think of holding men responsible for their deeds and thoughts before such an almighty Being? In giving out punishment and rewards He would to a certain extent be passing judgement on Himself. How can this be combined with the goodness and righteousness ascribed to Him?
—Albert Einstein; Out of My Later Years
ACT I
Prologue
From a deep darkness, a dissonant chorus of naked voices rises up out of the morass of earth and water. As the lights come up, Lorraine (RAINEY) Baldwin-Johnson stands alone. Her face is wet with sweat, tears and rain, masking her tarnished gold beauty. Her feet are bare. She stares at the heavens.
A Chorus of souls approaches the stage from all corners of the space. The CHORUS slowly sings the sound of heavy rain pounding on the dark and deserted country road. The Chorus forms the surrounding woods and lush farmland and almost devours Rainey and the two lanes of asphalt road. Flashes of lightning turn night to day and the thunder roars loudly.
Rainey begins to run down the empty roadway towards us. She is running as fast as she can down the centre line. She is holding a bundle in her arms.
RAINEY
Oh God! Please, please, please God! Oh Jesus. Please. Oh God. Oh God. Oh God.
Rainey’s bruised and bloody feet begin to tire. She stops to catch her breath.
Pastor MICHAEL, a tall, auburn-coloured man in his early forties, is dressed in a church robe and stands to one side of the stage as if at a pulpit. The remaining Chorus members sit in rows in front of him like a congregation.
MICHAEL
(reading from the Bible) He saved others; himself he cannot save. If he be the king of Israel, let him now come down from the cross, and we will believe him. He trusted in God; let him deliver him now…
The CHORUS (as congregation) signifies sadly.
Rainey places the bundle higher up, almost at her shoulders. The leg of a child involuntarily kicks free from the bundle, then relaxes. The sound of a siren can be heard in the distance.
RAINEY
(almost under her breath) Our Father, who art in heaven. Please. I beg you. Beg you. Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done…
Choral voices become sirens as headlights appear before her. Rainey and her bundle are soaked to the skin. Rainey catches a second wind and begins to run again. She clutches the bundle with one arm, using her free hand to wave frantically at the approaching headlights. The centre line remains constant under Rainey’s