Bradley alumnus directs “A Raisin in the Sun”
TV news anchor Garry Moore ’80 MLS ’09 prepares student actors for the limelight.
02/25/2013 5:23 PM
By Crystal Vining ’13
The Department of Theatre Arts will showcase once again their students’ talents in the upcoming performance of “A Raisin in the Sun,” a drama about a struggling African-American family trying to make ends meet and the racial tension in Chicago of the late 1950s.
And directing the acclaimed drama is a Bradley alumnus who’s no stranger to the stage. Garry Moore ’80 MLS ’09, longtime news anchor at WEEK-TV, is preparing the student cast for their up-coming performances.
The story of “A Raisin in the Sun” begins with three generations of one family, the Youngers, living in a small, ramshackle apartment on Chicago’s South Side. After the death of the family’s patriarch leaves the Youngers with a $10,000 life insurance check, each character sees the large sum as a means to finally achieve their dreams” a down payment on a new house, tuition money for medical school or a business venture that will lift the family out of poverty.
Cecil Blutcher, a senior political science major, plays Walter, the son who dreams of becoming rich after investing his father’s insurance money in a liquor store. Walter’s sheer determination to get his wife, Ruth, played by junior theatre major Morgan Green, and his son Travis, played by Rashiek McBride, out of poverty is his American dream but comes with consequences.
Blutcher said he embraced his role and transformed it to make it his own.
“The words will take me where I want to be,” Blutcher explained. “I want the audience to experience the scene as if they were there. They should not know they are in a theatre.”
Moore was anxious to direct the play and has always had an interest in theatre. He graduated from Bradley with his degree in broadcast production and management and has found himself in front of an audience ever since. In addition to television, Moore has worked as a storyteller, often writing and performing songs, fables and plays based on the experience and cultural traditions of Africa-Americans.
Moore said his time at Bradley gave him the tools to succeed and he wanted to return the favor for the cast of “A Raisin in the Sun.” His experience directing the American classic, Moore said, is one he will never forget.
“It was a pleasure to be able to work with such talented students,” he noted. “The theatre department runs like a professional company and these students could not have been more prepared. It was truly a joy to work with them.”
Performances run from February 28 to March 10 in the Hartmann Center for the Performing Arts. Tickets are $14 for adults, $12 for Bradley faculty and staff as well as seniors and $7 for students. For tickets or more information call 677-2650, or book online at http://theatre.bradley.edu.