3 minute read
The Curtain Rises for Ensemble Theatre
from FEBRUARY 2023
Paradise Blue continues a tradition of Black storytelling excellence.
By SAM BYRD | Photo by AESTHETIC ALKHEMY
periences, and live performances for students both off-site and at the theater. Also, its Young Performers Program offers intensive summer training in all disciplines of the theater arts.
Paradise Blue, running now through February 26, is the latest opportunity for Houstonians to witness the Black storytelling experience through the dramatic arts. The production chronicles the story of trumpeter Blue, his Detroit-based jazz club, and songbird Pumpkin, the object of Blue’s affection. Just when Blue starts to ponder whether or not to sell the club, a mysterious woman shakes up the scene, and everyone’s fate is left in the balance.
“It’s sort of a roller coaster. There are various highs and lows. You go through an emotional exchange between the five actors on stage. Each actor has a narrative that propels them to engage with each other in this intense search for their own being,” says Andre Harrington, Paradise Blue ’s costume designer. “The way Dominique Morisseau wrote the play, each character is searching for some type of peace and comfort that will help sustain them during this time of potential dislocation from the neighborhood.”
Harrington brings his own costuming touches to the story, and he has just the right background to make everything pop. As a theater professor as well as a costume and makeup design specialist, he has worked with numerous professional theater companies including Alliance Theatre, Theater-
Works USA, Chicago’s Court Theatre, and the St. Louis Black Repertory Company. He holds a master’s degree from the University of Iowa and a bachelor’s from the University of Maryland at College Park, where he had his early costume-design training.
As tailor-made as he might seem for a theater career, he found his way to the theater almost by accident. He was working as a visual merchandiser in Boston when he took a family friend to enroll in college. While there, he thought it would be a good time to explore the idea of graduate school, and someone suggested costume history as an option. “I didn’t know what that meant at the time. My undergraduate degree was just in textiles,” he admits.
Yet, armed with the advice of an academic mentor and a solid portfolio, it would not take long for the admissions team to see his talent.
“My mentor looked at my portfolio and saw something that I didn’t see. I had a sense of color and [a talent for] maneuvering materials and fabrics to tell a story,” he recalls. “I took a couple classes as a provisional student—a history course, an acting class, a paint and design course—and then I applied to graduate school. That’s where my career in theater began.”
Harrington was soon immersed in the research work required to create historically accurate costumes for each production by looking at visual information to spark his thinking—be it a painting, a sculpture, architecture, or other people’s work. Of course, he had to keep the context of the production in mind.
“You have to read the script to get a sense of where these people are,” he explains. “How is their psychology working? What is their sociology? What is their anthropology? What are these characters about? Find a moment for your audience to connect with them. Find nuances that will keep the audience engaged, as well as keep the character [true to] their choices as a performer.”
This is Harrington’s first time to work with Ensemble Theatre, but he describes the vibe as an institution with deep roots—both in the Black community as well as in Houston’s lively performing-arts scene.
“When I walk into the theater for rehearsals, I feel a sense of welcome. I feel that the work is going to represent the community. And when I say the community, I mean the community at large—the African American continuum,” he adds. “The theater allows us to tell a story about what we did, where we did it, when we did it, and why we did it. Telling stories is ingrained in our cultural DNA as African descendants. From oral traditions to written verse, we have to continue that practice. Ensemble Theatre is thriving, and it is working diligently to continue that legacy.”
What: Dominique Morisseau’s Paradise Blue
When: Through Feb. 26
Where: Ensemble Theatre, 3535 Main St. Info: ensemblehouston.com
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