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Books By Ed
Bullins
How Do You Do?
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How Do You Do: A Nonsense Drama /
In the Wine Time /
New Plays from The Black Theatre /
Five Plays
The Electronic Nigger and Other Plays
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A Black Quartet: Four New Black Plays /
The Duplex: A Black Love Fable in Four Movements
Four Dynamite Plays
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The Theme Is Blackness: The Corner and Other Plays
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The Reluctant Rapist
The New Lafayette Theatre Presents the Complete Plays
and Aesthetic Comments by Six Black Playwrights
I Am Lucy Terry
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Famous American Plays of the 1970s
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Ed Bullins
(2 July 1935— )
Chronology—Productions & Publications
1935 – Born in Philadelphia on 2
July to bertha Marie queen and Edward Bullins. Raised by
his mother in North philadelphia’s black ghetto. Bullins
lived the street life. . . . hisearly years emerge from
several of his plays, as well as from his short stories,
collected in The Hungered One: early Writings (1971),
and from his novel The reluctant Rapist (19730. Stabbed
in a fight, his survival impressed with the notion he
had a task and a destiny.
1952 -- Quit school and joined the
Navy. During this period, he won the lightweight boxing
championship on one of the ships of the Mediterranean
fleet.
1955 -- Returned to Philadelphia
and enrolled in night school
1958 -- Left Philadelphia for Los
Angeles, leaving behind wife and several children.
1961 -- While attending classes
part time, started writing seriously, writing mainly
fiction, essays and poetry.
1963 -- Periodical Publication:
"The Polished Protest: Aesthetics and the Black Writer,"
Contact, 4 (July): 67-68.
964 -- Moved to San Francisco and
enrolled in the creative writing program of san
Francisco State College (now university) and Began
writing plays.
1965 -- Wrote
How Do You Do?, Dialect Determinism (or The Rally),
and Clara's Ole Man. The absurdist aspects (Kafka,
Ionesco, Edward Albee, Samuel Beckett, Jean Genet) of
How Do You Do? are rarely central to Bullins' other
plays. Produced at Firehouse Repertory Theatre San
Francisco 5 August.
1965 -- Dialect Determinism (or The
Rally) is a satire leveled against militant leader Boss
Brother in which Malcolm X's ghost makes an appearance
to challenge him. Bullins' central theme is the
rejection of political rhetoric that is a substitute for
action and conceals an unwillingness to effect personal
and social changes.
1965 -- Clara's Ole Man written in
a realistic modedepicts the street people and tenement
dwellers, the subjects of his later plays. The play
remains one of his finest. The Four principal characters
are Big Girl, loud, aggressive, and quick tongued;
Clara, attractive, insecure, and self-deprecating; Baby
Girl; an arrested inarticulate version of Clara; and
Jack, a young man, non-street person that calls on
Clara. He discovers the hard way that Clara's "ole man"
is Big Girl.
1965 -- Periodical Publication: "Ed
Bullins" in "The Task of the Negro Writer as Artist: A
Symposium," Negro Digest, 14 (April): 54-83.
1966 -- It has No Chance and A
Minor Scene. Produced at Black Arts West Repertory
Theatre/School, Spring
1966 -- The Game of Adam and Eve,
co-authored by Shirley Tarbell. Produced at Playwrights'
Theatre, Los Angeles, Spring
1966 -- The Theme is Blackness.
Produced at San Francisco College, San Francisco.
1966 -- Periodical Publication:
"Theatre of Reality," Negro Digest, 15 (April): 60-66.
1967 -- Left California for New
York. Joined up with Robert Macbeth, a young black
director, and a group of young actors and actresses to
form the New Lafayette Theatre. its first production was
Ron Milner's Who's Got His Own (13 October) at the
original headquarters of 132nd Street and Seventh
Avenue. Its second production was Athol Fugard's Blood
Knot in November.
1967 -- Book:
How Do You Do: A Nonsense Drama (Mill Valley, Cal.:
Illumination Press, 1967)
1967 -- Received an American Place
Theatre grant.
1967 -- Periodical Publication:
"The So-Called Western Avant-Garde Drama," Liberator, 7
(December): 16-17.
1968-1980 -- At least 25 of Bullins
plays were produced produced in New York: ten by New
Lafayette; others by La Mama Experimental Theatre Club,
the New Federal theatre of Henry Street Settlement
House, the Public Theatre, American Place Theatre, the
Workshop of the Players Art, and Lincoln Center.
1968 -- Received a Rockefeller
grant.
1968 -- The Electronic Nigger,
which has some absurdist aspects. The play's point is
the danger of rhetoric of any kind. Thes etting is a
writing class and the lead character is a pretentious
older student filled with jargon. Bullins lampoons the
pseudo-objective rhetoric of the social sciences and
conventional, unexamined rhetoric of the humanities.
Neither deal well with being black in America.
1968 -- The Lafayette Players third
production opened at the American Place Theatre, after a
fire drove them from their original headquarters. This
production, called The Electronic Nigger and Others (and
later Three Plays by Ed Bullins), consisted of three
plays by Bullins: The Electronic Nigger; A Son, Come
Home; Clara's Ole Man. A Son, Come Home centers on a
conversation between a fanatically religious mother and
her estranged son. Reconciliation is followed by retreat
into individual suffering an loneliness
1968 -- Three Plays by Ed Bullins
wins Vernon Rice drama Award.
1968 --
In the Wine Time, a full length by Bullins, produced
by the New Lafayette Theatre in its new headquarters on
137the Street; also premiered Bullin's Goin' A Buffalo,
a play that questions the meaning of love and loyalty
and examines the viability of dreams enmeshed in
illusions and traps of their own making. 21 February.
1968 -- Goin' A Buffalo. Produced
at American Place Theatre. 6 June.
1968 -- Periodical Publication:
Drama Review, Black Theatre Issue, edited by Ed Bullins,
12 (Summer)
1968 -- In the Wine Time. Produced
at the New Lafayette Theatre. 10 December.
1968 -- The Corner. Produced at
Theatre Company of Boston.
1968 -- Periodical Publication:
"Black Theatre Groups: A Directory," Drama Review, 12
(Summer): 172-175.
1968 -- Periodical Publication:
"Black Theatre Notes," Black Theatre, no. 1.
1968 -- Periodical Publication:
"Short Statements on Street Theatre," Drama Review, 12
(Summer): 93.
1968 -- Periodical Publication:
"What Lies Ahead for Black Americans," Negro Digest, 19
(November): 8
1969 - 1972 -- Periodical
Publication: Black Theatre, edited by Bullins, 6 issues.
1969 -- Wrote The Gentleman Caller,
which also has some absurdist aspects. In a Black
Quartet (includes Ben Caldwell's Prayer Meeting, Amiri
Baraka's Great Goodness of Life, Ron Milner's The
Warning--A Theme for Linda), Chelsea Theater Center, 25
April.
1969 -- New Lafayette Theatre
produces (in April) their most controversial play, We
Righteous Bombers , credited to Kingsley Bass, Jr., a
reworking of Camu's Les Justes, which questions the
revolutionary act of blacks killing blacks. The play
became the subject of a symposium at the theatre 11 May
1968 whose transcription was published in Black Theatre,
issue 4, a magazine edited by Bullins for the New
Lafayette. The problem posed was whether revolutionary
activity should be challenged by writers who had no
alternative solutions. Amiri Baraka and Larry Neal
defended the play; Askia Muhammad Toure and Ernie
Mkalimoto. Marvin X and others claimed Bullins wrote the
play. Bullins absent himself from the symposium.
1969 -- Book: You Gonna Let Me Take
You Out Tonight, Baby?, in Black Arts, edited by Ahmad
Alhamisi and Harun Wangala (Detroit: Black Arts
Publishing, 1969).
1969 -- Book:
New Plays from The Black Theatre, edited, with
contributions, by Bullins (New York: Bantam).
1969 -- Poetry: Journal of Black
Poetry (Spring), includes contributions by Bullins.
1969 -- Poetry: Negro Digest
(December), includes contributions by Bullins.
1969 -- Book:
Five Plays (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merill)
1970 -- Received a Rockefeller
grant.
1970 -- Book: The Gentleman Caller,
in
A Black Quartet: Four New Black Plays, introduction
by Clayton Riley (New York: New American Library).
1970 -- A Ritual to Raise the Dead
and Foretell the Future. Produced at New Lafayette
Theatre. February 1970.
1970 -- Wrote The Pig Pen, a
policeman dressed like a pig occasionally walks across
the stage. Produced at the American Place Theatre. 20
May 1970. The play is constructed around a party,
centers on a racially-mixed couple. The audience
witnesses various responses of characters they have
gotten to know of the announcement of Malcolm X's
assassination. Bullins neither condones nor condemns
interracial relationships, he rather points out the
sickness that permeates them.
1970 -- New Lafayette Theatre
produces Bullin's The Duplex (22 May). .
1970 -- The Helper. Produced at New
Dramatists Workshop (New York). 1 June
1970 -- It Bees Dat Way. Produced
at Ambiance Lunch-Hour Theatre Club (London). 21
September Questions a black audience to rethink its
pleasure of dramatic attacks on whites.
1970 -- Death List. Produced at
Theatre Black (New York). 3 October. A confrontation
between a revolutionary and his woman. She confronts is
planned assassination of 62 black leaders who signed an
supporting the State of Israel. She asks, "Are a poem of
death my Blackman? . . . Are you not the true enemy of
Black people? Are you not the white created demon that
we were all warned about?"
1970 -- Street Sounds. Produced at
La Mama Experimental Theatre Club. 14 October
1970 -- The Devil Catchers.
Produced at New Lafayette Theatre (New York). 27
November.
1970 -- Poetry: Black World
(September), includes contributions by Bullins.
1970 -- Book:
The Electronic Nigger and Other Plays (London: Faber
& Faber).
1971 -- In New England Winter.
Produced at New Federal Theatre. 26 January.
1971 -- New Lafayette Theatre
produces Bullin's The Fabulous Miss Marie. 9 March.
1971 -- Receives a Black Arts
Alliance Award for In New England Winter, and Obie for
The Fabulous Miss Marie, which is Bullins first place
in which he turns his attention to the black middle
class.
1971 -- Received a Guggenheim
fellowship.
1971 -- Poetry: Journal of Black
Poetry (Fall-Winter), includes contributions by Bullins.
1971 -- Book:
The Duplex: A Black Love Fable in Four Movements
(New York: Morrow)
1972 -- Received a Rockefeller
grant.
1972 -- Short Bullins (includes How
Do You Do?, A Minor Scene, Dialect Determinism, and It
Has No Choice). Produced at La Mama Experimental Club
(New York). 25 February.
1972 -- Next Time in City Stops.
Bronx Community College (New York). 8 May.
1972 -- You Gonna Let Me Take You
Out Tonight, Baby? Produced at Shakespeare Festival
Public Theatre ( New York). 17 May
1972 -- Lincoln Center produces
Bullins' The Duplex. Bullins was unhappy with the
directors' (Jules Irving's and Gilbert Moses') emphases
and accused them of turning his play into a "coon show."
1972 -- New Lafayette Theatre
produces Bullin's The Psychic Pretenders. 24 December.
1972 -- Book:
Four Dynamite Plays (New York: Morrow).
1973 -- Received a Creative
Artists' Public Service Program Award.
1973 -- House Party, a Soul
Happening. Music by Pat Patrick. Lyrics by Ed Bullins.
Produced by American Place Theatre (New York) 29
October.
1973 -- Playwright-in-Residence at
the American Place Theatre.
1973 -- Book:
The Theme Is Blackness: The Corner and Other Plays
(New York: Morrow).
1973 -- Book:
The Reluctant Rapist (New York: Harper & Row).
1974 -- Book:
The New Lafayette Theatre Presents the Complete Plays
and Aesthetic Comments by Six Black Playwrights,
edited with contributions by Bullins (Garden City:
Doubleday)
1975-1983 -- On staff at the New
York Shakespeare Writers' Unit.
1975 -- The Taking of Miss Janie.
Produced at Federal Theatre. 4 May. Won Bullins the New
York Drama Critic's Award. Relates the 13-year
relationship between a black man, Monty and the blond
Janie, whose rape forms the prologue and epilogue of the
play. The play suggests that the 60s were a failure, a
"stalking and a tease," for all Monty wanted was Miss
Janie.
1975 -- Periodical Publication:
"Malcolm: '71, or Publishing Blackness," Black Scholar,
6 (June 1975): 84-86.
1975 -- Periodical Publication:
"Next Time," Spirit, The Magazine of Black Culture, 1
(Spring).
1976 -- Received a Guggenheim
fellowship.
1976 -- Wrote two children's plays
that were produced:
I Am Lucy Terry and The Mystery of Phillis Wheatley.
1976 -- Received an Honorary Doctor
of Letters from Columbia College in Chicago.
1976 -- The Mystery of Phillis
Wheatley. Produced at New Federal Theatre. 4 February.
1976 -- I Am Lucy Terry. Produce at
American Place Theatre. 11 February.
1976 -- Home Boy, a Cycle play.
Music by Aaron Bel. Lyrics by Ed Bullins. Produced at
Perry Street Theatre (New York). 26 September.
1976 -- Jo Anne! Produced at
Theatre of the Riverside Church (New York). 7 October.
1977 -- Wrote books for two
musicals that were produced: Sepia Star and Storyville.
1977 -- Storyville. Music and
lyrics by Mildred Kayden. La Jolla, Mandeville Theatre
(University of California). May.
1977 - DADDY!, a Cycle play.
Produced at New Federal Theatre (New York). 9 June.
1977 -- Sepia Star. Music and
lyrics by Mildred Kayden. Produced at Stage (New
York), 20 August.
1978 -- Michael. Produced at New
heritage Repertory Theatre (New York). May.
1978 -- C'mon Back to Heavenly
Home. Amherst College Theatre (Amherst, Massachusetts).
1980 -- Leavings and How do You Do?
Produced at Syncopation (New York). 1980.
1980 -- Steve and Velma. Produced
at New African Company. August.
1981 -- Book: The Taking of Miss
Janie, in
Famous American Plays of the 1970s, edited by Ted
Hoffman (New York: Dell)
1983 -- Moves back to San Francisco
area, teaching and writing.
1989 -- Earned bachelor's degree in
liberal studies (English and playwriting) from Antioch
University/San Francisco.
1994 - Earned his M.F.A. in
playwriting from San Francisco State University.
1995 - Appointed professor of
theatre at Northeastern University.
2006 -- Currently Distinguished
Artist-in-Residence at Northeastern University in Boston
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Bullins is always a moralist; he
probes and questions clichés, accepted values,
stereotypes, and romantic illusions to test what is of
value in them. His basic concern is with black people,
their values, aspirations, dreams. Constant in his work
is a questioning of the meaning of the idea of a people,
a community, and its various definitions: the
ideological definitions generated by the black
nationalist movement of the 1960s and early 1970s; the
traditional definitions of family and kinship networks;
street definitions evolved from the partnerships and
loyalties of neighborhood and street life; the looser
definition suggested simply by the phrase with which he
often concludes his list of characters: "the people in
this play are Black."
A wanderer himself, Bullins sets
his plays all over the United States: Los Angeles, New
York, Philadelphia, Newport, and the Eastern Shore of
Maryland. However, geography in Bullin's plays is
superseded by a more important location, the black
nation which exists wherever black people are. they, and
Bullins, create an imaginative and subjective sense of
place through their music, language, and perceptions of
the world. they transform geographic place into their
own territory. Bullins frequently asserts he does not
write realistic plays, regardless of the style in which
they are written. For example, his characters frequently
drift freely between time frames, ore ven step out of
the play to address the audience; Bullins knows it is on
such imaginative realities that not only a culture but
also a political and social identity can be built.
Intrinsic in the imaginative world
of a Bullins play is black music: it is always either
coming from a radio or from an actual combo which sits
on the stage and even takes part in the action. Jazz,
blues (for which he often writes the lyrics), and gospel
music become the context for this characters'
activities, providing another dimension to their
meaning.
Language, too, provides more than
realistic detail; it defines the sensibility of his
people. In Bullins' plays, black street argot becomes
lyrical without losing any of its energy and edge.
Moreover, his plays are often punctuated by long
monologues through which characters define themselves
with a precision made possible by Bullins perfect ear.
In fact, two of his plays, Street Sounds (produced in
1970) and its spin-off House Party, a Soul happening
(produced in 1973) consist entirely of monologues
through which the mosaic of the black community emerges.
. . .
When Bullins edited Drama Review's
black theater issue, he divided the plays into two
groups: "Black Revolutionary Theatre," under which
heading he placed plays depicting racial conflict, often
literal racial warfare, and "Theatre of Black
Experience," in which group he placed his own Clara's
Ole Man. Bullins has written in both modes; however, his
plays differ radically from the work of Baraka, Ben
Caldwell, Marvin X, Sonia Sanchez, Herbert Stokes, and
Jimmie Garrett, whose work he chose for the "Black
revolutionary Theatre" section of the volume. Bullins
plays challenge the very metaphors these playwrights
employed to depict the battle raging between their
characters' consciousnesses, as well as in the streets.
. . . [Such is the case with Dialect Determinism; We
Righteous Bombers, included in New Plays from the Black
Theatre; It Bees Dat Way; and Death List.]. . . .
Formal critical response to
Bullins' work is as yet sparse; theater reviews—most of
them enthusiastic—still constitute almost all of the
commentary on his plays. He is most frequently praised
for his language, power of observation, humor, and
veracity. The structural techniques of Bullins' plays
most frequently disturb critics who feel his episodic
vignettes, central use of party, and the monologues in
particular leave the plays unfocused. But all agree
that, in Clive Barnes' words, he "writes like an angel."
A central figure for the black arts
movement of the 196os and 1970s, Bullins, however,
avoided making theoretical statements to which other
leading figures of the movement turned in seeking a
rationale for the new writing and daring theater that
the movement produced. Although hard on his characters
who are cultural nationalists, Bullins does not
criticize their beliefs, but rather their substituting
rhetoric for art, for the actual creation of new
cultural and social realities. Moreover, if one must
label Bullins, the most accurate one is that of cultural
nationalist, for the effect of his work is to give
substance to the theory, to make possible a definition
of cultural nationalism that has not yet been proposed.
A national culture exists when the
artists of a nation have created a world of the
imagination, have succeeded in giving the people of the
nation an extended artistic reference point, a mirror as
well as a picture of their possibilities, creative means
for extending their personal, social and political sense
of themselves. Black music has always performed this
service for black Americans; black writers and visual
artists have only recently begun to do so. both in the
sheer volume of his work as well as through what he
depicts and explores, Bullins consciously and carefully
seeks to create a counterpart to black music: a world
his audience can visit and revisit, in which they can
see themselves, from which they can draw sustenance,
through which they are challenged to create themselves
anew. Black music is merely the ground, the setting, and
the structure of Bullins' work: it provides its most
telling analogue.
—Leslie Sanders, York University,
Atkinson College. "Ed Bullins. "Dictionary of Literary
Biography. Afro-American Writers After 1955: Dramatists
and Prose Writers (Volume 38), 1985.
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Interviews
Marvin X, "Interview with Ed Bullins: Black
Theatre," Negro Digest, 18 (April 1969): 9-16.
Mel Gussow, "Bullins the Artist and
the Activist, Speaks," New York Times, 22 September
1971, p. 54.
Erika Munk, "Up from Politics—An
Interview with Ed Bullins," Performance, 2 (July/August
1972): 52-56.
Richard Wesley, "An Interview with
playwright Ed Bullins," Black Creation, 4 (Winter 1973):
8-10.
Charles M. Young, "Is Rape a Symbol
of Race Relations?" New York Times, 18 May 1975, II: 5.
Patricia O'Hare, "Bullins—a
Philadelphia Story," New York Times Daily News, 7 June
1975, p. 25.
Biography
Jervis Anderson,
"Profiles—Dramatist," New Yorker, 49 (16 June 1973);
40-79.
References
W.D.E. Andrews, "Theatre of Black
Reality: The Blues Drama of Ed Bullins," Southwest
Review, 65 (Spring 1980): pp. 178-190.
Samuel J. Bernstein, "The Taking of
Miss Janie," in his The Strands Entwined: A New
Direction in American Drama (Boston: Northwestern Press,
1980), pp. 61-86.
Don Evans, "The Theatre of
Confrontation: Ed Bullins, Up Against the Wall," Black
World, 23 (April 1974): 14-18.
Geneviève Fabre, Drumbeats, Masks
and Metaphor: Contemporary Afro-American Theatre,
translated by Melvin Dixon (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1983), pp. 168-189.
Samuel a. Hay, "What Shape Shapes
Shapelessness?: Structural Elements in Ed Bullins'
Plays." Black World, 23 (April 1974): 20-26.
Richard G. Scharine, "Ed Bullins
was Steve Benson (But Who Is He Now?)," Black American
Literature Forum, 13 (fall 1979): 103-109.
Geneva Smitherman, "Ed Bullins/Stage
One: Everybody Wants to Know Why I Sing the Blues,"
Black World, 23 (April 1974): 4-13.
Robert L. Tener, "Pandora's Box—A
Study of Ed Bullins Dramas," CLA Journal, 19 (June
1976): 533-544.
Source:
Dictionary of Literary Biography. Afro-American Writers
After 1955: Dramatists and Prose Writers (Volume 38),
1985.
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updated 22 October
2007 |