In yet another feather in the cap of the Baltimore theatre scene, Everyman Theatre is presenting their entry into the Baltimore August Wilson Celebration of the American Century Cycle.
Commemorating the artistry and brilliance of August Wilson, one of the 20th century’s preeminent playwrights, Baltimore theatres are partnering to present all ten plays that make up the August Wilson Century Cycle over a three year period. Beginning with Gem of the Ocean which is set in the 1900s, (launched at Arena Players in April of 2024), and finishing with Radio Golf set in the 1990s, these plays portray gripping and evolvingly complex depictions of Black American life in consecutive decades.
Collaborating to present each of the shows in historical order is no small feat on the part of the Baltimore theater community; and it marks a rare and exciting opportunity for theatre-goers. Other participating stages include Chesapeake Shakespeare Company, ArtsCentric, Fells Point Corner Theatre, Spotlighters Theater, Theatre Morgan at Morgan State University, Fells Pointe Corner Theater, Baltimore Center Stage, and Noah Silas Studios/Theater Project.
The Piano Lesson lands at Everyman Theatre as the fourth play in the chronology. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1987, as well as the 1990 New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award, this play takes place in the 1930s. The plot, like most of the plays in The Cycle, focuses on one household’s relationships as well as how they navigate the times they live in.
But there are always larger themes with Wilson’s writings. Presented with humor, pathos, bombast and melancholia, his characters lay bare their desires and disappointments, hopes and expectations. Topics like the importance of a family’s legacies and the importance of sentimental values come face to face, with one sibling’s need to let go of the past in order to realize his future, while the other sees the physical presence of the family’s history—the piano inherited from the previous generation—as more important to hold on to, rather than having it be sold off for the money it can bring.