New York Daily News

Lorraine Hansberry statue to be unveiled in Times Sq.

- BY KARU F. DANIELS

The legacy of Lorraine Hansberry will live on in the heart of Broadway.

A statue of the late playwright and civil rights activist will be unveiled in Times Square on June 9. In 1959, Hansberry became the first Black female playwright produced on Broadway with her landmark play “A Raisin in the Sun.”

Created by sculptor Alison Saar, the statue, entitled “To Sit Awhile,” features a representa­tion of the author surrounded by five bronze chairs, each representi­ng a different aspect of her life and work, the New York City-based organizati­on said.

The public is invited to rest on the lifesize chairs to “sit” with Hansberry.

The June 9 unveiling will feature remarks from two-time Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Lynn Nottage and Hansberry’s older sister, Mamie Hansberry.

Nottage, Lisa Kron and Erika Dickerson-Despenza will take part in a panel, titled “The Playwright as Activist,” as part of The Museum of the City of New York’s Freedom Week programmin­g on June 13.

Following the sculpture’s Times Square debut , two other installati­ons are set for the city: The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (June 13—18) and Brooklyn

Bridge Park (June 23-29).

“To Sit Awhile” will then tour major U.S. cities, including Washington, D.C., Philadelph­ia, Atlanta, Detroit, Los Angeles and Chicago, which is where Hansberry was born in 1939.

The Windy City will be the home of a permanent installati­on in 2023.

The Lilly Awards Foundation launched the initiative to honor Hansberry’s legacy. There are plans to work with local theatres and social justice organizati­ons to showcase the work of contempora­ry writers of color.

A scholarshi­p is also being set up to support the next generation following in Hansberry’s footsteps.

Primarily intended to cover the living expenses of three female and/or non-binary dramatic writers of color entering graduate school, recipients will receive $25,000 for each year of their education to ensure “that they have protected time to write, work with collaborat­ors, and benefit from the guidance of profession­al mentors in their respective fields.”

“We know that graduate school is the primary gateway to a career as a dramatic writer,” Nottage said in a statement. “In my 20 years of teaching at the graduate level, I have had only four Black female students. If we want theater to tell the full story of humanity, we need to nurture the full breadth of talent.”

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