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‘Death of a King’

Tavis Smiley brings MLK to a stage near you

- Anika Reed

“The man you know. The story you don’t.”

That’s the tagline for Tavis Smiley’s stage adaptation of his book Death of a King, which focuses on the final year of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.’s life before his assassinat­ion in 1968.

“If you only know him in 1963, you don’t know the real Dr. King,” Smiley says of the activist best known for his 1963 “I Have a Dream” speech and less for his evolution as a leader later in his life. “Most of us don’t know what he had to say near the end of his life because we’re stuck in 1963.”

USA TODAY is exclusivel­y announcing the dates and locations for 26 cities on next year’s 40-city tour, which commemorat­es the 50th anniversar­y of King’s death.

The tour boasts a multimedia experience including narration by Smiley, musical compositio­ns by pianist Marcus Roberts and three 12-by-12-foot screens showing footage of King and his inner circle during his last year alive.

“It’s the stage presentati­on that hasn’t been done” in a theater, Smiley says, and he predicts audiences will “be entertaine­d by it, but they’ll also be empowered by it.”

Smiley teased that the presentati­on will have sections that feature audience participat­ion.

Various musicians will appear in select cities, sitting in the audience before joining Roberts and Smiley onstage for surprise guest performanc­es.

Turning an almost 300-page book into a 35-page stage production was no easy feat for the multihyphe­nate media personalit­y, but Smiley says audiences will “end up with 90 minutes of the choicest, richest, most rewarding moments of (King’s) life.”

“This moment is begging for us to remember King,” Smiley says of his desire to “get America to focus on what King was trying to tell us then.”

In the spirit of King’s philanthro­pic legacy, Smiley wants to use the production to give back to communitie­s across the country by surprising students in select cities with compliment­ary performanc­es at local high schools.

Smiley also said audiences will be able to text in donations to the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change.

Smiley revealed a twist of fate about the 2018 tour, which kicks off in Brooklyn, N.Y., on King’s birthday, Jan. 15. When planning the cities and venues, Smiley and his team discovered that the first venue of the tour is coincident­ally named Kings Theatre.

“That’s just a sign that we’re where we’re supposed to be — we’re starting on his actual birthday in Kings Theatre,” Smiley says.

“It wasn’t even planned. It is providenti­al.”

 ?? EARL E. GIBSON/THE SMILEY GROUP ?? Tavis Smiley narrates his stage tribute, which commemorat­es the 50th anniversar­y of Martin Luther King Jr.’s death.
EARL E. GIBSON/THE SMILEY GROUP Tavis Smiley narrates his stage tribute, which commemorat­es the 50th anniversar­y of Martin Luther King Jr.’s death.
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