Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Dramatist exposed racism in institutio­ns

- Play.

CHARLES Fuller was the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of A Soldier’s Play.

Fuller’s work often explored and exposed how social institutio­ns can perpetuate racism.

His plays were filled with complex characters and an undercutti­ng of convention­s. He once told Newsday: “The best way to dispel stereotype­s and massive lies is telling something as close to the truth as you can.”

In one review of his work, The New York Times said “cliches of form, plot and character shatter like skeets at a shooting range”.

Fuller’s most famous work, A Soldier’s Play, used a military setting in its tale of the search for the murderer of a black sergeant on an army base in Louisiana during the Second World War.

It dissected entrenched racism as well as internal divisions in the black military community, wrapping it in a murder mystery.

The play won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1982 and two years later was made into the Oscar-nominated movie A Soldier’s Story, for which Fuller wrote the screenplay and earned an Oscar nomination.

“I’d just like to be considered a playwright fortunate enough to have written a hit, and who wants to keep on writing plays that break through the wall,” he told The New York Times in 1982.

His work attracted the finest black acting talent. The film version starred a young Denzel Washington, who had appeared in its first stage incarnatio­n in New York alongside Samuel L Jackson.

A 2005 revival off-Broadway starred Taye Diggs, Anthony Mackie and Steven Pasquale.

It made its Broadway debut in the pandemic-shortened season of 2020-21 with David Alan Grier and Blair Underwood and earned seven Tony nomination­s, including best play revival. Grier won the Tony for featured actor and the play won best revival.

Born in Philadelph­ia, Fuller attended Villanova University and then joined the Army in 1959, serving in Japan and South Korea. He later studied at La Salle University.

He was working as a housing inspector in Philadelph­ia when the McCarter Theatre in Princeton, New Jersey, mounted his drama The Perfect Party, which moved off Broadway in 1969.

Fuller wrote plays for the Negro Ensemble Company and his works were mounted at New Federal Theatre and Henry Street

Settlement.

His breakthrou­gh came with The Brownsvill­e Raid, which told the true story of black soldiers who were dishonoura­bly discharged in 1906 after they were wrongly accused of murder. Only decades later did the US army exonerate them.

Five years later, Fuller used similar themes and settings in A Soldier’s

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