Houston Chronicle

Broadway embraces diversity, but have things really changed?

- By Mark Kennedy |

NEW YORK — This season, the theater community is celebratin­g how Broadway has finally become the Great un-White Way.

Black actors have taken center stage in “The Color Purple,” “The Gin Game,” “Eclipsed” and “Shuffle Along.” A Latin cast shines in “On Your Feet!” and Asian-Americans told a bitter story from America’s past in “Allegiance.” The season’s megahit “Hamilton,” of course, has multi-racial leads in its DNA.

At Sunday’s Tony Awards, 14 of the 40 nominees for acting in plays and musicals — 35 percent — are actors of color. And more non-whites are nominated on the other side of the stage, including choreograp­her Savion Glover, director George C. Wolfe and playwright Danai Gurira.

But this season’s diversity may be more a coincidenc­e of timing than Broadway stages consistent­ly providing an accurate reflection of America’s melting pot.

“The aligning of the stars has occurred this year where a lot of really spectacula­r work featuring multi-racial casts and a true photograph of what the world and America really looks like is performing on Broadway night after night after night,” said “The Color Purple” producer Scott Sanders. “Will we see this being the norm moving forward? I’m not so sure.”

Neither is Pun Bandhu, an Asian-American actor and a member of The Asian American Performers Action Coalition’s steering committee. The group is the only one that collects data on Broadway’s diversity — it started collecting it nine years ago — and it offers a sober outlook.

According to its latest report, non-white actors haven’t ever in the past nine years represente­d more than 26 percent of all Broadway roles. Though numbers for the current season aren’t ready yet, the numbers for minority roles last season actually dipped to 22 percent, down from the previous season’s 25 percent.

“What last year’s numbers prove is that while we may be having an extra diverse year this year ... that’s not usually the case,” said Bandhu. “It hasn’t changed that much actually on Broadway.”

The numbers suggest improvemen­ts one year, then a drop off the next. The 2013-14 season was rich with roles for African-Americans, including “A Raisin in the Sun” starring Denzel Washington, Audra McDonald channeling Billie Holiday in “Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar & Grill” and the dance show “After Midnight.”

There were also African-Americans in nontraditi­onal roles, like James Monroe Iglehart as the Genie in “Aladdin,” Nikki M. James and Kyle Scatliffe in “Les Miserables,” and Norm Lewis becoming the first black Phantom on Broadway in “The Phantom of the Opera.”

That season, black actors represente­d 21 percent of all roles. But the next season, the number fell to 9 percent.

This ebb and flow is nothing new to Stephen C. Byrd, a veteran Broadway producer behind this season’s “Eclipsed .” He recalls a diverse Broadway when he produced an all-black revival of “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof ” in 2008.

Back then, Morgan Freeman was starring in “The Country Girl,” Laurence Fishburne was in “Thurgood” and such shows as “Passing Strange,” “In the Heights” and the original “The Color Purple” were playing.

“That was a time of great diversity on Broadway,” said Byrd, who produces minority-driven works with Alia Jones-Harvey. “We’ve been at this for 10 years and it’s taken from that time to come to where we are today to see that same diversity on Broadway.”

This season, Byrd is watching as Broadway is cheered for its inclusiven­ess at a time when the film industry has come under heavy criticism for a lack of diversity in the Academy Awards. There’s even been the bragging (hash) Broadway So Diverse to rival (hash)Oscars So White.

But next season isn’t shaping up to be as diverse as this one.

While black actresses will lead “Cats “and “Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812 “and African-American actors will be represente­d in “Motown” and August Wilson’s “Jitney,” the lead actors are so far all white for the upcoming “The Cherry Orchard,” “Heisenberg,” “The Glass Menagerie,” “The Master Builder,” “The Present,” “The Bandstand,” “Hello, Dolly!” “The Little Foxes,” “Les Liaisons Dangereuse­s” and “Falsettos.”

Of the six leading parts in “Holiday Inn,” only one will be played by an actor of color. All six leading roles in a revival of “The Front Page” will be played by white actors.

“As a producer, you have to be aware that audiences are demanding diversity. They want to see themselves reflected on the stage,” said Bandhu. “I think it has been proven that diversity is good for Broadway.”

Box office data shows that overall Broadway grosses are flat, meaning producers will have to attract nontraditi­onal theatergoe­rs if they want to see profits to go back up.

On Broadway, no show has more captured the cultural mood like “Hamilton” — connecting musical theater to hip-hop and celebratin­g minority actors. Other important firsts were made in nontraditi­onal casting, including Sophie Okonedo in “The Crucible” and Forest Whitaker in “Hughie.”

Bandhu urges producers to push for nontraditi­onal casting — he congratula­tes “Waitress” for hiring non-whites for two-thirds of the lead actresses — and putting minority actors in lead roles.

“Hopefully things like ‘Hamilton’ start to change the curve a little bit. The penny starts to drop. When you start seeing more visible talent from actors of color and you start seeing them being populate on stages, then their absence becomes even more stark.”

 ?? Joan Marcus / Boneau/Bryan-Brown via Associated Press ?? Keala Settle, from Hawaii, Jessie Mueller and Kimiko Glenn perform in “Waitress,” at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre in New York. The play hired non-whites for two-thirds of the lead actresses.
Joan Marcus / Boneau/Bryan-Brown via Associated Press Keala Settle, from Hawaii, Jessie Mueller and Kimiko Glenn perform in “Waitress,” at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre in New York. The play hired non-whites for two-thirds of the lead actresses.

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