Woodie King Jr., an influential power in Black theater as founding father of the New Federal Theatre (NFT), who helped Black playwrights amplify their voices with a stage to inform their tales of cultural expression and social change, died at a hospital in New York on January 29. He was 88.
King’s explanation for loss of life was myocardial infarction, as confirmed by his long-time affiliate Voza Rivers.
King celebrated his eightieth birthday at New York Metropolis’s midtown Castillo Theatre, which turned his new house for the NFT. He retired from his position as producing director at NFT in 2021, however remained on the board.
Juney Smith of the Rainbow Media Group and Reed R. McCants of Black Historical past Mini Docs captured King’s journey from Detroit to Manhattan’s Decrease East Aspect and past of their documentary “King of Stage (The Woodie King Jr. Story).”
The trailblazing producer, director, writer, and actor based the NFT in 1970, and for greater than six many years, it turned his incubator, the place he championed new works by Black playwrights, artists of colour, and girls, premiering greater than 200 productions at Henry Road Settlement, together with the 1976 world premiere of Ntozake Shange’s “for coloured women who’ve thought of suicide/when the rainbow is enuf”; “Loss of life of a Prophet” starring Morgan Freeman; “Checkmates” by Ron Milner; and “The Taking of Ms. Janie.” He additionally produced such Broadway exhibits as “For Coloured Women …”; “What the Wine Sellers Purchase”; and “Checkmates,” which he additionally directed.
King’s landmark exhibits launched stars like Denzel Washington, Viola Davis, Glynn Turman, Phylicia Rashad, and Samuel L. Jackson, and gave voice to pressing tales, incomes him the Nationwide Black Theatre Pageant Residing Legend Award, an Obie, AUDELCO lifetime honors, Obie Award for Sustained Achievement, the Actors’ Fairness Affiliation’s Paul Robeson Award and its Rosetta LeNoire Award, and a Tony Honors for Excellence within the Theater in 2020.
King was the architect of the Nationwide Black Touring Firm within the late Nineteen Sixties. The purpose was to coordinate nationwide Black theater excursions throughout America. “That was shortly lived; the unions in these theaters have been taking all the cash and we weren’t allowed to herald our personal skilled individuals,” King instructed this author in an AmNews 2017 interview. “We then began touring the school and college circuit that proved profitable till 2010.”
His co-founding of the Nationwide Black Theater Pageant in 1979 with Larry Leon Hamlin has blossomed into an annual Black theater cultural occasion in Winston-Salem, N.C., that includes greater than 40 productions with greater than 55,000 individuals taking part.
Woodie King Jr. was born on July 27, 1937, in Baldwin Springs, Alabama. On the early age of 5, he and his mother and father moved to Detroit, Michigan. Like many younger males, after graduating from highschool, in 1956, King took a job on the Ford Motor firm on the meeting line, the place he toiled for 3 years earlier than taking a place as a draftsman with the town of Detroit.
Black performs didn’t exist in Detroit throughout King’s period, so he made his personal. “That was once I turned a producer, nonetheless not understanding the total idea, nevertheless it was on the job coaching,” stated King to the AmNews. “Again then, it solely price us about $100 to lease a bar and get the actors.”
In keeping with Cliff Frazier, Emmy Award winner and longtime Detroit buddy, “In Detroit there was no Black theatre. He created his personal Black Theatre. All of us contributed financially, and took part in performing, and out of it emerged a fantastic playwright, Ron Milner. Woodie and I someday later starred within the nationwide tour of ‘Research in Shade’ written by the Episcopal priest Malcolm Boyd.”
King, armed together with his guerilla producer/director’s diploma from the streets, left Detroit for New York in 1964, on the pinnacle of the Black Energy and Black Arts Actions. He turned buddies with Amiri Baraka, who had created the Black Arts Repertoire Theater Faculty (BARTS) in 1964 that performed a pivotal position in Black arts.
“Amiri set a brand new customary,” stated King. “We turned buddies and I finally optioned a few of his performs, just like the Black Quartet. He had a superb group of brothers from Newark that we each labored with once we have been doing performs. It was a complete radical motion.”
That very same 12 months, he was employed because the cultural arts director at Mobilization for Youth, an anti-poverty program in Manhattan. He held the place for 5 years earlier than establishing the New Federal Theatre. In these days, a school diploma wasn’t essential to run a theater, produce, or direct, however King ultimately earned his M.F.A. at Brooklyn Faculty in 1999. In 2008, he obtained an honorary doctorate of humane letters from Lehman Faculty.
King’s New Federal Theatre impressed Voza Rivers whereas he was underneath the tutelage of Roger Furman at Harlem’s Roger Furman Repertory Theatre in 1964. Two of America’s main Black theater firms got here collectively in 1983 when Rivers and King first collaborated on Laurence Holder’s drama “When the Chickens Come House to Roost.” Their relationship and partnership endured till King’s transition. “Our partnership was not outlined by contracts, however by deep respect and shared goal,” stated Rivers. “We’ve cheered one another’s triumphs, shared within the battle for sources, and celebrated the celebrities we’ve helped uncover collectively.”
In keeping with King, “Black theatre is about serving to and bringing individuals alongside to hold on the custom.”
King is survived by his spouse, Elizabeth Van Dyke, and his three kids, Geoffrey King, Michael King, and Michelle King-Huger, whom he shared with ex-wife Willie Mae Washington, in addition to 5 grandchildren.





















