by Daniel Johnson
October 12, 2025
Hurston wrote a brief story, titled “Spunk,” in 1925 and a decade later she turned it right into a play.
In 1925, Zora Neale Hurston wrote a brief story titled “Spunk,” and a decade later she turned it right into a play. Nevertheless, as a result of the play went unproduced, it was despatched to the U.S. Copyright Workplace, the place it languished for many years till it was despatched to the Library of Congress’s drama assortment, the place it sat till it was unearthed in 1997.
Now, the Yale Repertory Theatre in New Haven, CT, is bringing “Spunk” to the stage via Oct. 25. The manufacturing, which opened on Oct. 3, options new songs and preparations. Music supervision is by Nehemiah Luckett, with choreography by OBIE Award–winner nicHi douglas. The play is directed by Tamilla Woodard, chair of the appearing program on the David Geffen Faculty of Drama and a resident director at Yale Repertory Theatre.
In accordance with The New York Occasions, “Spunk” exists in the same vein as Hurston’s masterpiece, “Their Eyes Had been Watching God,” and options Black Southern wit in addition to a Black feminine protagonist who’s free to be herself regardless of the social restrictions and taboos of the day. Certainly, equally to Janie Crawford, this protagonist, Evalina, is engaged in a love affair that others take a look at with derision, and, like Crawford, she doesn’t concern herself with their opinions both.
Hurston, an anthropologist by each commerce and coaching, turned her eye towards comedy when she redeveloped the script for the stage, however she additionally used folks songs, sermons, and sacred practices to flesh out the story within the hole between her unique rendition of Spunk and its reincarnation as a play.
As Tamilla Woodard, the director of “Spunk” on the Yale Repository Theater, instructed the New York Occasions, “You’ll be able to really feel Zora making an attempt to get at what it means to have company and liberty in your life, and imply to not be certain by what folks inform you you’re imagined to do and the way you’re imagined to do it.”
Woodard was truly a second-year MFA scholar at Yale when Catherine Sheehy, a dramaturg and professor at Yale, heard about Hurston’s unpublished works in 2001 via an NPR story, and after requesting a duplicate, she learn it and commenced telling everybody in her orbit about it, sometimes by passing her copy to them.
In accordance with Sheehy, Hurston wrote 10 performs that have been rediscovered after the Library of Congress reviewed its recordsdata within the late ‘90s to see precisely what it had in its assortment. Earlier than Hurston grew to become a novelist, she was a dramatist; nonetheless, throughout her lifetime, just one play reached Broadway: 1931’s “Quick and Livid.”
Hurston was forward of her time, celebrating the frequent Black people of the South, and even amongst her theater contemporaries, her work stands aside as distinctive to her. In some methods, as Daphne Brooks, a scholar of music and Black Research at Yale College, instructed the outlet, we’re nonetheless making an attempt to catch as much as Hurston.
“Hurston’s deft means to weave collectively humor and melodrama, music and motion, and daring statements in regards to the vibrancy and complexities of Black life regardless of Jim Crow tyranny are completely distinctive and set her aside. Her work exists outdoors the usual methods by which critics have outlined ‘Black drama’ because the Harlem Renaissance. American theater critics and audiences largely weren’t prepared for her then, and I’m unsure if they’re now,” Brooks famous.
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