惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

A
About on SuperTechFans
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
T
Tenable Blog
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
小众软件
小众软件
Y
Y Combinator Blog
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
博客园 - 聂微东
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
量子位
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
C
Cisco Blogs
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
F
Fortinet All Blogs
S
Schneier on Security
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
F
Full Disclosure
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
GbyAI
GbyAI
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
L
LangChain Blog
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
Security Latest
Security Latest
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
D
Docker
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
S
Secure Thoughts
C
Check Point Blog

Forbes - Hollywood & Entertainment

D4vd Arrested, Held Without Bail Months After Teen's Body Found In Car ‘Normal’ Rotten Tomatoes Reviews: Bob Odenkirk’s Action Comedy Is Mostly Locked And Loaded TAEMIN Is Ready For The Next ‘First’ After COACHELLA Netflix Failed Warner Deal Strengthens Future Acquisitions Today’s Wordle #1763 Hints And Answer For Friday, April 17 Season 2 of the Netflix show starring Cailee Spaeny, Charles Melton, Oscar Isaac, and Carey Mulligan is available to stream. NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Friday, April 17 TikTok's Elvis Presley ‘Hound Dog’ Meme, Explained CBS Moves Matlock And Ghosts To 2027 Midseason Invincible Season 4, Episode 7 Review: Power Scaling & Plot Holes HYBE Is Making A K-Pop Movie Starring This ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Star That Tubi App For ChatGPT Doesn’t Work The Way You Think It Does Bob Odenkirk Explains Why His ‘Normal’ Character Is Part Saul Goodman BTS Ties Its Longest Reign On A Billboard Chart ‘FROM’ Season 5: The Good News And The Bad News ‘Invincible’ Episode 7 Ties An All-Time IMDB Review Score Record An Eagles Smash Flies To A New Chart Peak, Decades After Its Release Beef Season 2’s Rotten Tomatoes Score Shows Maybe Lighting Can’t Strike Twice Justin Bieber's Coachella Set Sent A 14-Year-Old Song Back To The Top Of The Charts Chris Stapleton Scores His First Hit On One Chart In Half A Decade Ella Langley Makes History Among Women In Country Music Bruno Mars’s Grammy-Nominated Rosé Collaboration Returns As A Smash Joe Jackson On His Return To Rock And Pop With ‘Hope And Fury’ Two Of Queen’s Most Celebrated Songs Return As Top 40 Bestsellers Inside Netflix’s ‘A Gorilla Story’: Retracing David Attenborough’s Steps In Rwanda Today ‘The Boys’ Season 5, Episode 3 Recap & Review: God Complex Joy Harmon, ‘Cool Hand Luke’ Car Wash Scene Actress, Dies At 87 Today’s Wordle #1762 Hints And Answer For Thursday, April 16 NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Thursday, April 16 ‘The Pitt’ Season 2 Finale Release Time: Here’s When Episode 15 Drops On HBO Max TikTok Skits Reveal ChatGPT, Gemini And Grok Are Confidently Wrong Jennie Makes Chart History With Another American Radio Smash BTS Scores Its First Multi-Week No. 1 On One Chart KATSEYE Announces First EP Without A Significant Member TV’s Best New Show Deserves Its Near-Perfect Rotten Tomatoes Score ‘The Boys’ Star Laz Alonso On Mother’s Milk ‘Finding Himself' In Season 5 ‘The White Lotus’ Season 4 Gets Official Synopsis As Filming Begins GoldenTV And Character Announce Honorees For Inaugural ‘Character Honors’ At Last, A New Show Makes It To Netflix’s All-Time Top 10 List Adria Arjona Cast In DCU, And The Wonder Woman Vs. Maxima Debate Continues Olivia Rodrigo’s First Two Albums Surge As She Announces A New Project Linkin Park’s Compilation Joins The Band’s Debut Album In A Chart Feat An Update From Zosia About The ‘Pluribus’ Season 2 Release Date Prince’s Oscar-Winning Album Rocks Back To No. 1 Nirvana’s Only Grammy-Winning Album Hits A Chart Landmark ENHYPEN World Tour ‘BLOOD SAGA’ Reveals Venue And Ticketing Details Today’s Wordle #1761 Hints And Answer For Wednesday, April 15 NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Wednesday, April 15 'The Boys' Season 5 Episode 3 Release Date & Time on Prime Video 'Thrash': Why Lisa From Netflix’s Shark Thriller Looks So Familiar Today’s Wordle #1759 Hints And Answer For Monday, April 13 NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Monday, April 13 Design Details In ‘The Drama’ Delve Deep Into Character Review: Blackbraid Delivers Exteme Metal Masterclass To Dublin, Ireland Rosé’s All-Time Sales Chart Record Has Been Beaten What Time Does ‘Euphoria’ Season 3 Come Out? How To Watch Tonight John Nolan, ‘Batman’ Films And ‘Person Of Interest’ Actor, Dies At 87 BTS Dominates The Biggest Songs Chart In America — Again Taylor Swift Turns Two Recent Singles Into Bestsellers Again Charlie Puth Hits New Career Highs — And Lows — With His Latest Album Inside Blake Shelton’s New American Dream Taemin Dazzles At Coachella Debut And Premieres 6 New Songs: Full Setlist Today’s Wordle #1758 Hints And Answer For Sunday, April 12 NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Sunday, April 12 Avengers’ Biggest Battle? Taking On ‘Dune: Part Three’ At Christmas Why Dewey Actor Was Recast For ‘Malcolm In The Middle’ Revival Series NYT Connections Hints Today: Sunday, April 12 Clues And Answers (#1036) Netflix’s Best New Show Has A Near-Perfect 95% Rotten Tomatoes Score Coachella 2026 Is Being Taken Over By Creator Streams ‘Maul: Shadow Lord’ Sets Even More Star Wars Rotten Tomatoes Records Harry Styles Flies With His Oldest Hit Thanks To A Box Office Smash New Names Surface As Potential Rogue And Wonder Woman In The MCU And DCU Chris Stapleton’s High-Profile Collaboration Becomes A Certified Hit Miley Cyrus Charts The Biggest New Sales Smash In America Pet Shop Boys’ Visual History Told In New Book Ozzy Osbourne’s Name Helps A Rock Band Chart A New Top 10 Hit Coachella 2026: All 95 Surprise Guests Who Appeared This Year Coachella Accidentally Plays New KATSEYE EP Announcement Before Debut Performance KATSEYE Performs ‘Golden’ At Coachella with HUNTR/X voices KATSEYE Feature ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Singers For 'Golden' At Coachella Bini Makes History For Filipino Music At Coachella 2026: Full Setlist Today’s Wordle #1757 Hints And Answer For Saturday, April 11 NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Saturday, April 11 ‘Hacks’ Season 5 Release Schedule Reveals Final Episodes For Series Dan Levy’s Netflix Crime Comedy ‘Big Mistakes’ Takes Huge, Hilarious Risks What Does ‘You The Birthday’ Mean? TikTok’s Viral Phrase, Explained BTS ARIRANG World Tour: What To Expect For New Fans And Old ‘You, Me & Tuscany’ Rotten Tomatoes Reviews Like Where Rom-Com Lands How To Watch Coachella 2026 At Home KATSEYE Releases 'Pinky Up' Without Manon ‘Euphoria’ Season 3’s Rotten Tomatoes Score Crashes, Has Lost Key Player Ella Langley’s ‘Dandelion’: Everything You Need To Know Karol G Didn’t Wait For Coachella To Make History — Her Google Campaign Just Did Can You See The Watcher In This ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Shot? Foo Fighters Hit No. 1 With A New Single, Right Before An Album Arrives Ella Langley Shoots To No. 1 With Her Highly-Anticipated New Album Netflix Original Movie ‘Thrash’ Is This Year’s Summer Shark Thriller You Just Watched The Backdoor Pilot For ‘The Pitt: Night Shift’ Charlie Puth’s New Album Marks His First Major Miss On The Charts Fleetwood Mac’s ‘Rumours’ Album Track Becomes A Decades-Old Bestseller
‘Angry, Raucous, And Shamelessly Gorgeous’ Play Directed By LaTanya Richardson Jackson Sparks Dialogue On Black Feminism And Renewal
Dominique Fluker · 2026-06-19 · via Forbes - Hollywood & Entertainment
19_angry_raucous_and_shamelessly_gorgeous_-_denise_burse-_deborah_joy_winans-_charlayne_woodard-_olivia_washington

L-R: Denise Burse, Deborah Joy Winans, Charlayne Woodard and Olivia Washington in Angry, Raucous, and Shamelessly Gorgeous at Geffen Playhouse. Directed by LaTanya Richardson Jackson.

Jeff Lorch

Lauded and award-winning playwright Pearl Cleage created sharp-witted Angry, Raucous, and Shamelessly Gorgeous in 2018 to explore an intergenerational conversation among Black women of all ages and to offer a feminist critique of how Black women were portrayed in August Wilson’s early plays, providing a soulful and comedic take on art, activism, and aging on your own terms.

Now, the play makes its way to Los Angeles at the Geffen Playhouse, with opening night on June 18th and running through July 12th. “I’m very interested in how we forge a conversation between younger generations and ours; how do we begin to talk about the work that we do. I wanted very much to talk about the fact that women in my generation, whom I can say without any fear of contradiction have done and continue to do such amazing work, really need to celebrate themselves,” she said to me during our Zoom interview. “We went through a lot to get all of these changes to happen, and we went through a lot to help our brothers, and understand that they had to fight against, sexism and racism, and and it really started there trying to figure out what, what would be a spark that could, that could have a young woman and an older woman who were engaged in the same kind of work to talk about, and how do we understand each other.”

Pearl Cleage (she/her), playwright, Angry, Raucous, and Shamelessly Gorgeous.

Quintin Jackson

Cleage likens her desire to hear more of Black women’s voices and perspectives to her experiences in the civil rights, Black arts, freedom struggle, anti-war, and women’s movements decades earlier, during which she took a critical look at misogyny and feminism. “We stayed as long as it was helpful to us, and then we left and started talking among ourselves, because then race ceases to be a factor. It's like in a group of men and women trying to talk about something serious; it's very different if you take the men out, and it's only the women talking.”

She continued, “I remember going to see for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf for the very first time, and I, I wept loudly throughout that, and I was trying to be, you know, quiet because I’m in a theater, I don't want to disturb people, but it was so absolutely true to what I knew it felt like to be a young black woman, it was like, oh my god, she put all of it on the stage. She's telling everything, and at first there's like, oh my god, oh my god, now they'll know all our secrets. And then by the time that play is over, you feel like, thank goodness, now they know. That's what we want: when we go to the theater, that realization that somebody's telling the truth.”

L-R: Denise Burse, Charlayne Woodard and Deborah Joy Winans in rehearsal for Angry, Raucous, and Shamelessly Gorgeous at Geffen Playhouse.

Isaak Berliner

That feeling Cleage references in watching for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf, was my experience with viewing her play. The play was a meditation on ownership: of one’s work, one’s story, and one’s right to begin again. At its core, the play sits in Black sisterhood, grief, and redemption, while insisting on the audacity it takes to reclaim the trajectory of your own life.

The performances by icons Denise Burse, Deborah Joy Winans, Charlayne Woodard, and Olivia Washington were intentional, sharp, and all-consuming—commanding attention in a way that made the entire room lean in and stay there.

What lingers most is how the play quietly confronts you: your purpose, your participation in community, and the ways patriarchal expectations still shape how we move through the world—and what it might look like to break free.

This work demands that you think critically about your life’s work—and how to expand both it and yourself. It invites an unapologetic reckoning. Angry, Raucous, and Shamelessly Gorgeous challenges the audience to reflect on the different stages of their lives and whether they will be able to transition gracefully into them when the time comes, or be resistant and stubborn. It also encourages the audience to question the art we’ve grown to love and consume.

The premise of the play centers on Anna Campbell (Woodard), a trailblazing actress decorated with accolades but in a financially precarious situation. Upon returning to her hometown, Atlanta, Georgia, with hopes of executing a career-defining comeback, she collides with a younger performer (Olivia Washington) who challenges her past, her politics, and her place in the movement.

Charlayne Woodard in Angry, Raucous, and Shamelessly Gorgeous at Geffen Playhouse. Directed by LaTanya Richardson Jackson.

Jeff Lorch

In the play, while you hear of male characters, there’s no physical representation of them, which Cleage says is intentional. “Part of that is because men have a lot of platforms and a lot of space, because they still control so much of how we move through the world. They have a lot of space to tell their stories, and sometimes, you know, writing a play, it’s like, no, I don't want to hear that voice anymore; I want to hear all the different voices that we have, just as women, and they're so interesting to me,” she said.

Additionally, Cleage shared that she sees a lot of herself in the character she writes. “I always see parts of myself in the characters in my place, because they all start in my brain, you know, they start in my own imagination, so they’re always representations of different things that I'm thinking about, or things that are driving me crazy, like aging,” she shared. “I also want us to continue to confront our own judgmental ideas about who is considered an artist. No matter what our initial judgment of Pete (Washington) might be, is such a likable, strong, brave, interesting, charismatic character that after a while, you don't care what she does to earn a living, you want her to be able to do it at the highest level that she can do it, which is what I want for all the young women who are are stepping onto these stages and into these spaces – to be their bad ass selves. There’s space big enough for them to show us what they got,” Cleage stated.

L-R: Olivia Washington, Denise Burse and Deborah Joy Winans in Angry, Raucous, and Shamelessly Gorgeous at Geffen Playhouse. Directed by LaTanya Richardson Jackson.

Jeff Lorch

The women-led and directed play, guided by seasoned actress LaTanya Richardson Jackson, takes an introspective look at Black women’s representation in theater and addresses male playwrights, something Cleage was tempted to do for a while. “We still get to say to them, our stories are as important as your stories. It seems like such an obvious thing to say, but that’s a big part of what is still the conversation between men and women: at times men don't understand that our stories are equally important, interesting, vibrant, sexy, contradictory, and all those things are there in the work and the stories of women, because we're fully formed human beings,” she said. “Even the idea of which was very fun for me to say, ‘Okay, I'm gonna say something about August Wilson,’ because I'm a Black theater girl. I understand that August begin to critique August Wilson without understanding the role that he played and the role that he continues to play in the lives of us who consider ourselves to be American theater artists and world theater artists, but that doesn't mean that we can't also bring a sisterly feminist womanhood critique not only to the plays but also to the beautiful, wonderful charismatic brothers who put those plays on.”

As far as the name of the play, which is striking, Cleage found inspiration through wordplay. “Five years ago, there was an exhibition in New York, and the headline was an exhibition of work by a black woman artist, visual artist, and the headline talking about the exhibition was Angry, Raucous, and Shamelessly Gorgeous, and I thought, ‘Wow, what a great phrase for something,” I loved it, because it’s angry, of course, you have to have rage, because there’s so much injustice that you want to fix, raucous, because it's always more effective and more fun to be loud and rowdy when you're protesting something, and shamelessly gorgeous, because we still want to be fabulous while we do it. We still want to be able to sweep into a room and, you know, have stars behind us,” she enthusiastically said.

Cleage and the play’s director, Jackson, had known each other for years and both attended Spelman College, so it was a no-brainer for them to collaborate on the play. “Our job is to tell the story. We got to tell the story. The playwright has given us the words, but our emotional resonance and our emotional investment tell the story,” Jackson told me. “That’s our job as actors. That's what we're called to do: to find what's inside that allows us to dig in and let it out. It's like when people are grappling with how a scene should go, who they're going to be in the scene.”

Director LaTanya Richardson Jackson in rehearsal for Angry, Raucous, and Shamelessly Gorgeous at Geffen Playhouse.

Jeff Lorch

Her advice to the younger generation of actors? Confidence. “In 2026 I encourage all of you, be about it, be shameless in that regard, we can, you know, everyone has lived without shame, you know, in a different context, denotatively, contextually, but right now we have to not - I want to use shameless in the context of not being, not being ashamed, not worrying about how you're showing up, as long as you're showing up in a positive, and you know, a positive way that is moving the culture forward. You need to show up and take it,” Jackson said.

Cleage hopes audiences of all ages take away from this play and experience the power of open communication and understanding. “It’s worth it to try to have risky conversations with people that you're curious about, but don't necessarily know. It's worth it across lines of race, across lines of age, across lines of different kinds of work you do, but those conversations are ultimately what bind us if, at the heart of those conversations, is a mutual determination to tell the truth. I hope people are intrigued by the fact that these women are coming to a common truth they can agree on, and that they also realize what we were talking about earlier: we can talk about the most serious topics in the world and still laugh together,” she stated.