Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (1984), a play by August Wilson. [ Cort Theatre, 275 perf.; NYDCC Award.] Ma Rainey (Theresa Merritt), an African‐American blues singer, is difficult at the best of times, and the 1920s are not the best of times, particularly for blacks in Chicago. When she arrives for a recording session, she has had a run‐in with the police after an automobile accident, the producer is demanding she use a new arrangement by the young trumpet player Levee (Charles S. Dutton), and the equipment either is not functioning or has been sabotaged. Bitter arguments ensue, tensions mount, and by the time Ma stomps out, the atmosphere is so charged that a slight misstep provokes Levee to knife one of his fellow musicians. While some critics saw it as a collection of superbly delineated character studies rather than a fully realized drama, it nonetheless made for compelling theatre, especially with the sterling cast under Lloyd Richards's direction. Dutton reprised his performance in a 2003 Broadway revival starring Whoopi Goldberg as Ma; the script was again commended but the uneven production was not and it failed to run.





