Photo by Steven
This evening in Tompkins Square Park ... where another strand of lights on the tree seemed to have gone out (since Dec. 26) ...
Visit on Jan. 18, March 7, and May 9 for a series of open-mics with a photographic twist and share your poetic take inspired by images and ICP exhibitions.The first Nuyorican Poets Café x ICP: 1,000 Words Open Mic Series installment will take place on Jan. 18 in ICP's cafe while the galleries are closed for installation. This event is free to attend, with registration in advance strongly encouraged (link here).How It Works• 6 p.m. — check in. The open mic list is open for all attendees, sign up onsite, first come, first served. Each performer is encouraged to provide one photograph to perform in front of — please have your image ready to share via email upon arrival.• 6:30 p.m. — performances begin. Each performer is allowed 3 minutes.• 8 p.m. — end of performances.
Burrows began her Broadway career in the 1950s, starring alongside Ossie Davis in "The Wisteria Trees." She continued to perform on Broadway for several years, appearing in such shows as "The Green Pastures," "The Skin of Our Teeth," and "The Blacks." But Burrows became frustrated with the narrow range of roles available to Black women, and she left Broadway to pursue a solo career in one-woman shows.Burrows' one-woman Off-Broadway show, "Walk Together Children," was critically acclaimed and continued as an international tour after its initial run. She went on to perform other one-woman shows, including "Sister! Sister!" "Dark Fire" and “The Great White Way: The Story of Rose McClendon."
In 2020, she was honored with an Obie Award for Lifetime Achievement. Burrows was also an activist who represented the Women's International Democratic Federation at the United Nations.
... including this piece in The New Yorker titled The Many Lives of Vinie Burrows.Vinie Burrows, an actress who made her mark on Broadway in the 1950s but who grew frustrated by how few choice roles were available for Black women and turned her focus to one-woman shows exploring the legacies of racism and sexism, has died at 99. https://t.co/qakbhiKE74
— The New York Times (@nytimes) January 5, 2024