A Soviet Film on Negro Life in America as Told by Langston Hughes and Others
Campus Arts Event
A Soviet Film on Negro Life in America as Told by Langston Hughes and Others
This play follow Langston Hughes on the trip he thought would change the world as he struggles to smooth tension between his group of Black intellectuals and their ignorant but determined allies, the Soviets.
FREE
Lenfest Center for the Arts - The Flexible Performance Space
April 22, 2023 | 8:00 pm
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About the New Plays Festival

Columbia University School of the Arts presents an expanded festival of new plays written by Columbia MFA Playwriting Students. The esteemed faculty who have nurtured these students, including Tony, Pulitzer, and Obie Award winners such as Leslie Ayvazian, David Henry Hwang, Lynn Nottage, Charles Mee, and Rogelio Martinez, invite you to experience these innovative new playwrights.

About the Playwright

Alle Mims is one email away from fleeing the country but in the meantime, they love reading and writing about Black, Red and Pink Revolutionaries. You can find them doom scrolling everywhere @allemims.

Location

Lenfest Center for the Arts
615 W 129th St
New York, NY

About The Performance

In 1932, a 31-year-old Langston Hughes traveled with a group of Harlem Renaissance artists from New York to Moscow in order to make a communist propaganda film. We follow Langston Hughes on the trip he thought would change the world as he struggles to smooth tension between his group of Black intellectuals and their ignorant but determined allies, the Soviets. As other character’s narratives take over, Hughes finds himself under the scrutiny of both his race and his Party in a clash of propaganda and authenticity in a new age of popular culture.

For more information about this performance, please visit the event website.

Image: Lenfest Center for the Arts