Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Youth tackle violence in writing class conducted by Ted Lange from The Love Boat


Ted Lange, best known for his role as the bartender, Isaac Washington, in the TV
series "The Love Boat," was in Memphis as artist-in-residence for a two-week writing
class. Here he searches through a folder for Carolyn Matthews' writing assignment.
When it comes to gun violence, Memphis ranks pretty high compared to cities its size. On any given day, someone is left for dead or seriously wounded.
Conflict and violence led to the shooting death of a young man by his friend in an excerpt from “Ritual Murder.” The excerpt focused on the senseless killing and ensuing investigation.
 “When murder occurs for no special reason on a Saturday night, it’s ritual murder,” said Levi Frazier, narrating the scene when Joe Brown Jr. (Brandon Lewis) shoots and kills his best friend, James Roberts (Willie Perry).
Young actors from Blues City Cultural Center perform an
excerpt from "Ritual Murder," a play written by Tom Dent in
which one friend kills the other. Levi Frazier (right) was the
narrator. (Photos by Wiley Henry)
In the original one-act play, written by Tom Dent, Brown knifes Roberts. In the excerpt, the actor from Blues City Cultural Center (BCCC) brandished a handgun. The play was staged at the Memphis Office of Youth Services (MOYS) on April 29.
Levi Frazier and his wife, Deborah Frazier, co-founded the performing and visual arts organization 40 years ago. The couple, both actors, playwrights and performing artists, took part in the play.
Ted Lange (pronounced Lunge) observed the action from the audience with a small group of budding writers. Lange is best known for his role as the bartender, Isaac Washington, in the TV series “The Love Boat.”
He was BCCC’s artist-in-residence for “Peace in the House,” a program that uses the creative arts as a platform to engage youth in activities that promote peace and reduce violence.
“Ritual Murder” was included in “Peace in the House,” which was tapped for a National Endowment for the Arts Challenge Grant. Lange was then given the green light to teach a two-week writing class.
Nearly a dozen youth from MOYS got a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to work with the renowned actor and writer in late April prior to BCCC’s presentation of “Peace in the House.”
But Lange didn’t come to Memphis to teach acting. “I didn’t give them any acting classes,” he said. “I told them what I was doing and why I was doing it. And I told them that ‘I want to see where your imagination takes you.’”
Imaginations varied from one participant, or future thespian, to another after Lange gave them an assignment and made sure that they wrote something each day. The assignment yielded different results.
“I gave them exercises and I tried to teach them some of the tricks that I learned as a writer in the process,” he said. “I wanted to give them the benefit of what I learned.”
The class in turn used what they learned and scripted a storyline, or used poetry, to ascertain what happened in the young man’s life that prompted him to kill his friend in the excerpt from “Ritual Murder.”
“Before a young person can do anything, they have to have peace,” said Deborah Frazier, meaning peace from within.
Lange observed a couple of adults taking part in the writing class. They, too, sought his opinion and expertise. Some of them – both youth and adults – are aspiring writers. A few are professional.
One of them was Carolyn Matthews, a freelance writer and coordinator of BCCC’s “Sew Much Love,” an entrepreneurial program for homeless and marginalized women. She listened intently and picked up a few pointers.
“The focus was to learn playwriting,” Matthews said. “He would elicit from us prompt lines, devices and literary strategies to get us to think outside the box. He also talked about word choices and diction.”
She added: “The writing exercises were an invigorating experience.”
“You got to do exercises. Just like you work out your body, you have to work on your writing,” said Lange, more than just a stage and screen actor. He directs and writes plays as well. Twenty-five are currently in the hopper.
He said working with young people is a natural fit. Levi and Deborah Frazier thought so too when they brought Lange to Memphis. They first met the actor and writer in Poland in 2017.
“Levi was bringing over his one man show (about Ira Aldridge) and I was bringing over information on a musical (about Ira Aldridge),” Lange remembers. “What brought us together was the legacy of the first black Shakespearean actor in Europe.”
Ira Aldridge was the crème de la crème in Europe in the 1800s, a black Shakespearean actor so revered Poland honored him with a state funeral after he died in 1867.
He was the connection that brought Lange and the Fraziers together.
“Often times when you see an actor on TV, you think Hollywood actor. You don’t have time for young people,” said Levi Frazier.
Lange debunks that perception and looks forward to coming back to Memphis.

Thursday, May 16, 2019

High school graduate defies the odds and excels academically

On April 25, Ivy D'vynne Wicks spoke at First Assembly Christian School on the
Rho Kappa National Social Studies Honor Society. She is the president of the local
chapter. Also on that day, Wicks was inducted into the Mu Alpha Theta National
Mathematics Honor Society. (Photo by Dr. Sharli K. Adair)
More than $511,000 in scholarship offers from 11 colleges is quite an accomplishment for a high school graduate who was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) when she was two years old.
When Ivi D’vynne Wicks graduates from First Assembly Christian School on May 18, she will head to Oglethorpe University in Brookhaven, Ga., in August on a full academic scholarship to study pre-med and theater – or filmmaking, perhaps.  
But Wicks’ academic prowess may not have been possible if her mother, Dr. Sharli K. Adair, hadn’t stepped in and taken control after noticing that her school-age daughter at that time was becoming “extremely ADHD.”
Dr. Sharli Kay Adair gives Ivi D'vynne Wicks
a congratulatory hug and flowers after Wicks
was presented with the International Thespian
Award after her last production at First Assembly
Christian School. She played Mrs. Gloop in
the Willie Wonka play. (Courtesy photo)
The doctors wanted to prescribe medication to control Wicks’ impulsive behavior, but Adair wouldn’t entertain the thought of medicating her daughter or subjecting her to a stimulant.
 “I realized the medicine was a deterrent; it only slows you down. And Ivi was too young,” said Adair, who had other plans to try to bring her daughter’s behavior under subjection.
ADHD is a disorder with ongoing symptoms of inattention, impulsivity and hyperactivity. Stimulants are generally prescribed to reduce the symptoms and improve behavior.
Adair wasn’t buying any of it. So she turned to God, prayed daily, controlled Wicks’ environment, worked on her study habits, turned to family for support, and surrounded her daughter with role models.
Wicks wasn’t aware that ADHD had invaded her body. “I didn’t know that I suffered from it until I was 14 years old,” she said. “When I found out about it, I just said, ‘Wow!’”
To understand how Wicks could brush off ADHD so easily, you’d have to understand her mother’s tenacity, her grandmother’s fearlessness, and the village concept that they embraced to help raise young Wicks.
“When Ivi had a temper tantrum at two, my mom called it out,” Adair remembers. “She told me to open the door because Satan is leaving today. She had oil in her hands and anointed Ivy. Then she said, ‘Leave, Satan! You will not take this child.’”
The late Dorothy J. Marlow was a praying, God-fearing woman since Adair, a single, working mother, could remember. After the birth of Wicks 18 years ago, she moved her mother into her home. The arrangement was a godsend.
“I always looked up to my grandmother,” said Wicks, cherishing the matriarch’s wisdom and her elder status. “She was another mother figure in my life. She taught me to be strong and taught me how to pray.”
Her mother, she pointed out, worked all the time to provide a comfortable living. But that didn’t preclude Adair from tending to Wicks’ needs and developing a moral code that her daughter should live by.
“She represents Christ first,” said Adair, noting that no one should be afraid to raise a child in the spirit of holiness. “I tried to live a life that would make her make the right decision.”
On top of that, she added: “I made sure that I parented my child.”
With Adair and her mother working in tandem to stop ADHD from causing chaos in Wicks’ life, the path to a good education hasn’t gone unnoticed. In fact, Wicks has excelled in school in spite of the disorder.
 “In sixth-grade, they wanted to put her up in the eighth grade. But socially she wasn’t ready. Her behavior was not on an eighth grade level,” Adair surmised. She said her daughter would have missed the transition from elementary to middle school.
Wicks, however, hasn’t missed a step academically since Adair first enrolled her in grade school – not that she hasn’t struggled some along the way. In fact, Adair said Wicks has maintained a 4.5 GPA and above since ninth-grade.
ADHD isn’t as noticeable now since Wicks is able to channel the disorder in the right direction or use it to propel her aspirations. “When I get really excited, I get anxious,” she explains. “I have a million things on my mind. So it fuels my creativity.”
Wicks also sees ADHD as a blessing. It didn’t hamper her studies or cloud her thinking either.
“I think of things that I can do for the future,” she said, such as drawing, writing music, singing, performing on the stage and, believe it or not, developing business plans. She also is the recipient of several awards, honors and citations.
Wicks’ math teacher at FACS thinks the world of her. “Ivy is a top-notch student, a hard worker, and she’s diligent,” said Marcia Coleman, who has taught Wicks math since the eighth grade.
“She’s in the highest math level that we have in school,” she said. “She’s certainly a young lady with extreme high character and strong morals and integrity. I wish I could package her up and multiply her by 140.”