In the past two years, theaters such as the Guthrie and the Ordway have been targeted by critics for not including more women and people of color as playwrights, directors and performers.
In a reversal of fortune, a bounty of diverse shows appeared on Twin Cities stages this spring, nearly all of which have received positive reviews.
"This is definitely a moment to celebrate," said Robin Hickman, who consults with the Ordway Center. "The question is, is this an exception or is this a sign of things to come?"
The Guthrie, whose 50th-anniversary season evoked rancor for not being inclusive, has strong productions on all three of its stages, all directed by African-Americans and featuring top-notch talent. "Othello," on the big thrust stage, is directed by Tony nominee and Obie-winner Marion McClinton and stars Peter Macon in the title role (opposite theater heavyweight Stephen Yoakam). The cast includes Sun Mee Chomet, Kurt Kwan and Regina Marie Williams.
Penumbra Theatre's Lou Bellamy, another Obie winner, staged "The Mountaintop," Katori Hall's imaginative play about the last night of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s life. That production, on the Guthrie's proscenium stage, stars Erika LaVonn as a hotel maid and James T. Alfred as King.
And at the Guthrie's Dowling Studio, playwright Carlyle Brown wrote, directed and produced "Abe Lincoln and Uncle Tom in the White House." This fanciful chamber piece yokes the fictional character from Harriet Beecher Stowe's classic novel with the 16th president as the latter considers signing the Emancipation Proclamation. James A. Williams and Steve Hendrickson star in Brown's one-act.
The Guthrie has had diverse shows over the years, but usually one at a time.
"When I come to the Guthrie, the ushers usually know exactly what theater to send me to," one avid black theatergoer quipped. "Now they're pleasantly confused about where I should go."