For Penumbra Theatre, 2012 was a near-death year.
After a financial crisis that led to layoffs, cutbacks and canceled productions last year, the St. Paul playhouse has roared back to life with a production of "Spunk," George C. Wolfe's music-infused play that is, appropriately, about stylish survival in the face of hardships.
The just-opened production stars Twin Cities actors and singers Austene Van, Dennis Spears, Jevetta Steele and T. Mychael Rambo. All four performed in benefits last December to help Penumbra raise $340,000 to get out of a fiscal hole that threatened its existence. (The theater pulled in $359,000 from more than 1,400 donors.) Joining these veterans are newcomers Mikell Sapp and Keith Jamal Downing.
"This is a show about our legacy and our future," said Rambo, who has worked many times with Penumbra founder Lou Bellamy. "To let Penumbra go away would've been like letting a family member die. You do all you can to make sure that doesn't happen."
Wolfe crafted "Spunk," which premiered off-Broadway in 1990 at New York's Public Theater, from three stories by renowned Harlem Renaissance writer, folklorist and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston. The tales — two are fables about troubled marriages, one revolves around hip tricksters in a hustling competition — are anchored in folk culture and vernacular language.
"Hurston wrote about what she called 'the Negro farthest down' — ordinary, self-educated, rural black folks," said Hurston scholar Valerie Boyd, author of "Wrapped in Rainbows: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston." "Hurston saw the joy and the … beauty in these mundane, unremarkable lives and decided that these people's lives and longings were worthy of literature, of chronicle, of celebration."
The three stories in "Spunk" are set early in the 20th century during the Great Migration of African-Americans from the rural south to the urban north. The new arrivals, some of whose emblematic journeys are documented in Isabel Wilkerson's "The Warmth of Other Suns," often found themselves caught between their roots and the grit and glitter of urban life.
Although "Spunk" is a work of levity and lightness, it also captures the new arrivals' struggles for prosperity amid poverty and abuse. Issues such as domestic violence and forgiveness are prominent, always anchored in the folklore that was essential to preserving African-American culture.