Free Southern Theater remembered with exhibit

John O'Neal and Denise Nicholas in a 1965 Free Southern Theater production of Ossie Davis' play "Purlie Victorious". (Photo by Tom Wakayama)
The exhibition features several press releases, typescripts, brochures and photographs. One document discusses the integrated troupe's need for protection while traveling together throughout the rural South during the Jim Crow era. Also on display are letters conveying audience members' reactions about the performances.
“We want to tell the story of the FST, its development and what it contributed to the Civil Rights Movement and beyond because it does have a legacy that continues today,” says Chris Harter, director of library and reference services at the Amistad Research Center.
According to Harter, there is a close connection between Tulane and the development of the theater group. When the founders of the theater made efforts to seek financial support from other venues in New York, Tulane theater professor Richard Schechner served as an adviser and assisted in the outreach process.
Harter plans to turn the display into an online exhibition so that it will be available throughout the year.
Harter says, “A digital exhibition allows individuals who can't come to New Orleans or come to the center the opportunity to still learn about the FST and the Black Arts Movement.”
Greg Thomson is a junior at Tulane University majoring in communication.