

The Bubbly Black Girl Sheds Her Chameleon Skin
Kirsten Childs
Awards & Recognition
Winner! Drama Desk Award for Outstanding New Playwright
Trapped in a life which can lead nowhere, Billie Jean has dropped out of school and secretly taken a job as a dancer in a local bar, her ultimate goal being to become a ballet dancer.
But her ambitions bring her into conflict with her envious sisters, both of whom have been locked into dreary marriages too early, and her mother, who has given up on her own children and now lavishes her care and affection on her "foster daughters" industrious girls to whom she has transferred her own frustrated hopes.
Billie Jean must fight a multiplicity of prejudices family, sex, color, class and economic to win an education and forge her own identity.
But with her grandmother's strength and trust to embolden her, Billie Jean breaks free, establishing at last a tenuous but hopeful relationship with her mother and taking the first sure steps toward a life which will, at least, be of her own making.
"A skillfully drawn domestic drama, moving in its simplicity… an inspirational play to truly exceptional quality.” – Variety“A forceful and important new voice.” – New York Post“Miss Franklin has a compelling sense of language, a nice way with humor, and a dramatic vitality that demands an emotional response."
— Cue Magazine
Black Girl is a American black history play written by J E. Franklin and published by Dramatists Play Service (1971).
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