

STEW
Zora Howard
Three men chew the fat under an old, wide tree.
In this exploration of intergenerational bonds, we peek into the interiority – the great loves and bitter blues – of Black men in America.
HANG TIME is a deeply moving and subversive work by Pulitzer Prize Finalist Zora Howard.
"In Hang Time, lynched men tell finely tuned tales... Zora Howard’s new play catches three men during a few moments of their breathless eternity."
— The New York Times
"A bruising statement about the systemized dehumanization of Black men... a stunning picture of the ‘strange fruit’ that Billie Holiday sang about, of Black bodies swinging from trees... The writing is bleak and colorful and gorgeous enough for poetry."
— Lighting & Sound America
"A startling and stunning tableau... an absolutely heart-wrenching and hauntingly beautiful experience."
— The Front Row Center
"In terms of its words, Hang Time, by Zora Howard, is a very subtle play. Its language is rich, and the themes that its characters usher forth chime suggestively, like harsh but precisely rung bells, never quite settling on a resolution. Its imagery, however, is awful and overt: even before the show starts, as the audience files in, three Black men are hanging in midair, their legs dangling, the motion of their bodies almost stilled."
— The New Yorker
"A powerfully evocative performance piece... Hang Time is filled with the magic of theatre."
— New York Theatre Wire
| Character |
|---|
| Slim Male, Black, 40s. The pontificatin’ type. Quick to tell you the way of the world. |
| Blood Male, Black, 20s. Just coming into himself. |
| Bird Male, Black, 60s. Has seen some things. Knows to keep his head down. |
Zora Howard on Hang Time
HANG TIME is a play written by Zora Howard and published by Samuel French .
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