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Sunday, October 28, 2018

What "For Colored Girls" meant to us

In the midst of a wrenching week, when there has been so much to mourn, we also feel the loss of the poet, novelist, and pioneering voice who wrote those words about the power of language. Ntozake Shange died Saturday in Maryland at the age of 70, according to the Star Tribune. News of her death was also provided by her family on Twitter.
Shange presented her groundbreaking choreopoem, "For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow Is Enuf," in 1975; it became an off-Broadway play in 1976 and Tyler Perry wrote, produced and directed a film adaptation in 2010. Shange coined "choreopoem" to describe her work in "For Colored Girls," a dramatic expression blending poetry, dance, music and song.
Perhaps her most famous lines were these:
i found god in myself
and i loved her
i loved her fiercely
To say that her words were revolutionary is insufficient. To say that "For Colored Girls," with its searing portrayals of life, death, rape, abortion and struggle, changed people's lives is undeniably true. Whether they encountered Shange's words on stage, on screen, in the classroom or by other means, generations of women of color -- and others who felt marginalized, traumatized, or held locked in place by an unforgiving world -- found themselves in Shange's choreopoem, including these lines taken from the poem "dark phrases," told in multiple voices:
sing a black girl's song
bring her out
to know herself
to know you
but sing her rhythms
carin/struggle/hard times
sing her song of life
she's been dead so long
closed in silence so long
she doesn't know the sound
of her own voice
her infinite beauty
she's half-notes scattered
without rhythm/no tune
sing her sighs
sing the song of her possibilities
sing a righteous gospel
let her be born
let her be born
& handled warmly.
lady in brown
i'm outside chicago
lady in yellow
i'm outside detroit
lady in purple
i'm outside houston
lady in red
i'm outside baltimore
lady in green
i'm outside san francisco
lady in blue
i'm outside manhattan
lady in orange
i'm outside st. louis
lady in brown
& this is for colored girls who have considered suicide
but moved to the ends of their own rainbows.
Among those who remembered Shange on Twitter Saturday are women and men whose own voices and work have changed the lives of others.

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