At OSF, Ashland, Regina Taylor's "Oo-Bla-Dee" is a complex story
of four black women in 1946, and their dreams of being be-bop stars to rise
above the restrictions placed on them by both their gender and the color of
their skin.
The play opens with Gin Del Sol and her sax against a bright blue square in
the background. A woman floats across the top sitting on a crescent moon. She
says her name is Mother Time, but you can call me Luna. She lays out the historical
landscape of the play, just after WWII when the men are beginning to come home.
Gin's man has left after promising to marry her when he gets out of the Army
Air Corps. She needs to breathe, and takes off north. The background square
becomes a moving railroad track as jazz rhythms and a whistle mark the motion
of the train.
It's backstage at a club in St. Louis when Gin shows up to play with Evelyn
Waters and the Divines. We meet the drummer Lulu. She's a wild woman with a
bottle of bourbon, a joint, and she has to run out to get her numbers before
the show. Ruby was married with a child. She had always wanted to play in a
symphony, but in 1946 spots weren't open to women, especially black women. Now
she plays upright bass, and when her music wanted more and more of her time,
her husband took the child and left. Evelyn was a song writer and piano player
who was trying to resurrect her career, and Shorty was their manager. He was
secretly in love with Evelyn who was in love with his brother Leroy, who had
gone to France to fight the war.
Gin tells us "You have to follow wherever the music leads." They recall
the Bette Davis film "Now Voyager" where she leaves her lover and
her life and can't turn back. "At least she's living by her own rules."
Gin's just looking for a little space in her life. People tell her to stay in
her place, so she took to the air; music lifts her up. When she meets Evelyn,
it's sparks and fire. Evelyn has always played with men and she told them what
to do. She has trouble with everyone. She and Shorty go at it constantly. He
holds everything together through all the cat fights. Shorty does what needs
to be done.
Part 2 opens with newsreel footage of WWII. The atomic bomb explodes. There
are pictures of concentration camp survivors, Hiroshima after the bomb, and
black soldiers. There's homecoming segregation, a lynching, and another picture
of the mushroom cloud. Shorty's driving the girls to Chicago for their big gig
and record audition. He drives "within the limits" and recounts being
stopped by whites in Georgia. When Evelyn laid low in the car, he got out and
danced and sang for them. He did what he needed to do to survive. They got stopped
by whites again, and Shorty gets out. Evelyn has a gun now, and they all arm
themselves. He finally returns, quiet, disheveled and they move on.
Gin is looking for that perfect note where she can step in between time. She
recalls Bessie Smith where you can walk into the music and to space and freedom.
A soldier comes into the club. He's looking for the girl he had promised to
marry before he left for the war. Both Lulu and Ruby want him, but we find out
he's actually looking for Gin. She's on the verge of her new life. She wants
that note and can't go back. Luna has been beaten. A gang of white men lynch
the black soldier.
We have flashbacks from Ruby and Lulu from 1966 to the past. Gin has disappeared,
Shorty and Evelyn married. We sweep to the climax of that night in 1946 in this
riveting drama of hopes and dreams, ecstasy, racism, and sexism that is Timothy
Bond's production of "Oo-Bla-Dee" in The Bowmer Theater at OSF Ashland.
It continues throught October 28.
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