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In "Bought and Sold
in
Williamsburg,"Alan
meets actress
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"Lydia,"
as portrayed by Harriot Lomax, welcomes Alan to her
kitchen.
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Harriott
Lomax who
portrays house slave Lydia Broadnax, cook for the Wythe household.
Lomax bases her portrayal of Lydia on documentary and archeological
evidence. Though the real Lydia would never have had such
an exchange with a white man, her conversation with Alan provides
a glimpse of what life as a slave might have been like. Click
here to watch portions of Alan's conversation with Lydia
ALAN
ALDA Hello?
LYDIA
Oh, good day to you sir. Now, did Mistress Wythe give you
permission to come out here to this kitchen and disturb me
while I was trying to get her dinner ready?
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I know how to cook. I don't think Mistress Elizabeth
can boil water.
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ALAN
ALDA No, she didn't. I just wandered in. I wonder if I could
ask you a few questions?
LYDIA You have curiosities for me, sir?
ALAN
ALDA I do, yes. How long have you been working here?
LYDIA
Well, ever since Master George and Mistress Elizabeth was
first married, and that was back in '55. Master George brought
me here from his plantation out yonder there in Elizabeth
City County, Chesterville 'tis called.
ALAN
ALDA That would be 1755?
LYDIA
Why, yes sir.
ALAN
ALDA And you work in the kitchen? You cook?
LYDIA
I am the cook. Oh pardon my manners. Sir, my name be Lydia.
ALAN
ALDA Lydia? Thank you. I'm Alan.
LYDIA
Mr. Alan.
ALAN
ALDA Okay. You're making a fish there?
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Alan
and Lydia with the fish prepared during their
conversation.
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LYDIA This is called a sheepshead. Get it from market. Master
George ain't got no streams running through this property
so we have to depend on folks who live out to the countryside.
I do believe it comes from the James River. I need to put
some more coals under there, I'm quite certain.
ALAN
ALDA Do you make that according to a recipe that's been in
the family for a while?
LYDIA
Well now sir, A good cook knows how to season things so that
they taste right now. You can't rightly eat a raw fish. But
you know about how much salt and pepper and other spices and
things you needs to put on there. Depending on the size, I
bet sir.
ALAN
ALDA I see. What else do you put on there besides salt and
pepper?
LYDIA
Well sir, I don't give away my secrets. But there be, as I
said, some salt, and some pepper, and I put some rosemary
in it. And, of course, I was gonna put in a little bit of
spirits.
ALAN
ALDA What would that be, like, rum?
LYDIA
Oh no, sir, I used a bit of Rhennish for that. 'Tis wine,
sir.
ALAN
ALDA I see, I see. How long do you cook it like that?
LYDIA
Well, 'til it's done, sir.
ALAN
ALDA That would be a good thing. How do you know when it's
done?
LYDIA
By looking at it sir. You see, I've begun to learn how to
cook from my momma. You see, my momma was the cook for Master
George's momma. And she was the one who teach me how to cook.
And of course, when I come here, I already knew how to cook,
because Master George-- he want me to come here and cook for
Mistress Elizabeth. See, I've known Master George all my life.
ALAN
ALDA Right. You were born on this plantation?
LYDIA
I was born in Chesterville, sir. Not too far from the city
of Hampton.
ALAN
ALDA Ah ha. And we're in Williamsburg now?
LYDIA
This'll be the capital city of the largest colony in all of
British North America.
ALAN
ALDA Ah-ha. If I may ask you, how did you get a position in
the kitchen?
LYDIA
Well, like I said, momma, she teach me how to cook, 'cause
she was the cook for Mistress Margaret, that'll be Master
George's momma. And, well, I was about the kitchen with her.
And I reckon she started having me assist her in the kitchen
when I was, well, oh, I reckon when I was about three when
I started. Of course Mistress Margaret, that'd be Master George's
momma, she teach me how to read, write, and cipher right along
side Master George and young Master Thomas, that'd be his
eldest brother, God rest his soul. And his sister, Mistress
Anne.
ALAN
ALDA So, do you currently read now? Do you read books and
things?
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Lydia
won't divulge her recipe for the Master's fish
dinner.
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LYDIA
Well sir, I ain't got much time for that, you see. Master
George, being as important as he is here to the colony and
to Williamsburg, well, they always have folks coming in, so
I'm always quite busy here to the kitchen. And by the time
I get done with the work at night, I'm just too tired to be
sitting and reading. I'm certain he would appreciate it if
I would spend more time reading the books. But I ain't got
time for that.
ALAN
ALDA How long do you work in the evening?
LYDIA
In the evening sir, well, way after the sun goes down. You
see, I gets up in the morning before the sun, I then goes
into the house and find out from Mistress Elizabeth what dishes
she wishes I prepare for the dinner for the table today. And
we have all sorts of things, like the beef and the ham and
such. And I've got to have all that ready by--Now Mistress
Elizabeth, she likes her dinner to the table at two of the
clock every day. And when I speak with her, then we goes to
market. Sometimes I go by myself to procure the things I'm
going to need for the dinner for that day. And then when I
get done, I come back, and whatever was left over from supper
last night, I sends that into the house for breakfast.
ALAN
ALDA What time do they eat breakfast?
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You see, my momma was the cook for Master George's
momma. And she was the one who teach me how to cook..
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LYDIA
Oh, I reckon half after eight, nine of the clock. Whenever
Mistress Elizabeth says they'd be ready for it.
ALAN
ALDA So they eat leftovers from supper for breakfast?
LYDIA
Why yes sir. Well, leftovers from dinner be what would be
served for supper sir.
ALAN
ALDA So the main meal is dinner at two o'clock?
LYDIA
Yes.
ALAN
ALDA And that lasts until about when?
LYDIA
Well, now that all depends on how long them ladies and gentlemen
want to be sitting around that table and talking about all
sorts of things, politics and such.
ALAN
ALDA So it might go two, three hours?
LYDIA
Yes sir.
ALAN
ALDA And then they take a break from talk and they think about
things, I guess to talk about at the next meal.
LYDIA
Well now I don't know if they have to think about things,
sir. You know, there's always plenty going on around here
for folks to be talking about. You know, what goes on in this
one's house and what goes on in that one's house.
ALAN
ALDA So then when do they have supper?
LYDIA Well, that would usually be half after eight, nine of
the clock.
ALAN
ALDA And that goes on until how long?
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Lydia
speaks freely with Alan about her life as a slave,
though in reality she would not interact so informally
with a white man.
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LYDIA
Well, that goes on until the folks be sitting around there,
talking and playing the games, and drinking the spirits and
tea and whatever else 'tis they wish to do for the evening.
ALAN
ALDA Now, what about the cleaning up? Who does all the cleaning
up? Cleaning pots and things like that?
LYDIA Well, there'd be ten and five of us Negroes here on
this property. I'm the cook. I do the cooking. I go to market
with Mistress Wythe. Now the dishes that she uses in the house
upon the table, they don't come out here. Mistress Elizabeth
has someone in the house to clean them up. But here, well,
I see to it that the young-uns learn how to clean up them
pots after all. Keep them young-uns busy, keep 'em out of
trouble. You know, idle minds be the devil's workshop, but
idle hands do, too.
ALAN
ALDA Speaking of which, do you get a day off?
LYDIA
Does your stomach take a day off, sir? Did you ever decide
that you ain't gonna eat one day?
ALAN
ALDA So you work from before sun up until falling down?
LYDIA
Way after the sun goes down.
ALAN ALDA And you don't get a day off, either.
LYDIA
No sir.
ALAN
ALDA That's a pretty hard life. You don't get time off during
the day, either?
LYDIA
Well, now sir, you see, when I goes to market? If Mistress
Elizabeth decides she ain't going to market with me, I go
a little bit earlier. That way I have time to spend with folks
at market. 'Cause you see--And I goes real early, 'cause the
earlier you get there, that means you can get the freshest
fruits, the freshest fish, and also the freshest news.
ALAN
ALDA So what kind of news do you find useful to get?
LYDIA
Oh, whatever be going on. Sometimes Mistress Elizabeth says
she doesn't understand how the Negroes know more than she
does or before she knows it. Well, I don't say it, and you
won't say this to her, now will you?
ALAN
ALDA No, I won't. No.
LYDIA
You can keep a quiet tongue in your mouth?
ALAN
ALDA I can, yes.
LYDIA
I wants to say to her, 'cause the good Lord gave me two eyes
and two ears but he only give me one mouth. And as long as
I keep that mouth shut and them eyes and ears open, I knows
a whole lot of things.
ALAN
ALDA Does she then try to get information out of you about
what's going on?
LYDIA
Oh, sometimes she does. But, 'course, I don't know nothing.
But if it was something that I did hear but I want her to
know, I'll ask her about it, I won't tell her. I'll ask her
about it. See, I wouldn't tell Mistress Elizabeth nothing.
That wouldn't be polite. That would not be showing her the
proper respect. I needs to see to my fish here, sir. Not coming
along too good. I needs to put some more coals. Do you do
your own cooking sir, or do you have a cook do it for you?
ALAN
ALDA No, we do our own cooking. How about your family? Do
you have a family here?
LYDIA
Well, the Negroes here on the property, they'd be all my family.
Master George brought me here and left behind my mother, my
sister, my brother. And a fellow by the name of Tom--I believe
he was gonna ask me to jump the broom with him, but, Master
George brought me here before that did happen, so I never
jumped the broom. 'Cause I ain't find nobody that, well, that
had the fine qualities that Tom have. Like the fine qualities
that perhaps you look like you might have, sir.
ALAN
ALDA Have you ever been in contact with your family since
you came here?
LYDIA
Oh, all the time sir. Ain't seen 'em. But you see Ben, that'd
be Master George's waiting man, he takes care of Master George.
And wherever Master George goes, Ben goes with him. And when
he goes out there yonder there to Chesterville, brings me
back news about the folks out there. And course, when he goes
out there, he tells them all about me. Everyone that I leave
behind that I recall I always ask about them unless I've been
told that they've been passed on. They've been moved on somewhere
else.
ALAN
ALDA And how 'bout here?
LYDIA
Oh, I see all the children here. Ain't give birth to none
of them. But the children here, theys like my own. I look
after them, take care of them. Much like the folks did out
yonder there in Chesterville, when I was a small child. They'd
look after me because often times momma had her duties to
do and she didn't have time to tend to me.
ALAN
ALDA Did you ever imagine what might happen years from now?
Have you ever thought about that? About how people who had
been brought here from Africa might live in the future?
LYDIA
I don't know about other folks sir. But you see, Master George,
when we was growing up yonder there out there in Chesterville,
Master George always said he didn't think too much about this
thing called slavery. Well, the laws don't allow him to free
us. That is, unless he goes down yonder there before the governor's
council. And you won't say nothing about this, will you?
ALAN
ALDA No.
LYDIA See Master George and Lord Dunmore, you see, that'd
be the Governor…Well, Master George don't see eye to eye with
many of the things the Governor wishes. And they have had
some differences. So even if Master George was to go before
the council and ask if we could be free, or ask for my freedom,
ain't no guarantee the Governor that will grant it. The council
might, but the Governor might not say so. But, I do hope and
pray that one day things would change.
ALAN
ALDA What would happen if you were suddenly freed right now?
How would you get by?
LYDIA
How I would get by? It would be how Master George and Mistress
Elizabeth would get by. You see, I know how to cook. I don't
think Mistress Elizabeth can boil water. She's always coming
out here with her cookbooks. "Now Lydia, you want this much
of this and this much of that." And then when I get it all
together and have her taste it, you want to know what she'd
want to know from me? "Now what have we done wrong?" Especially
if it don't suit her liking. I want to tell her, "I ain't
done nothing wrong. Mistress, I've done just what you tell
me to do." But that ain't nice. So, you know what I say to
her? I say, "Now Mistress, perhaps if you take a bit more
of this and perhaps a bit more of that and add it to that,
maybe it'll be more to your liking." And that's what I do,
and she tastes it. And then, when it's to her liking, that's
when I taste it. And that's when I know how she likes the
things.
ALAN
ALDA So if you were freed, you'd be able to get a job cooking?
LYDIA
Well sir, I'm getting up in years now and I know how Master
George and Mistress Elizabeth likes their food prepared. And
they ain't giving me no cause to want to go elsewhere. So
if Master George was to give me my freedom, I'd stay right
here and do the cooking for them. The only difference is Master
George would have to pay me.

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