
Detroit Public Theatre’s production of ‘Passing Strange’
Clip: Season 51 Episode 20 | 8m 16sVideo has Closed Captions
Detroit Public Theatre production of “Passing Strange,” a musical with a powerful message.
Get a preview of Detroit Public Theatre’s final production of its eighth season, the Tony Award-winning rock musical “Passing Strange.” We talked with members of the production about the show's legacy, what makes it unique among rock musicals, how art and media can be used as a vehicle for cultural conversations, and the creative process behind bringing the Broadway production to the local stage.
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American Black Journal is a local public television program presented by Detroit PBS

Detroit Public Theatre’s production of ‘Passing Strange’
Clip: Season 51 Episode 20 | 8m 16sVideo has Closed Captions
Get a preview of Detroit Public Theatre’s final production of its eighth season, the Tony Award-winning rock musical “Passing Strange.” We talked with members of the production about the show's legacy, what makes it unique among rock musicals, how art and media can be used as a vehicle for cultural conversations, and the creative process behind bringing the Broadway production to the local stage.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- The wonderful Detroit Public Theater is closing out its season with a production of the musical "Passing Strange".
The Rock Opera tells a story of a young African American musician's search for his identity, his artistic voice, and what he calls the real.
The production is directed by Detroit artist and activist John Sloan III.
And One Detroit's Chris Jordan spoke with Sloan, with actress Lulu Fall, and Detroit Public theater founder Courtney Burkett about the show's meaning and its legacy.
♪ He's trying to write a song but the song's writing him ♪ ♪ It's a song about paradise wearing thin ♪ - What's interesting and really powerful about this show is that it's written by a black man and a white woman, but it tells a story of identity and one that is very unique to the black experience, but that also has archetypal themes that I think anybody can be drawn to.
♪ I wanna scream - It pulls something out of each person because it's such a multi-layered show and there aren't many musicals out there that are multi-layered in this particular fashion.
- This has been our first season in our new home which has been tremendous and closing it out with this big rock musical is really very exciting to see kind of the full capabilities of what we can do in this room.
♪ Mama, she's serving every one of my desires ♪ ♪ On a planet where it doesn't even matter anymore ♪ ♪ Paradise is a bore - "Passing Strange" is a wonderful, huge, intimate show that walks you through the journey of one person looking for their sense of self, grappling to understand who they are, who they are in context of what they want for themselves, in context of the weight of other people's expectation, and also what it means to be able to love and to be loved even when you don't necessarily understand why.
- This is a play that we have been wanting to produce since we were founded.
This is our eighth season, it's the biggest show we've ever done.
So it was really a big investment for us with a seven person cast and a full band on stage the whole time.
But we really felt like it was an important story to tell.
We're really interested in kind of contemporary work and work that Detroit audiences will see their own lives reflected in, and we really feel like the journey of this story and of this play is something that audiences will see and not...
It's really kind of a new way of experiencing musical theater.
I think it's not what most people think of when they think of musical theater.
It's not really traditional.
♪ But I hope you find it - I love shows that break the fourth wall, and in "Passing Strange", that fourth wall is completely broken by the narrator first and foremost just interacting with the audience.
So that alone just sets this musical apart.
This also being an autobiographical piece, that is another thing that completely blows all the other shows out of the water because of the fact that it's so intimate.
It breaks the fourth wall.
It's funny, it's raunchy, it is sad, it's real.
♪ No one ever made him feel ♪ As real as when she said to him by lending him ♪ ♪ Her keys ♪ And said welcome to Amsterdam, welcome to Amsterdam ♪ ♪ Welcome to Amsterdam.
- What you see with "Passing Strange" is you see a show that just in its existence is revolutionary, telling the story of a kid who is being told that he's not black enough and a kid who then struggles to try to find himself in an environment surrounded by a whole bunch of white people and Europeans, right?
That struggle is what is revolutionary.
The telling of that story is absolutely revolutionary.
What is accessible though is just that it's good storytelling, it's just good music.
It's a story that everybody's been through.
Everybody has been 22 or will be 22.
Everybody has been 16 or will be 16.
Everybody has had that journey of getting into an argument with your parents and not knowing that you regret that argument until 10 or 15 years later.
Everybody knows what it's like to have to find yourself.
Everybody has been one of these people on this stage at some point in their lives and their journey.
♪ We are the stereotypes - John Sloan is an incredible artist who has been working in the Detroit region now for a while.
John and I met pretty early in the life of Detroit Public Theater, and immediately I really admired him.
And so we were really happy that he accepted the job of taking on the direction of this play and this production, and he really brought it to life beautifully.
- What I love about his directing is of course he has a vision and of course there's certain things that he wants us to do, but I also really, really, really love that he trusts us as actors, as intuitive artists to try some things.
Some things work, some things don't work and that's fine, but I do love that he allows for that space.
- Welcome to my riot.
- If art imitates life, then we need way more diversity on stage.
Not just color and race and gender, but stories.
There are so many stories out there walking down the street.
No one has the same story.
And that's what makes me gravitate not only towards "Passing Strange", but generally to non-traditional musical theater because it just shakes things up.
- Especially in this context of what's happening in theater today, right?
So you go back and you look at the last five years, four years really.
Ever since the summer of 2020 and this uprising because of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery.
And this realization that that parts of the country have that racism still exists and is still a thing, right?
And the way that that then started to trickle through the artistic communities and you started to see in different industries the leaders of those industries, recognizing their impact and their influence in those systems.
The question then becomes is that recognition honest?
Is it truthful or is it a mile wide and an inch deep?
It's not just about producing content, it's about telling stories and valuing the telling of those stories.
Not because of the identity around that, but because of the understanding that art and media can share cultural conversation.
And you can learn about somebody who you might not have met before through their music, through their food, through watching their story on a stage.
And what "Passing Strange" did when it was on Broadway in 2008, what it's doing now here at Detroit Public Theater, this is one of those great shows that can meet two goals.
It's just a phenomenal piece of work, but it also has a very powerful message.
♪ I've been thinking about leaving my fingerprints ♪ This is a show that invites you to talk back to us, that invites you to have a conversation with us.
They're very similar to the other work of Dominique Morisseau or Erika Dickerson-Despenza says "hey, come and be involved and welcome into this community."
- The circle is complete when the audience comes in and the audience gets an experience and feels at home in this space because we built it for everyone.
- It's just joyful, and the actors, the artists, everybody works really hard to make sure that you could not just come into the show and and learn something, but you could come into the show and feel something, that you could come into the show and have really good time.
♪ She say it's all right, it's all right ♪ ♪ He say it's all right, it's all right ♪ ♪ I say it's all right, yeah it's all right ♪ ♪ It's all right now - And you could see "Passing Strange" at Detroit Public Theater through May 21st.
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