To Turn a Blind Eye with J. Nicole Brooks and Kevin Douglas
Release Date: 04/19/2022
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info_outlineTwo old friends and collaborators, J. Nicole Brooks and Kevin Douglas, reconnect over their love/hate relationship with old movies and their experiences living and working in Chicago, where a history of racism hides beneath Midwestern smiles.
Please visit our website for accessibility support and to learn more about each writer.
This Month:
- J. Nicole opens up about how water trauma and her desire to heal inspired the piece she read, “Be Water.”
- Kevin describes how he wrote his play, Thaddeus and Slocum: A Vaudeville Adventure, for the child version of himself and his love of old movies that lacked representation of people who looked like him.
- J. Nicole laments how old movies are sometimes racist and homophobic which makes it difficult to enjoy the art that you once loved and revered as a child.
- Both writers discuss the complexities of racism and segregation in Chicago today and throughout history.
- J. Nicole discusses how a segregated swimming pool started the 1919 race riot in Chicago.
- Kevin talks about how his Chicago high school’s flag was the Confederate flag and the discussion about changing it.
- Kevin explains how racism in Texas is blatant but racism in Chicago happens behind your back.
- Kevin chats about how he had to learn about black history and racial inequity in the United States and teach it to his family because they were from Jamaica, where they were the cultural majority.
- J. Nicole talks about finding segregation while living in Brooklyn, Chicago, and LA.
- Both writers talk about their upcoming projects.
Pieces Read
- Excerpt from Thaddeus and Slocum: A Vaudeville Adventure by Kevin Douglas, a play about two aspiring Vaudeville performers who pretend to be white people who wear blackface, even though one of the performers is actually black.
- “Be Water” by J. Nicole Brooks, a first-person piece about Brooks’ experiences with water trauma, largely inspired by her white swimming instructor who refused to get in the water with black children.