The Last Hurrah

Vickie L. Williams

OVERVIEW

“The Last Hurrah” is a journey of three Tuskegee Airmen from Cleveland, Ohio and their stories of discrimination, segregation, and achievements. These airmen made history and were a part of major changes in the U.S. military. In spite of being denied and discredited, they and other Tuskegee Airmen, prevailed. And they cheered hurrah… until the last hurrah. ** this is a staged reading**

PRICE

$5.00

RUN TIME

25 minutes

VENUE & STAGE

GUND Dance Studio

SHOW TIMES

Fri 7/22 @ 9:00PM
Sat 7/23 @ 6:30PM

DETAILS

TYPE OF SHOW

Fringe

Recommended For

Ages 14+

GENRE(S)

Scripted Play, Reading

CONTENT WARNING

VENUE FEATURES

ADA Accessible, Restroom

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SYNOPSIS

Based on interviews with three Cleveland local Tuskegee Airmen, the late Lieutenant Colonel (Lt Col) Clarence Jamison, the late Master Sergeant (MSG) Thomas Austin, and the late Corporal (CPL) Roy Richardson, as they point out black achievements in the U.S. Armed Services. Those achievements are labeled as hurrahs. The first hurrah was when racists believed black people were incapable of learning. The Tuskegee Airmen not only learned how to fly, but their superior flying techniques won them eight Distinguished Unit Citations. Racists also believed blacks should be kept separate from white society. Tuskegee Airmen refused to accept discrimination and their actions at Freeman Field resulted in President Truman signing an Executive Order to integrate the U.S. armed services. Hurrah! In 1941, they won the first Top Gun Gunnery Competition and after years of not given credit, they finally provided proof, the last hurrah.

Vickie L. Williams

Luther Pete Robinson (Corporal Roy Richardson)
Prophet Seay (Master Sergeant Thomas Austin)
Greg White (Lieutenant Colonel Clarence Jamison)

Vickie L. Williams

#TheLastHurrah #WeWereDamnGoodPilots #RedTails

Additional Info

**this is a staged reading**

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Photo Credit(s):