The Darker Face of the Earth

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1994 edition (Story Line Press)

The Darker Face of the Earth is a verse play written by Rita Dove. Her first full-length play, originally conceived in 1979, it was published in 1994,[1] while Dove was serving as United States Poet Laureate. It was substantially revised in 1996 in preparation for its first production.[2]

The play is set on a slave plantation in antebellum South Carolina, and is based on the Greek legend of Oedipus, and on Sophocles' play Oedipus Rex in particular.[3][4]

The play premiered at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in Ashland, Oregon in 1996.[5] It was thereafter performed at the Crossroads Theatre in New Brunswick, New Jersey[6] and at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.[7] In 1999 it had its London premiere at the Royal National Theatre.[8][9]

Amalia Jennings LaFarge: A white plantation owner/mistress who gives birth to Augustus, the son of Hector. Later on she and Augustus become lovers.

Augustus Newcastle [Mulatto]: The son of Amalia and Hector, sold into slavery.

Louis LaFarge: Amalia's violent and impulsive white husband who has seduced many slave women.

Phebe: A slave that has romantic feelings for Augustus.

Scylla: A slave, prophet, and voodoo practitioner.

Hector: The slave Amalia seduced, resulting in the birth of Augustus.

Other Slaves on the Jennings plantation /Chorus: Diana, Ticey, Scipio, Psyche and Alexander.

Doctor: The person present at Augustus's birth who suggested selling him rather than killing him.

Jones [overseer]: A white man who watches over the slaves by the order of the Jennings family.

Leader, Benjamin Skenne, and Henry Blake: Two slaves and one free man recruiting comrades to start a slave revolt in the area.

Plot

Themes and analysis

References

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