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| My Life in the Concrete
Jungle |

Project Title: My Life in the Concrete
Jungle
Recipient
Organization: San Francisco Sheriff’s
Department
Fiscal Sponsor: Cultural Odyssey http://www.culturalodyssey.org/
Lead Artist: Rhodessa Jones
Genre and Date Awarded: Performing Arts, 2005
To Be Presented: September 2006, Lorraine Hansberry Theater,
San Francisco
Actress, singer, teacher, and writer Rhodessa
Jones is collaborating
with incarcerated women, ex-offenders, and other artists to create My
Life in the Concrete Jungle, “a magical-realist
journey into the heart of the American urban wilderness,” inspired
by Amos Tutuola’s My Life in the Bush of the Ghost.
Tutuola’s book is a nightmarish adventure of a young boy who
is chased into the bush by African slavers. While there, he
experiences a variety of transformations and adventures, including
phantasmagoric encounters with many of the ghosts and spirits found
in African mythology as well as the specters of fear, death, homelessness,
and disease. Jones’s collaborative work will explore
the parallels between the African myths that populate the bush and
urban myths that inhabit American cities.
The artistic team will include several gifted designers who will
bring to it imaginative costumes, lighting effects, oversized puppets,
masks, and video projections—creating an atmosphere in which
the line between fantasy and reality is blurred. The production
will include live music, performed by guest vocalists and percussionists,
who will blend African inspired world music with jazz and contemporary
styles.
Building on work developed over 16 years by Jones and The
Medea Project: Theater for Incarcerated Women, a team of artists
will enter county jail for months at a time where they will offer
intensive workshops that identify, audition, and interview perspective
participants for the performance development process. The workshop
uses an improvisational structure, incorporating physical exercise,
vocalization, and dramatic presentational techniques.
One of the most important goals of the Medea Project and Sheriff
Department’s mutual effort is to prepare inmates for their
reentry into the community after their release and several ex-inmates
have encountered The Medea Project and made incredible transitions
back into their communities. Jones has ascertained that increasing
inmates’ self-awareness is necessary to their breaking the
cycle of incarceration and probation, and the performance text for My
Life in the Concrete Jungle will be based on the real life experiences
of the participating women.
In a departure from previous projects, participants will include
male actors, musicians, spoken word artists and singers and professional
dancers. Jones believes that creating the piece outside of
just a women’s forum and approaching the theatrical process
like “the real world” can be extremely valuable. Working
in a supportive atmosphere with men can be a positive step in the
women’s rehabilitation. Further, female inmates in the
production will have to finish their sentences (short time offenders)
in order to be in the performance. This will further the Medea
Project’s focus on the released inmate and her successful reintroduction
into her community.
Rhodessa Jones is co-artistic director of the performance
company Cultural Odyssey and has created groundbreaking theater pieces
based on the lives of women she has encountered while conducting
classes in San Francisco County Jail. Jones writes of her artistic
vision:
Utilizing the written word and the spoken word, I have coined “Theater
for the 21st Century,” which is the place where politics,
culture, literature, and storytelling intersects with the personal made
public.
The San Francisco Sheriff’s Department administers San Francisco’s
six county jails and works to make San Francisco safe. In addition
to its traditional law enforcement duties, the Sheriff’s Department
has created some of the country’s most successful crime prevention
programs, including in-custody substance abuse treatment, anti-violence
counseling, and post-release job development. The Department
also consults with victims of crime in creating the curriculum for
courses and providing direct services when needed. The San
Francisco’s Sheriff’s Department has partnered with the
Medea Project for Incarcerated Women for more than 15 years. This
partnership involves allowing Rhodessa Jones and her team of artists
to enter the county jail for months at a time.
With cooperation and transportation provided by the Sheriff’s
Department, the inmates will be able to perform the finished piece
at Bay Area theatres, where they can celebrate their successes with
family members and the general public.
Rhodessa Jones
Selected Awards
- SF Noir Kuumba Award for Excellence in the Arts, San Francisco,
California (February 2005)
- Honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts, California College of the Arts,
Oakland, California (May 2004)
- Individual Artist Fellowship, San Francisco Arts Commission (May
2004)
- Goldie Lifetime Achievement Award, San Francisco Bay Guardian (November
2003)
- Non-profit Arts Excellence, San Francisco Business Arts Council
(May 2003)
Selected Performances and Residencies
- Artist in Residence, “Urban Voices Festival,” Johannesburg,
South Africa. Conducted workshops at Women’s Correctional
Centers in Johannesburg and Pretoria. Performed “Big-Butt
Girls, Hard-Headed Women” and “In Search of Human Culture” at
the Market Theater (July 2005)
- Director and Workshop Facilitator, Torino, Italy, conducted workshops
in the Torino Women’s Prison, and included a performance
with Italian women inmates.
- Scholar/Activist-in-Residence at Intercollegiate Women’s
Studies of the Claremont Colleges (Fall 2005)
- Artist/Scholar in
Residence, University of Texas, Dallas (January-February 2005)
- “Primal Intersections,” performance
workshop co-taught with Guillermo Galindo (September-December 2004)
- Artist
Responding to the War, residency, University of Wisconsin (October
2004)
- “Deep in the Night: A Performance,” YARI
YARI International Women Writers Conference, New York University,
New York, New York (October 2004)
- La Mama International Directors’ Symposium,
Spoleto, Italy (August 2004)
- King Hedley II, by August
Wilson, role of “Ruby,” Lorraine
Hansberry Theater, San Francisco, California (January-February
2004)
- Artist/Scholar in Residence, Stanford University, Institute
for Diversity in the Arts (January 2004)
Lectures
- Keynote Speaker for the 26th Annual Conference of the National
Association for Drama Therapy at Reed College in Portland, Oregon
(2005)
- “Blessing the Boats,” PICA Performance Festival,
Portland, Oregon (October 2004)
- Women Leadership Conference, San
Francisco, California (May 2004)
- ACLU Youth Rights Conference, with
the Medea Project, University of California, Berkeley, California
(March 2004)
- “Mining the Autobiography for the Stage,” Women
on Writing Conference, Skyline College, San Bruno, California (March
2004)
- “Theater for the 21st Century,” University of
San Francisco, San Francisco, California (March 2004)
- “Creative Performance/Creative Survival,” Brown
University, Providence, Rhode Island (February 2004)
Directing Credits
- The Things I Lost, performance by The Medea Project:
Theater for Incarcerated Women, University of California, Santa
Cruz, California (January 2004)
- OG and the B-Boy, intergenerational musical with spoken
word, San Francisco, California (March 2003)
- “Performing Community, with the Medea Project: Theater
for Incarcerated Women,” Rutgers University, New Jersey
(March 2003)
- Blessing the Boats, by Sekou Sundiata, Aaron Davis Hall,
New York, New York (May 2003)
Published Works
- “Beginner’s Guide to Community-Based Arts,” Featuring
Rhodessa Jones Keith Knight and Mat Schwarzman
- Rena Fraden, Imagining Medea: Rhodessa Jones and Theater
for Incarcerated Women, forward by Angela Davis,
University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
(December 2001)
- We Just Tellin’ Stories, film collaboration with
The Medea Project: Theater for Incarcerated Women,” with
filmmaker Lawrence Andrews, awarded “Best Documentary” by
the San Francisco Black Film Festival
- “Rhodessa Jones: Theater for a New Millennium,” Extreme
Exposure: An Anthology of Solo Performance in the Twentieth
Century, Theater Communications Group, New York (1999)
- “Deep in the Night,” a performance in Journal
of Medical Humanities, Volume 19, Numbers 2/3 (Summer 1998)
- “Big Butt Girls, Hard-Headed Women,” in Colored
Contradictions: An Anthology of Contemporary African American
Plays, Harry Elam and Robert Alexander, editors, Penguin
Books U.S.A. (1996)
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