Deep are the Roots
Deep are the Roots is a play by American playwrights Arnaud D'Usseau (1916-1990) [1] and James Gow.
The original text
It is a controversial play about a black army officer who falls in love with a former Senator's daughter. It ran for 477 performances over 14 months, directed by Elia Kazan and starring Barbara Bel Geddes and Gordon Heath.[2] and subsequently had a successful tour in the UK.[3] In 2012 the play was produced at the Metropolitan Playhouse.
Performance history in South Africa
1951: Performed in the Library Theatre, Johannesburg in 1951. The cast included Lesley Brook ("Alice Langdon"), Joyce Fowler, John Rutherford ("Brett Charle"'), Derrick Forman ("Senator Langdon").
1951: Produced by Cecil Williams at the Labia Theatre, Cape Town, starring himself as Howard Merric, David de Keyser as the educated Negro, Peggy Arscott (Genevra Langdon), Michael Drin (Senator Langdon), Cecilia Sonnenberg (Alice Langdon).
Sources
Wikipedia [2].
Helikon, 1(2):14-15.
Trek, 15(11):23. November 1951.
Trek, 16(3):20. March 1952.
Return to D in Plays 1 Original SA Plays
Return to D in Plays 2 Foreign Plays
Return to South_African_Theatre/Plays
Return to Main Page