The Green Pastures

First edition

The Green Pastures is a play written in 1930 by Marc Connelly adapted from Ol' Man Adam an' His Chillun (1928), a collection of stories written by Roark Bradford.[1] The play was the winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1930.[2] It had the first all-black Broadway cast. The play and the film adaptation were generally well received and hailed by white drama and film critics.[3] African-American intellectuals, cultural critics, and audiences were more critical of white author Connelly's claim to be presenting an authentic view of black religious thought.[4]

The play portrays episodes from the Old Testament as seen through the eyes of a young African-American child in the Great Depression-era Southern United States, who interprets The Bible in terms familiar to her. Following Bradford's lead, Connelly set the biblical stories in New Orleans and in an all-black context. He diverged from Bradford's work, however, in enlarging the role of the character "De Lawd" (God), played on stage by Richard B. Harrison (1864–1935). The Green Pastures also featured numerous African-American spirituals arranged by Hall Johnson and performed by The Hall Johnson Choir. The cast also included singer Mabel Ridley.The chorus included torch singer Eva Sylvester and members of the Sylvester family as cherubs.

  1. ^ Internet Broadway Database
  2. ^ Pulitzer.org
  3. ^ Dietz, Dan. The Complete Book of 1930s Broadway Musicals (2018)
  4. ^ Evans, Curtis J. 'The Religious and Racial Meanings of The Green Pastures', in Religion and American Culture: A Journal of Interpretation, Vol. 18, No. 1 (Winter 2008), pp. 59-93