Home Blog Page 240

‘The Color Purple’ Brings Jazz, Gospel, Blues to Red Mountain Theatre

0
The Color Purple, which opens Friday, February 9 and runs through Sunday, March 3 at Birmingham’s Red Mountain Theatre, will be highlighted with singing performances featuring notes of jazz, gospel, ragtime and blues. (Red Mountain Theatre/Mary Fehr)

By Keisa Sharpe-Jefferson | The Birmingham Times

Directing The Tony award-winning stage play “The Color Purple” is an honor for the multi-talented Monet who joins an elite company of few Black women who’ve had the opportunity to direct a musical of this magnitude.

The musical, which opens Friday, February 9 and runs through Sunday, March 3 at Birmingham’s Red Mountain Theatre, will be highlighted with singing performances featuring notes of jazz, gospel, ragtime and blues.

Monet told The Birmingham Times she does not take lightly the opportunity to direct this critically acclaimed play.

“Directing this production means a lot to me,” said Monet, a graduate of A.R.T/Harvard. “Not only is it so wonderful to be directing ‘The Color Purple’ in the South so close to the geographical areas that it is set in and references, but also to be able to do the show for a community that really understands these (characters) in a more intimate way. These characters are based on people that would resemble their grandmothers, their great grandmothers …”

The play is based on Alice-Walker’s Pulitzer-Prize winning book of the same name, which follows the life of lead character Celie – who rises from a dramatic childhood of abuse, oppression and trauma to become a strong and vibrant woman and community figure, complete with supporting female characters including Sofia, Squeak and Shug Avery.

‘The Color Purple’ debuted to box office, big movie screen success in 1985 under the direction of famed movie producer and screenwriter Steven Spielberg (known for such movie blockbusters such as ‘E.T.,’ ‘Jaws,’ ‘Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom,’ ‘Raiders of the Lost Ark’ and ‘Back to the Future’).

The movie starred iconic entertainment figures Whoopi Goldberg as Celie; Oprah Winfrey as Sofia; Margaret Avery as Shug Avery; Rae Dawn Chong as Squeak; Lawrence Fishburne as Swain; and Danny Glover as Mister.

The musical opened on Broadway at the Broadway Theatre on Dec. 1, 2005 and the latest iteration theaters in 2023 starred “American Idol” winner Fantasia Barrino as Celie and the film isn’t a strict re-creation of the stage show, which was almost entirely sung-through.

Monet is not only working as director and choreographer for The Color Purple but she is also an actor and consultant who’s worked with distinguished playwrights, directors and organizations.

Her work spans theatre, film, commercials, music videos and live events and she’s served as a consultant for the likes of Black Thought (The Roots), John Leguizamo and she’s associate director of the highly anticipated Alicia Keys musical, Hell’s Kitchen that will be headed to Broadway spring of this year.

The diversity of work is common for those who lean toward a professional career in the arts, she said.

The Color Purple is directed by Monet, left, and features local actors Myiesha Duff and Naomi Brown. (PROVIDED)

Monet said her greatest work right now is telling this story “through the lens of this community and this cast” and “watching the actors grow and explore these characters along the way and getting to watch them all come to life on stage.”

One of those actors is Birmingham-native Myiesha Duff, who cast as Celie in the musical.

“Having a director who identifies as Black and has lived, breathed, and been a part of our culture brings a relatability and understanding that is a breath of fresh air,” said Duff, who considers Red Mountain Theatre home.

This is Duff’s third time playing this role at RMT (she also performed it in 2012 and 2019).

“I am honored to bring Celie to life again on the stage,” said Duff. “Working with this group – from my castmates, directorial team, production team – has been a joy.”

Duff, a graduate of E.B. Erwin High School’s class of 2004, describes Celie as “a simple and complex character and I get to play the many nuances that make her a beloved character.”

To prepare for this role, she “reread the book (‘The Color Purple’) and increased my gym and exercise time in efforts to increase my stamina because Celie spends the majority of the play on stage,” Duff said.

She admits that there are times, due to the emotional nature of the role, that she has had to “pull away and regroup.”

Aside from her stage performance, Duff enjoys family time with her husband of 14 years and their three children, ages 9, 6, and 4.

And in addition to being a full-time wife, mom and actress, she’s also a children’s book author, educator and administrator.

Getting Into The Swing

Local entertainer Naomi Brown was on a cruise with her husband Ron and their children when she got the call.

“They told me that I’d missed the email, so they called me and told me I had the role as a swing actor for The Color Purple,” she said.

A month later in December, she was invited to be cast as a swing actress in the upcoming stage production.

While Brown is one of the background singers in the production she is also a swing actor which carries an “incredible responsibility” in a production, she said. Swing actors study multiple roles and must be ready to step in if one of the principal actors is unable to perform.

“This is my first experience doing the swing position (in The Color Purple),” she said. “I’m covering all ensemble (on-stage performers other than the main actors) and all the (lead) singing church ladies,” she said. “That’s a total of eight women.”

Brown said there’s slightly less pressure in being part of the ensemble, but there is more heavy lifting with the lead singing roles (church ladies) she is covering as well.

“With the church ladies I have to be on point because that (role) is specific – the notes they’re hitting and the reason they’re hitting it at a certain time, because they’re telling a story and you have to be accurate,” said Brown.

And that’s not all.

“I’m breaking down staging, where they’re standing, when they’re coming in, when they’re going out, who’s standing where, why are they getting up on this part, what are the cues. There are a lot of intricate pieces to being a swing actor,” said Brown.

And even though the main roles – Celie, Shug, Sofia and Squeak – have understudies (those who will fill in if the lead actress is out), Brown says she still has to learn their roles as well to fill in for the understudy, should they need backup.

“If anyone is injured or if anything happens where they can’t be in the play, I would have to step into that role,” said Brown. “There are a lot of intricacies to being a swing.”

She is the only female swing actress. There is one other male swing actor for The Color Purple at RMT.

Brown says it is “definitely challenging” learning all the roles, but also the fact that the director of the play makes “consistent adjustments going on with different people (during rehearsal).”

Showtimes

Performances for The Color Purple will begin Friday, February 9, with the last performance on Sunday, March 3. Performances will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday – Saturday and will also feature Saturday and Sunday matinees at 2 p.m.

Community Conversations will be held following each Thursday performance where members of the cast and crew will be available to talk about the show and what it means to host the musical in this community.

For more information on the stage play and actors, or to purchase tickets, visit https://redmountaintheatre.org/color-purple-2024.

 

Celebrating Garrett Morgan, ‘The Black Edison,’ for Black History Month

0

By Samuetta Hill Drew | The Birmingham Times

February is Black History Month. Therefore, all the safety articles will spotlight African American inventors and their inventions. Many do not realize that African Americans have always been pioneers when it came to finding solutions to address societal problems. They were visionaries from the beginning of world civilization to their Middle Passage, to their first steps on the land known as America to the present day. Their inventions in rail and traffic safety, chemical and electrical safety, aerospace safety, communication and health greatly improved how we work and live today.

We will focus this week’s article on man who has gained a great deal of attention in recent years – Garrett Morgan. Many students have learned that Morgan patented the directional traffic signal, later changed to three colors, which now directs traffic on most roads and highways around the world. He also invented a safety protective hood that was used by the allied forces in World War I. It served as the prototype for the modern respirator.
We know about his safety inventions, but let’s find out more about the man who was an American entrepreneur, inventor and activist. He was born on March 4, 1877, in Paris, Kentucky to Eliza and Sydney Morgan. His parents had been slaves, but they were freed before his birth. He dropped out of school after the sixth grade, and at age 14 he left his family’s farm and moved to Cincinnati, Ohio. He got a job as a handyman and hired a tutor to continue his education.

In 1895 he moved to Cleveland, where he began repairing sewing machines. In 1907 Morgan opened his own sewing equipment and repair shop. After his brief marriage to Madge Nelson, he married a second time to a white woman, Mary Hasek, from Bavaria. The couple started a clothing business that grew to employ more than 30 people.

Morgan’s first notable invention addressed a common problem then with sewing machines. The needles moved up and down so quickly that they often became hot and scorched some fabrics. After experimenting with different liquids, he developed a chemical solution to reduce friction. He later discovered the solution was safe to use for straightening hair and patented the formula. In 1913, Morgan founded the G.A. Morgan Hair Refining Company to sell the product. The business became very profitable, allowing him time to explore other inventions.

In the early 1910s Morgan shifted his attention to a breathing device that would prevent smoke inhalation. His interest was piqued after a devastating factory fire that killed 146 workers. In 1914 Morgan patented his creation – a hood that went over the head and had a tube attached to it. While the device proved effective, racism negatively impacted its sale, so Morgan hired some white actors to sell the hoods for him.

His traffic light invention was inspired unfortunately by another tragic incident. In the early 1920s, Morgan observed a collision between an automobile and a horse-drawn carriage carrying a young child. This type of accident was very common. Looking to solve another societal problem, Morgan invented a traffic light featuring movable arms that directed the traffic to stop, go, or stop in all directions. His invention was not the first, but it controlled traffic better than the others. He patented his traffic light in 1923 and eventually sold the rights to the device to the General Electric Corporation for $40,000. He earned the nickname “the Black Edison.”

He was a longtime member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and started a weekly newspaper that addressed the social issues that faced African Americans.

Morgan was just one African American inventor whose intellect, vision, tenacity and inventions helped save lives then and became the prototype for inventions which continue to save lives today. His efforts really help us to Keep an Eye on Safety for decades to come.

PEOPLE, PLACES AND THINGS

0

CELEBRATE BLACK HISTORY MONTH! READ A GOOD BOOK!

TODAY…

**READ THE BIRMINGHAM TIMES. Catch up on the news!

**TINY MAKERS SERIES 10:30 – 11:30 a.m. at the Birmingham Botanical Gardens.

**THE JOE LOCKETT SHOW Live Podcast with NEPHEW CLIFF and MS. DENISE, Monday-Friday at 4 p.m.

**OPERA SHOTS, 6 p.m. at Cahaba Brewing Company, an annual series casual pop-up concerts throughout the community, held in unexpected places and designed to break down the stereotypes of opera. It features members of the Opera Birmingham Chorus and surprise guest artists.

**FILM – 7 p.m. at the Sidewalk Film.

**WOODY & SUNSHINE at the Nick.

**PREMIERE: DEFENDING FREEDOM: THE ARTHUR D. SHORES STORY, 7 p.m. at The Carver Theatre.

**KIKSTART at WaterMark in Bessemer with Free Food Boxes, 9 a.m.

**COMPUTER CLASSES AT THE FIVE POINTS WEST LIBRARY every Tuesday and Thursday.

**EACH AND EVERY THURSDAY HAPPY HOUR, 5-8 p.m. at D’ZIRE with SPECIALS.

**MOVIES EVERY THURSDAY at Sidewalk Fest.

**THIRSTY THURSDAYS at D’ZIRE Bar and Lounge.

**KARAOKE, 5-9 p.m. at Courtyard Alabaster Bar and Grill.

**THIRD THURSDAY BLUES JAM, 7 p.m. at True Story Brewing.

**TASTEMAKER THURSDAY – Every Thursday at Blaze Ultra Lounge, 228 Roebuck Plaza Drive, 8 p.m.- 12 a.m. with DJ Ace Twon (95.7 JAMZ) in the mix hosted by Audio Life and GMC Promo.

**THIRSTY THURSDAY at Hookah 114 17th Street No.

**TEQUILA THURSDAY at the Vibe Bar & Lounge.

**THROW BACK THURSDAY at Tha Vibe Bar & Lounge, 3801 Richard Arrington, Jr., Blvd.

**FILMMAKER HAPPY HOUR- Every 3rd Thursday, at Sidewalk Film Fest. Meet with other filmmakers and discuss your newest projects.

**EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT KARAOKE, 6:30 at Ruth’s Place hosted by LADY WOO and with DJ SHAY.

FRIDAY…

**EVERY FRIDAY DURING LUNCH – FRIDAY COUPON CHEAT DAY WITH HOT 107 at 1918 Catering. (Use the coupon ANY DAY.)

**THE JOE LOCKETT SHOW Live Podcast with NEPHEW CLIFF and MS. DENISE, Monday-Friday at 4 p.m.

**FRIDAY NIGHT WRITES, 8 – 11 p.m. at 7611 1st Avenue North.

**ALIENATED TOUR: GREY MATTER, DIRECT MUSIC, SWEETZ, COLT MONTGOMERY, ROB DEE, KAPABLE, and DIXIE TRIX at The Nick.

**LOVE SESSIONS WITH SHARRON COLLINS at Perfect Note.

**PHOENIX BALL at Iron City.

**EVERY FRIDAY – R&B FRIDAY, at The Chandelier, 212 Cahaba Valley Road in Pelham with DJ MANISH mixing live. FREE Entry.

**EACH AND EVERY FRIDAY HAPPY HOUR, 5-8 p.m. at D’ZIRE with SPECIALS.

**FOOD TRUCK FRIDAY at City Hall, 11 a.m.- 2 p.m. at the short 20th Street North.

**RIPCORD, 8 p.m. – 2 a.m. at 4501 Gary Avenue in Fairfield.

**QUE’S BAR & GRILL GROOVIN’ on 19th Street in Ensley.

**LIT FRIDAYS WITH RIPCORD, 8 p.m. – 2 a.m. at 4501 Gary Avenue in Fairfield.

**AFRO CARIBBEAN NIGHTS (Every Friday Night) at Ash’s on 2nd, 7 p.m. until with Reggae, Afro Beats, Dancehall and Top 40 Hits.

**FIREBALL FRIDAY at Tha Vibe Bar & Lounge.

**FRIDAY NIGHT RAP, Every 1st and 3rd Friday at Crescent Cultural Center, 1121 Tuscaloosa Avenue, W.

SATURDAY…

**EVERY SATURDAY at BIRDSONG FARMERS MARKET, 7 a.m. – 12 p.m., 2824 5th Avenue South at Automatic Seafood,.

**WINE DOWN HAPPY HOUR, 4 p.m. – 9 p.m. at Saferoom Lounge Bar.

**EACH AND EVERY SATURDAY HAPPY HOUR, 5-8 p.m. at D’ZIRE with SPECIALS.

**EVERY SATURDAY SOLD OUT – THE SATURDAYS JUMP OFF, 10 p.m. at Onyx of Bham, 615 8th Avenue West.

**TRIBUTE TO MARVIN GAYE featuring CHAE STEPHEN at Perfect Note.

**DRAG NIGHT at The Nick.

**GRACE POTTER at Iron City

SUNDAY…

**WORSHIP AT THE SIXTH, 9:30 a.m. at Sixth Avenue Baptist Church.

**SUPERBOWL SUNDAY, 1 p.m. until, at 1918 Catering, 197 Vulcan Road.

**EVERY SUNDAY – SOUL FOOD SUNDAYS, 1-5 p.m. (Every Sunday) at 1918 Catering, 197 Vulcan Road.

**SUNDAY FUN DAY at DZIRE BAR AND LOUNGE, 4120 3rd Avenue South. Call 205-266-2594 for more.

**SUNDAY FUNDAY for the grown Folks Kickback at Tha Vibe Bar & Lounge.

**EVERY 3rd SUNDAY JAZZ JAM SESSION, 4-8 p.m. at the Ferus on 41st.

**CITY WIDE PRAYER MEETING, Every 4th Sunday, 4 p.m. for one hour at Birmingham Easonian Baptist Bible College. The Lord’s Supper will be served and hosted by the Knights of Pythias & Court of Calanthe.

**AT SIDEWALK Film Fest…2024 GRAMMY AWARDS WATCH PARTY, 7- 10 p.m. FREE.

**EVERY 4th SUNDAY – TAYLOR HOLLINGSWORTH at The Nick.

**SUNDAY FREE TUNES with KYLE KIMBRELL at The Nick.

**SOULFUL SUNDAY with SAXOPHONIST DELON CHARLEY at Perfect Note.

MONDAY…

**THE JOE LOCKETT SHOW Live Podcast with NEPHEW CLIFF and MS. DENISE, Monday-Friday at 4 p.m.

**BIRMINGHAM BANDSTAND at the Nick.

**RNB MONDAYS, 10 p.m. at Onyx of Bham, 615 Eighth Avenue West.

TUESDAY…

**KIKSTART at Water Mark in Bessemer, 9 a.m. with Free Food Boxes…until all gone.

**COMPUTER CLASSES AT THE FIVE POINTS WEST LIBRARY every Tuesday and Thursday.

**DIAPER GIVEAWAY every Tuesday, 10 a.m. at the Titusville Library.

**THE JOE LOCKETT SHOW Live Podcast with NEPHEW CLIFF and MS. DENISE, Monday-Friday at 4 p.m.

**FAT TUESDAY, 5-8 p.m. at 1918 Catering, 197 Vulcan Park Road.

**BIRMINGHAM MARDI GRAS, 6 – 10 p.m. at the Boutwell Auditorium.

**EVERY TUESDAY – SPECIAL TUESDAYS with Food, Drinks Specials at 1918 Catering, 197 Vulcan Road.

**EVERY TUESDAY is SOUL CAFÉ Happy Hour introducing the Soul Café Happy Hour, 5:30-9:30 p.m. with Soul Goodies, Soul Spirits and Soul Music including $5 Titos and Redmont, at The Vault.

**JOSE CARR’S JAZZ JAM, 7:30 p.m. at True Story Brewing Company.

**TITO’S TUESDAY at Dirty Ash’s 8 p.m. with DAVID TALLEY IV.

**CARIBBEAN NIGHTS with Reggae, Caribbean and Island Vibes, 9 p.m. – until… with DJ Serious Mixing and hosted by KJ and MANNY at The Vault, downtown.

**EVERY TUESDAY – TRUE STORY BREWING JAZZ SESSIONS, 7- 10 p.m., 5510 Crestwood Blvd.

**TASTY TUESDAYS at Platinum of Birmingham.

**PORTUGAL THE MAN at Iron City.

**EVERY TUESDAY – BIRMINGHAM SONGWRITER’S ROUND with Host SUSANNAH SEALES at the Nick.

WEDNESDAY…

**INTERFAITH NOONDAY PRAYER SERVICES every Wednesday, Noon at Linn Park in Downtown Birmingham.

**WORKOUT WEDNESDAY at Five Points West Library at 10:30 a.m. for chair yoga and other chair exercises.

**GALENTINE’S GIRLS NIGHT, 4-6 p.m. with Special Guest JOE LOCKETT at 1918 Catering, 197 Vulcan Road, Homewood, 35209. Call 205-518-5711 for more.

**THE JOE LOCKETT SHOW Live Podcast with NEPHEW CLIFF and MS. DENISE, Monday-Friday at 4 p.m.

**WEDNESDAY NIGHT POOL TOURNAMENT AND KARAOKE NIGHT, 5 p.m. at Carter’s Hookah Lounge and Grill, hosted by Jo Sweetz with the Pool Tournament, at 7 p.m. and Karaoke at 8 p.m.

**EVERY WEDNESDAY, YOU, ME & RNB, 6 p.m. at 2206 Bar & Lounge, 2206 31st Street, with DJ You, Me & Playlist.

**D’ZIRE WEDNESDAYS, EACH AND EVERY WEDNESDAY with Free Mimosas, 8- 10 p.m. with DJ GORGEOUS in the Mix at 4120 Third Avenue South.

**WEDNESDAYS WEEKLY JAZZ JAM, 7- 10 p.m. at True Story Brewing Company, 5510 Crestwood Blvd. Food until 9 p.m., Music until 10 p.m. and Drink until 11 p.m.

**EVERY 4th WEDNESDAY at FACE’S LOUNGE KARAOKE hosted by ARETTA, 6:30 p.m. at 7070 Aaron Aronov Dr. in Fairfield.

**A-MENAGE-A TROIS NIGHT OF MUSIC-CHEYLOE’S SLEEPLESS KNIGHTS, MEGAN LEA and THE DIRTY MIRRORS LOVE RAT at the Nick.

**VALENTINE’S DAY WITH CAMERON SANKEY-LOVE FACTOR 2 at Perfect Note.

NEXT THURSDAY…

**READ THE BIRMINGHAM TIMES. Catch up on the news!

**TINY MAKERS SERIES 10:30 – 11:30 a.m. at the Birmingham Botanical Gardens.

**THE JOE LOCKETT SHOW Live Podcast with NEPHEW CLIFF and MS. DENISE, Monday-Friday at 4 p.m.

**FILM – 7 p.m. at the Sidewalk Film.

**BOOF, OVER SEASONS & POWERSINK at the Nick.

**MARC RABY’S STAGE PLAY “I’M IN LOVE WITH A COUGAR” at Perfect Note.

NEXT FRIDAY…

**EVERY FRIDAY DURING LUNCH – FRIDAY COUPON CHEAT DAY WITH HOT 107 at 1918 Catering. (Use the coupon ANY DAY.)

**THE JOE LOCKETT SHOW Live Podcast with NEPHEW CLIFF and MS. DENISE, Monday-Friday at 4 p.m.

**FRIDAY NIGHT WRITES, 8 – 11 p.m. at 7611 1st Avenue North.

**BURLESQUE NIGHT AT THE NICK HOSTED BY BELLA DONNA at The Nick.

**50 AND FABULOUS with R&B DIVA DEIRDRE GADDIS at Perfect Note.

NEWS TO USE…

IT’S 2024! NEWS TO USE…CELEBRATING  BLACK HISTORY MONTH…

GWEN’S SPOTLIGHT – FOR BOOK LOVERS…

**BOOKS: RITA COLLINS is author of several children’s books: T MATTIE’S MANNERS, illustrated by BREN RIDDLE, and books in the Eensy Weensy Series that includes: THE EENSY WEENSY CATERPILLAR, THE EENSY WEENSY LIZARD, THE EENSY WEENSY PENGUIN, THE EENSY WEENSY ACORN, AND THE EENSY WEENSY KITTEN illustrated by MICHAEL ALLEN.  The books can be read to young children or actually read by the youth themselves. They are ‘must have’ in your library for young readers. Rita is a retired Reading Recovery Teacher and ballet teacher focused on literacy and early childhood.

FOR ART LOVERS…

**FEBRUARY 11 THROUGH MAY 10 – ROOTS & RENAISSANCE, an African American Journey Through Art, at C.A. Kirkendoll Learning Resource Center, 5500 Myron Massey Blvd., Fairfield, Miles College. The Roots And Renaissance Art Exhibition at Miles College LRC is open Monday-Thursday 8 a.m. – 10 p.m., Friday 8 a.m. – 5p.m., Saturday 8 a.m. – 3 p.m. and Sunday 2 – p.m. www.fairfieldblackartcollective.com.

AT BIRMINGHAM BOTANICAL GARDENS…

**FEBRUARY 22 -CELEBRATING ANNE SPENCER HOUSE AND GARDEN, 5:30 – 7:30 p.m. at the Birmingham Botanical Gardens. The BBG is honoring the rich legacy of African-American Heritage during Black History Month and will welcome Shuan Spencer-Hester, the executive director of the Anne Spencer House & Garden Museum in Lynchburg, Va. as the guest for the evening.

IN FEBRUARY… LET’S CELEBRATE BLACK HISTORY, CULTURE & EXCELLENCE…

**FEBRUARY 17 – NATIONAL RANDOM ACTS OF KINDNESS DAY!

**FEBRUARY 17 – A CALL FOR VENDORS at A Day of Black Excellence, 1-4 p.m. For more, text 205-645-8308.

**FEBRUARY 17 – CELEBRATE BLACK HISTORY MONTH, 1-4 p.m. at the Crescent Cultural Community Center for a day of family, fun and education with drum performance by SAHI ONKP DJONY, music, food and Vendors. Speakers are CLARENCE MUHAMMAD, KUNDAIYI BAJIJIKI and KOBINA BANTUSHANGO.  1121 Tuscaloosa Avenue, Birmingham, Ala.

**FEBRUARY 17 – ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER at The BJCC, 7 p.m..

**FEBRUARY 20 – 25 – BLACK LENS FILM WEEK at Sidewalk Film.

**FEBRUARY 21 – FEBRUARY BOOK + FILM CLUB, 6 p.m. at Sidewalk Film.

**FEBRUARY 24 – BIG MACHINES DAY 2024 at the McWane Science Center.

**FEBRUARY 24 – KATT WILLIAMS, 8 p.m. at The BJCC.

**FEBRUARY 29 – BIRMINGHAM BLACK ECONOMIC ALLIANCE – Bi-Monthly Business Mixer, 6-8 p.m. at Sienna, 1025 20th Street South. Guest Speakers are EVAN JEFFERSON, Virtual Dispensary Owner and NIECKO GLOVER, Community Organizer/Advocate.

AROUND TOWN…

**FEBRUARY – YOGA IS FOR EVERYBODY, Every 1st and 3rd THURSDAYS at Crescent Culture Community Center, 1121 Tuscaloosa Avenue, S.W. with OPTION 1 – 11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. (Flexible) and OPTION 2 – 4:30 – 5:30 p.m. (Work Tension Relief and Relaxation). These self care yoga classes are with YAMALA MA’ATMAN, Trauma Informed Yoga for all ages and genders.  Suggested Donation is $5. Light snacks available.

INTERESTED IN POLITICS, CANDIDATES AND ELECTIONS…

**FEBRUARY 29 – PARTY WITH THE CANDIDATES, 5-8 p.m. at The Dannon Project, hosted by Jeh Jeh Pruitt. Vendors and food trucks wanted. For registration, call 205-873-4572. Tell them Gwen sent you.

FOR COMMUNITY LOVERS…

**CHIEF DONALD LEWIS JONES MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP – $500 SCHOLARSHIP FOR ONE BIRMINGHAM AREA GRADUATING SENIOR, Deadline is March 1. For more: www.magiccitypoetryfestival.org.

**MONTHLY POP-UP – BE KIND BIRMINGHAM (with you name it), EVERY First Wednesday, 10 a.m. at Titusville Library; Second Wednesday 10 a.m. at West End Library; Third Wednesday, 10 a.m. at Smithfield Library; Fourth Wednesday, 10 a.m. OR 3 p.m. at Five Points Library, and Fourth Wednesday, 4 p.m. at Harrison Park Rec Center.

…SEE YOU AT THE SIXTH…EVERY SUNDAY!

**EVERY MONDAY MORNING MEDITATION WITH PASTOR CANTELOW, 7:15 a.m. Contact the church at (205) 321-1136 or (205) 321-1137.

**CHILDREN’S CHURCH & COLLISION CHURCH, each First Sunday at 9:30 a.m. for K-5th (Children’s Church), 6-12th (Collision).

TIPS TO USE…

**TIPS BY TUTOR NATION – Tutor Nation is sharing tips that can be used during holiday breaks, school days, as needed or whenever. They help students and families with college and career readiness through tutoring and ACT Prep. Here is ANOTHER TIP – BREAK DOWN TASKS – Divide larger tasks into smaller, more manageable parts. This makes it easier to stay focused and track progress. (Look for more tips, right here, each week for advice or assistance from Tutor Nation. If you are a parent and your kids need tutoring or if you need more information, contact Tutor Nation at: tutor-nation.com/Home/.)

**THROUGH APRIL 2024 – YWCA GIRLS MENTORING, in partnership with Girls, Inc. of Central Alabama will provide girls mentoring to equip participants with practical tools for positive personal development. Accepting young ladies in grades 8th- 12th. These in-person sessions will be held on the 2nd Saturday each month from 11:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. Registration is required. For more, call 205-594-4475.

AT BIRMINGHAM BOTANICAL GARDENS…

**CHILDREN’S SUMMER CAMP is May 28-July 26 for ages 4-12. There will be fun themes including Nature’s Kitchen, Art in the Gardens, Water Wonders and more. The half-day camps are designed to promote creativity and the joy of discovery through fun learning experiences. Each camp includes daily explorations of the Gardens, STEM and literacy activities and learning in the garden lab.

Well, that’s it. Tell you more ‘next’ time. People, Places and Things by Gwen DeRu is a weekly column. Send events, your things of interest and more to my emails: gwenderu@yahoo.com and thelewisgroup@birminghamtimes.com.

Mayor Woodfin’s ‘Uncomfortable’ State of the City Address to The Kiwanis Club of Birmingham

0
Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin on Tuesday delivered his State of the City address to The Kiwanis Club of Birmingham and took direct aim at the city’s economic direction. (BARNETT WRIGHT, THE BIRMINGHAM TIMES)

By Barnett Wright | The Birmingham Times

Saying the City needs to be “comfortable with being uncomfortable” Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin on Tuesday delivered his State of the City address to The Kiwanis Club of Birmingham and took direct aim at the city’s economic direction.

In his 35-minute speech in the downtown Harbert Center filled with business leaders, elected officials and heads of agencies, the mayor made clear he believed some economic developments efforts in the city were lacking because of what he called “fragmentation.”

“I have believed that economic development functions have not been effective for the city, the county, or the region. Among other things, there are too many organizations working in silos—some doing good work—but the fragmentation is both unproductive and expensive,” he said.

To drive home his point, the mayor repeated: “The fragmentation is both unproductive and expensive. I have made it clear that things need to change for everyone’s benefit, and I am committed to playing a leadership role in that.”

The mayor didn’t stop there. “Some of you have heard me say, or heard that I’ve said, ‘we need to blow up the structures we have,’” he said. “But we also have to be smart about it. And where there are opportunities to build on what we already have it makes sense to do that. So that’s what we are in the process of exploring.”

After the speech, the mayor declined to elaborate on what he meant by “blowing up” the structures in place but he has expressed frustration at the number of jobs being created especially with the myriad of economic development organizations in place.

Woodfin did say “serious and frank conversations” were underway over the last several months about what needs to happen “in order for our community to build a vibrant economy that serves all our region’s citizens well and also addresses concerns I have for our city.” “There has been a lot of progress and I now believe that there are opportunities to make significant progress and there can be a clear path forward if we work together, gather other leaders, and respect the interests and needs of all,” he said.

“Make no mistake – let me be very clear when I say this – Birmingham is the economic center of the state of Alabama,” he said. “Let us do what’s necessary, and be comfortable being uncomfortable as we continue to secure our role as the key player in this region.”

The rest of the mayor’s speech focused on many of his accomplishments he shared in December when he unveiled his “The Blueprint: The Woodfin Way” which can be found here.

Birmingham’s Luke Crowder Found Out He Won a Grammy While Inside Gas Station  

0
Birmingham’s Luke Crowder on Sunday won a Grammy Award for production on mega rapper Killer Mike’s album, ‘Micheal’ in the category of Best Rap Album. (PROVIDED)

By Je’Don Holloway-Talley | For The Birmingham Times

Birmingham’s Luke Crowder was in a Homewood gas station with his longtime girlfriend, Arnisha Jordan, on Sunday when he found out he won a Grammy Award for production on mega rapper Killer Mike’s album, ‘Micheal’ in the category of Best Rap Album.

“We were just leaving my studio in Homewood [a small city just outside of Birmingham] and about to head home when one of my friends hit me up and said, ‘congratulations’… we started checking online, and Google said that Killer Mike had won for Best Rap album,” Crowder said. “I called my family and friends, and [numerous] close producer friends and told them this was not a win just for me, but for all of us.”

If you think a huge celebration ensued, think again. Crowder said he kept it “low-key”, bought a bottle of champagne, ordered a take-out meal turned celebratory feast and went home.

“We (Crowder, Jordan and his 8-year-old bonus daughter) went to Creole Connection next to Legion Field and ordered oxtails and grits, lamb chops and dirty rice, and cat fish sliders. We kept it low key, but indulged guilty pleasure foods,” he said. “I had a conversation with my mom [Robbie] she was pleased about it. She told me to continue to ‘keep God first and my ego in check…’”

Crowder, 35, longed to share the moment with his father, Kenneth Crowder Sr., who he lost to a fatal car wreck Thanksgiving weekend in 2018. Instead of being able to share the phone call he’d made to his mother with his father by her side, Crowder spent a moment in solitude with his late father.

“I said, ‘Hey, Dad, I finally won one. …I’ve [received] one of the most prestigious music awards there is, and I attribute that you pulling strings in heaven for me …’,” Crowder said.

The Roebuck native reflected on his journey and recalled past conversations with his dad about why it was taking the son so long to succeed…

“I started questioning what I was doing wrong, why is this not working for me? …and I remembered the verse in Habakkuk [2:2-3], it said, ‘Write the vision, and make it plain’ and I wrote my plan.… and it was so good I said, ‘I’m gonna show this to my father. I showed him and he said, ‘This is good, son, let’s talk more about it when I get back’ and he never made it back.” Crowder recalled.

Also injured in the car wreck were Crowder’s younger brother, Gabriel, and his mother, Robbie who survived the collision. Losing Kenneth Sr., “energized my efforts,” said Crowder, who was 30 at the time of his father’s death. “It was a hard time, but it let me know I needed to go harder on my goals.”

One of those goals was realized Sunday.

‘That’d Be a Good Wife For You … There’s Something About Her’

0
Lameka and Derrick Fisher met in high school in Vicksburg, Mississippi, and married in 2003. (PROVIDED)

BY KEISA SHARPE-JEFFERSON | The Birmingham Times

LAMEKA AND DERRICK FISHER

Live: Margaret, AL

Married: Aug. 23, 2003

Met: Lameka and Derrick “first met in Vicksburg, Mississippi, in high school at an event known as Junior Leadership, sponsored by the Vicksburg Chamber of Commerce in 1995,” said Lameka. Both were sophomores in high school. Derrick attended Vicksburg High School and Lameka attended Warren Central High School. Derrick knew he had to make his move when he first saw her. “She was real quiet and shy and I said to myself, ‘That girl is kinda cute. I’m going to go and talk a little noise to her.’”

Her reaction was less than promising initially, remembered Derrick. “She was ignoring me. That’s how the first time went,” he said laughing.  Lameka, admittedly a woman of few words, said her first impression of Derrick was very pleasant, even though she didn’t say much to him. “I thought to myself, ‘He’s friendly and doesn’t meet any strangers,” she said. But not one to be deterred, Derrick’s persistence eventually paid off and their paths crossed again while in high school. While they’ve known each other for well over 30 years it feels as though they were connected even longer.

“I actually looked back at one of my scrapbooks and we were in a piano recital together in 3rd grade, but we didn’t know each other,” said Lameka. “We had the same piano teacher.

First date: A few months after their first chance meeting at Junior Leadership they went on a first date which, according to Lameka, was a meal at Red Lobster in Vicksburg and then they went to a movie afterward. Both enjoyed their meal and time together, but Derrick ended up with chicken pox the day after their first date.

After that they were together pretty much from then on.

But while dating, both prioritized their education and went on to graduate from their respective high schools and enrolled in college. Lameka graduated in 1997 and went on to attend Tougaloo College in Jackson, Mississippi, and then “transferred to Ole Miss (graduated in 2001 with a psychology degree and went to Texas Chiropractic College in Pasadena, Texas (on the outskirts of Houston. Derrick graduated high school in 1997 and went on to attend Jackson State University (JSU) in Jackson, Mississippi.

The turn: “I loved her compassion,” said Derrick. But that was not the only sign that led him to propose. “My father, when I was 16, he met Lameka …. and before he died, he said, ‘I like that girl.’”

Time nor distance could stop their blooming relationship. While Lameka continued her education in another state, Derrick was finishing up his college education in Jackson, MS. “I think when I went off to chiropractic school (in Texas), after dating a few years, is when we realized the next step would be marriage,” said Lameka.

Derrick said his father helped him seal the deal. “My dad said she (Lameka) was sweet a girl. He was dying of cancer then and he said, ‘That’d be a good wife for you … There’s something about her. That really kind of help me escalate that (proposal).”

The proposal: 2001. While attending Jackson State, Derrick drove to Houston while Lameka was in chiropractor school. He was in his senior year in college.

Lameka said she knew the proposal was coming. She just didn’t know how and when. But an evening dinner at Harrah’s Casino Gulf Coast, in Biloxi, would change her life.

“I was expecting it, but I thought it was going to be for Christmas,” she said. Derrick went down on one knee and asked for Lameka’s hand in marriage on Dec. 23, 2001.

They were joined by a few of their friends. “I was wondering why so many people kept staring at us (at Harrah’s),” Lameka added laughing.

And Derrick’s plan didn’t end there; part two of the celebration continued as he “had an engagement party after the dinner at his house.”

Their engagement lasted over a year and a half while both completed their studies “because I had to finish,” said Derrick, who was under the watchful eye of his mother as he completed school at Jackson State. And as student in chiropractor school, Lameka had to remain focused because “I had lots of classes,” she said.

Derrick graduated in 2002 in mass communications and went back to work in Vicksburg.

The wedding: 2003. The couple had a large wedding at Cedar Grove Missionary Baptist Church in their hometown of Vicksburg, Mississippi.

They had eight bridesmaids, a maid and matron of honor and eight groomsmen and two best men. Their colors were purple, yellow and silver. The reception was at the city auditorium.

“My dad walked me down the aisle,” said Lameka. “Most memorable for me at the wedding was actually seeing my husband cry as I walked down the aisle,” she said.

Derrick recalls not only being captivated by his beautiful bride, but cherished “my vows as the most memorable part of our wedding.”

“We got married … and I moved to Houston (while Lameka finished up chiropractor school),” said Derrick.

Then, they moved to Birmingham in April 2006 as Lameka received a job offer. The Magic City has been home ever since – for 17 years and counting.

Words of wisdom: Marriage is most successful when “working together and being compassionate – being able to support each other in ups and downs,” Derrick said.

He added, “when you find that person that really has your corner when you’re down or when you’re up or you’re at your lowest, that’s what it’s really about … It’s cool when everybody’s up or when we got money, we do what we wanna do. But what’s really going to happen when money’s not flowing? Are you going to be there with that love and support each other through the good and the bad,” said Derrick.

For anyone going through a rough patch in their marriage, Derrick said “… don’t give up so easy. We wouldn’t still be together if we gave up easily.”

Lameka, admittedly an introvert and a woman of few words, simply added “a true relationship is two imperfect people refusing to give up on each other.”

Happily ever after: The Fishers celebrated 20 years of marriage in 2023 “through the joys and the pain and the sunshine and the rain,” said Derrick. They have a son Kameron was born in October 2013, ten years after they were married.

Both Derrick and Lameka are Vicksburg, Mississippi, natives. They currently live in Margaret, Alabama.

He graduated from “Jackson State University, in Jackson, Mississippi, ‘Thee I love,’ ” said Derrick citing the school’s famed expression and works as a banker.

Lameka completed undergraduate studies at Ole Miss, in Oxford, Mississippi, then completed studies at Texas Chiropractic College in Pasadena, Texas. She operates Fisher Chiropractic in the Trussville community.

 “You Had Me at Hello’’ highlights married couples and the love that binds them. If you would like to be considered for a future “Hello’’ column, or know someone, please send nominations to Barnett Wright bwright@birminghamtimes.com. Include the couple’s name, contact number(s) and what makes their love story unique.

https://www.gusterlawfirm.com/

 

 

98 Birmingham Promise Scholarships Awarded to High School Seniors Attending Alabama State University

0
Nearly 100 high school seniors from the Birmingham School System have been awarded Birmingham Promise Scholarships to attend Alabama State University. (FILE)

By Kenneth Mullinax/ASU

In an effort to help clear some of the financial hurdles that can impede students from attending college, nearly 100 high school seniors from the Birmingham School System have been awarded Birmingham Promise Scholarships to attend Alabama State University (ASU).

Samantha Williams, executive director of Birmingham Promise, explained that Promise scholarships allow graduates of Birmingham City Schools to attend any in-state public college or university tuition free, which allows some students to consider attending institutions farther from home, including many Birmingham students who dream of attending an institution such as Alabama State University.

Currently, 98 participants attend ASU.

“I’m proud that so many of our students use their Birmingham Promise scholarship to attend Alabama State,” said Williams. “Our goal ultimately is to build pathways for our students to achieve their dreams and reach their potential, and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) have always played a key role in providing those opportunities. We are proud to partner with Alabama State to provide these Birmingham graduates with a path to success.”

ASU’s vice president for Institutional Advancement and the executive director of the ASU Foundation, Colonel Gregory L. Clark (retired, U.S. Army) announced that nearly 100 Birmingham seniors have received the Promise scholarships, which can be used to help pay tuition and mandatory fees at Alabama State University upon their admission and enrollment at the acclaimed HBCU.

“These scholarships will give the selected students the opportunity to enhance their individual educations and give them specialized intellectual insight in studying with us to obtain a bachelor’s degree in whatever field of study they may wish to pursue in order to gain educational credentials and develop marketable skills, which will assist them in obtaining successful careers in life,” said Clark, who oversees communications and fundraising for Alabama State University.

On Friday morning, Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin delivered his convocation speech at Alabama State University Founder’s Day celebration.

Woodfin and current ASU President Quinton Ross also highlighted the partnership forged between the City of Birmingham and ASU through Birmingham Promise.

“It’s a partnership, but it’s friendship as well,” Ross said. “What you find in Mayor Randall Woodfin is a thought leader. He’s progressive, and he truly wants to make a mark and to provide, not only for the Birmingham area, but for the greater state of Alabama and beyond.”

Quilters of Gee’s Bend in Residence with UAB Arts in Medicine from Feb. 26-29

0
Members of the Quilters of Gee’s Bend will lead quilt-making and sewing demonstrations and workshops in residence with University of Alabama at Birmingham Arts in Medicine from Feb. 26-29. (Adobe Stock)
By Shannon Thomason/UAB
Members of the Quilters of Gee’s Bend will lead quilt-making and sewing demonstrations and workshops in residence with University of Alabama at Birmingham Arts in Medicine from Feb. 26-29.

The artistry of the Quilters of Gee’s Bend has been acclaimed as one of the world’s most vibrant contemporary textile traditions.

During the residency, the artists will work with UAB Medicine to set up public sewing spaces in the UAB Women and Infants Center, The Kirklin Clinic and UAB Hospital-Highlands. The demonstrations will take place in the main lobbies, in addition to special workshops for health care staff and UAB Medicine patients and families.

At the end of their residency, one of their iconic quilts will be added to the hospital’s permanent art collection and hang in a main area for patients, visitors and health care staff to enjoy.

Growing research in the field of arts in medicine has demonstrated that incorporating the arts into the healing environment can reduce anxiety and perceived pain, provide a positive distraction, and reduce the length of hospital stay and need for pain medication, says UAB Arts in Medicine Director Kimberly Kirklin. It can also improve self-confidence, provide a sense of control and autonomy, and create space for social connection.

“Having the legendary Quilters of Gee’s Bend create art in the hospital will support AIM’s mission to enhance the healing environment through the arts,” Kirklin said. “It will also enhance well-being for patients, families and health care staff through creativity and arts engagement.”

The women of Gee’s Bend, a small, remote Black community in Alabama, have created hundreds of quilt masterpieces dating from the early 20th century to the present. According to “The Quilts of Gee’s Bend” book, the quilts carry forward an old and proud tradition of textiles made for home and family: Quilts transform recycled work clothes and dresses, feed sacks, and fabric remnants to sophisticated design vessels of cultural survival and continuing portraits of the women’s identities. Their masterworks are products of both tradition and innovation, older women teaching younger women the styles and standards of beauty. Each quilt is both the signature of the individual and the banner of their community. Gee’s Bend quilters are known for singing hymns while they work. In 2011, UAB’s Alys Stephens Center presented the quilters in the weeklong residency, “Common Threads: Quilters of West Alabama Meet Mud Cloth Makers of West Africa.”

UAB Arts in Medicine, a collaboration with UAB Medicine, is celebrating its 10th anniversary. This residency is funded by the UAB Hospital auxiliary and is supported by the Arts in Medicine Kirklin Family Endowment.

UAB’s Jackie Alexander is Named College Media Association’s First Black Female President

0
Jackie Alexander, director of University of Alabama at Birmingham Student Media, is College Media Association’s first president of color. (UAB Photo)

By Shannon Thomason
UAB News

Jackie Alexander, director of University of Alabama at Birmingham Student Media, is College Media Association’s first president of color.

As president, Alexander says her focus is ensuring the organization’s strength and vitality and furthering its mission: educating and training college media advisers. She was sworn in at the annual College Media Association’s fall convention in November 2023.

UAB Student Media was nominated in several categories in the association’s national Pinnacle Awards. Some students were able to attend the event in Atlanta and witnessed their director’s groundbreaking inauguration. All three organizations, Kaleidoscope, Aura and UABtv, were recognized with top awards in the competition, which had more than 4,000 entries.

Alexander has been a member of the College Media Association since 2012, when she transitioned into college media advising from a background in print journalism, as an education reporter. Alexander became Student Media director at UAB in 2018.

In 2020, a friend and past president of CMA remarked on her involvement and urged her to run for the board. Alexander at first demurred, but the friend stressed the need for more young people to run for leadership roles in the organization, so she ran — and won. She has been working and learning from the immediate past president, while serving on the board as president-elect in 2021. She stepped into the presidency Nov. 1, 2023, as CMA goes into its 70th year with more than 500 members across the country and including Canada.

A Student Media director’s job is to provide advice, guidance and institutional knowledge.

In Student Media, students are not just members of a student club or organization leaders, but are running media businesses, she says. As such, they must provide feedback on the budget, write business proposals, make their own hiring and firing decisions, and “all the way down to editorial, they have control. But at the end of the day, they are making some big calls,” Alexander said.

UAB Student Media is the home of UAB’s student-run media outlets. They include Kaleidoscope, an award-winning news outlet and magazine; Aura, a much-heralded literary arts magazine; and UABtv, which has original, web-based video programming. UAB students operate all media. The content and opinions are solely those of the student writers, producers, editors, deejays and other staff, and do not reflect those of the university, administrators or adviser.

Aura produces a digital issue in the fall and a print issue in the spring. In between, they partner and do poetry slams and art nights, work with Muse, a student-led organization that aims to provide all UAB students with the opportunity to support or participate in an artistic, creative community regardless of major, and present workshops in the spring semester. Kaleidoscope’s show “Blazin’ Bites” is a local UAB take on “Hot Ones.” For UABtv, a student worked on a modern true crime version of the Hades and Persephone story. One did a podcast about being a millennial today, while another did a video series on anime.

Students are supported in their training through connections to the right resources, like the Poynter Institute. Media professionals come to campus for “talent talks” about their career journey and transferable skills. Students may talk with Alexander about Associated Press style or the production calendar, but also about what challenges they may have, from food or financial insecurity to family challenges.

“One of the things we really focus on is ensuring our students know that the work they do at UAB Student Media goes well beyond journalism,” Alexander said. “We focus heavily on those transferable skills.”

She says students now are creating their own opportunities.

“I have interviewed and hired students who already have their own nonprofits, their own LLCs, their own businesses before they even graduate from UAB,” Alexander said. “And I am so incredibly proud and humbled to work with them because I was not doing that in my undergrad career. They are so incredibly smart and so driven and so entrepreneurial.”

On the media landscape, she sees college journalists really stepping up.

“They are breaking news that no college student should ever have to break about people in power,” Alexander said. “They are really holding their world accountable, and their world is often their university.”

She sees partnerships between universities and local newspapers to save and preserve community news that provide great avenues for students.

“With newspapers disappearing at a rapid rate, the pipeline for journalists and student journalists of color to get into the professional media landscape continues to contract,” she said. “How do we prepare our students and make sure we are creating a better world for them to join after graduation?”

Alexander says she is not looking to turn out 100 more journalists.

“I’m trying to make sure we have people after graduation who are gainfully employed in the field of their choosing, in the job of their choosing, in a way that they can contribute back to our world,” Alexander said. “Whether that is being a storyteller or being in medicine, I want them to graduate as better people than when we first met. I want them to learn and grow holistically, to understand the world and contribute to the world in a positive way.”

Ramsay High School’s Tyra Davis, 17, Winning Essay Contests and Mock Trial Competitions

0
Tyra Davis, of Birmingham’s Ramsay High School, was one of the first-place winners of the Martin Luther King Jr. Unity Breakfast Written Essay and Digital Presentation Contests. (Marika N. Johnson, For The Birmingham Times)

By Sym Posey
The Birmingham Times

Tyra Davis is not your average 17-year-old high school junior. Just look at her schedule over the past several months.

Davis, of Birmingham’s Ramsay High School, was one of the first-place winners of the Martin Luther King Jr. Unity Breakfast Written Essay and Digital Presentation Contests. She was honored at the event for the essay portion of the competition, which was held at Birmingham-Southern College on Martin Luther King Jr. Day and got a chance to read her speech to a room full of leaders.

“The scholarship is important to me because I was able to advocate for youth activism throughout my essay,” Davis said of the contest, for which a monetary scholarship is awarded to the top three entries in each category.

“When I was reading at the breakfast, I felt the energy in the crowd and how it was very impactful to them. That was my goal the entire time. … I was writing my essay because I knew I had to read it in front of everyone. When I read it on stage it was a surreal experience,” she added.

Two for Two

That win was preceded by another one late last year. In October, Davis and some of her classmates participated in the first annual Mock Trial Competition sponsored by the Birmingham Bar Association (BBA) as part of its Students Today | Lawyers Tomorrow project. The Rams took first place, and Davis was named Outstanding Attorney for round one of the competitions.

“I was a prosecutor,” Davis said. “I made sure to include [key] elements in my final summary and made sure to bring feedback about what happened during the round. … It felt like I did what I came there to do.”

Davis, unsurprisingly, dedicates a lot of her school time to extracurricular activities, such as serving as president of the Youth & Government program, “a national YMCA program [that] empowers students from every corner of the U.S. by giving them the opportunity to learn about—and experience—government policies and methodologies firsthand,” in addition to participating in

  • Future Business Leaders of America (FBLA), an organization that “inspires and prepares= students to become community-minded business leaders in a global society through relevant career preparation and leadership experiences”;
  • the Black Women’s Round Table, a National Coalition on Black Civic Participation (NCBP) program that “serves as the organization’s intergenerational leadership development, mentoring, empowerment, and power-building arm for Black women and girls”;
  • the SpeakFirst Debate Team, a program that gives Birmingham City Schools “middle and high school students the opportunity to engage in co-curricular competitive debate”;
  • the Girl Scouts, an organization that gives girls the opportunity to participate in a broad range of activities and learn practical skills to better themselves and their communities;
  • Ramsay High School Academy of Law, a certified National Academy Foundation (NAF) academy designed for students who have aspirations of working in the legal profession
  • G.A.P. (Girls Aspiring with a Purpose), which is a dedicated mentoring group that aims to empower young girls by providing them the necessary life skills to navigate various challenges and opportunities.

“Ramsay has helped me evolve because I am exposed to and allowed the opportunity to join different activities and academies, [as well as] Youth & Government,” Davis said. “I love it, and it is something I am very passionate about. It is what got me into writing more and speaking my opinions more.”

Work Ethic

A typical day for Davis starts around 5:30 in the morning. “I have a routine that I follow in order to prepare for my day,” she said. “I try to get in some exercise, then I start preparing to go to school and attend my classes.

Her days usually consist of meeting with the different clubs and organizations she is part of, including “FBLA, Youth & Government, and the debate team,” she said, adding that she also is a member of Key Club, “an international, student-led organization that provides its members with opportunities to provide service, build character, and develop leadership.”

Key Club, founded in 1925, is the high school branch of the Kiwanis Club International service organization.

Davis, born and raised in Birmingham, is the oldest of her brother, Tyrone, 13, she said, “[He] is the joy of my life. He inspires me to do a lot of the things that I do.”

She also is inspired by her parents—her mother, Conswella, and father, Tyrone, a truck driver, —who, she said, keep her motivated and provide much needed support.

“My parents inspire me a lot,” said Davis. “My mom is very outspoken. As a pharmacist, she has always had a hardworking work ethic. My dad is a huge historian, so a lot of the history I know comes from [him].”

Passion for Activism

Davis took interest in becoming an activist when she was in fifth grade at Birmingham’s Advent Episcopal School.

“We had a project we had to complete for Black History Month, [and] I chose [to focus on] Thurgood Marshall because he was the Supreme Court’s first African American justice.

“Reading his story and looking into what he wanted to do and how he was able to make a societal change moved me to possibly pursue the same thing,” she said of Justice Marshall, a lawyer and Civil Rights activist who played a key role in ending segregation in American schools before being named to serve on the nation’s highest court.

Davis would like to attend law school and follow in the steps of Marshall, who died in 1993, and current Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson.

“Not only is [Jackson] the first Black woman to hold to a position as a Supreme Court justice, but she is also the first former federal public defender to serve on the Supreme Court,” Davis said. “Her grace and class [during her Supreme Court confirmation hearing, where she was treated as if she were on trial by the U.S. Senate], really inspired me. It made me feel like I can do or be anything.”

Some of the other key figures Davis looks up to are Civil Rights icon the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and renowned poet and Civil Rights activist Maya Angelou, as well as former U.S. President Barack Obama and current Vice President Kamala Harris, both of whom are the first African Americans to hold their respective offices.

And now there are others who look up to her, following her award-winning essay.

“My essay is about youth advocacy and how the youth were still able to have an impact. I came up with subject after I read Dr Martin Luther King Jr.’s speech, ‘A Time to Break the Silence.’ [My essay], which took me five days to write, states that people should advocate for themselves when they think a law that affects all people is unfair,” said Davis.

Favorite Things

Although she has accomplished a lot in her 17 years, Davis said her biggest accomplishments thus far have been getting the scholarship and getting baptized at Kingdom Builders Birmingham, pastored by Dr. Milton Wren Jr. and Lady Angela Wren.

“I love the Lord, and I love my church family,” said Davis. “Being baptized at 16 really affected me for the better. It changed my life.”

Her favorite hobbies are arts and crafts, especially with Canva, an online graphic design tool, and she’s learning how to cook, as well. She also enjoys reading and watching movies.

“My favorite book is [the 2014 National Book Award-winning memoir] ‘Brown Girl Dreaming,’ by Jacqueline Woodson, [who recalls her early childhood, growing up as an African American girl in the 1960s, and how her experiences led her to becoming a writer]. My favorite movie is ‘Marshall,’ [a 2016 film about Supreme Court Justice Marshall, starring the late Chadwick Boseman in the title role],” said Davis.

Davis’s contest winning essay:

Kingian Nonviolence: It Starts With Me

By Tyra Davis

The power of nonviolence has been and time again throughout history as a catalyst for social change. In the spirit of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., this year’s breakfast focuses on children and the 60th anniversary of the Crusade, a defining moment in the civil rights movement. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. written essay and digital essay contest encourages students to delve into Dr. King’s writings, especially his speech “Time to Break the Silence,” and explore how his legacy can shape the cultural climate of our society.

In May 1963, more than 5,000 schoolchildren, now known as the “Foot Soldiers,” marched through the streets of Birmingham, Alabama, demanding an end to segregation and racial injustice. The Children’s Crusade became a turning point in the struggle for civil rights, showing the courage and determination of young people. Their actions not only emphasized the urgency of change, but also exposed the harsh reality of discrimination to the nation and the world.

Inspired by the teachings of Dr. King, Kingian Nonviolence is a philosophy rooted in love, compassion and belief in the power of nonviolent resistance. By learning and practicing the gift of nonviolence, people can contribute to changing the cultural climate toward understanding, empathy, and equality. This approach emphasizes the importance of dialogue, reconciliation and changing relationships through non-violent means.

Kingian Nonviolence offers a framework for addressing systemic inequality and injustice by promoting community and shared responsibility. It encourages people to recognize the humanity in others, even in adversity, and to seek a peaceful solution instead of violence or aggression. By embracing nonviolence, we can challenge harmful stereotypes, dismantle oppressive systems, and create lasting change that benefits everyone.

Dr. King’s speech “Time Break Silence” delivered in 1967, it recommended an end to the Vietnam War and discussed the implications of social justice. In this powerful speech, he called for a revolution of values and urged people to break their silence and take steps against injustice. In addition, his writings, which are collected in the publication “A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,” give a complete picture of his philosophy and principles. Dr. By reading and understanding King’s works, we gain insight into his legacy and the tools needed to achieve positive change.

Dr. King’s teachings on nonviolence go beyond mere tactics; they encompass a way of life that promotes justice, equality, and compassion. His words remind us that the fight for civil rights and social justice is ongoing and requires constant vigilance. By studying his speeches and writings, we gain a deeper understanding of the strategies and principles that guided his work. We learn the importance of nonviolent direct action, the power of collective organizing, and the necessity of addressing the root causes of inequality.

The Children’s Crusade serves as a reminder of the power of youth activism and the potential for positive change. By embracing Kingian Nonviolence and incorporating Dr. King’s teachings into our lives, we have the ability to shift the cultural climate towards one of peace, justice, and equality. Let us honor the bravery of the Foot Soldiers and the vision of Dr. King by committing to the study and practice of nonviolence in our communities.

Together, we can create a society that reflects the ideals of compassion, understanding, and unity that Dr. King fought for. By engaging in open dialogue, promoting empathy, and challenging systems of oppression, we can foster a cultural climate that values diversity, inclusivity, and social justice. It is through our collective efforts that we can build a better future, one where the principles of Kingian Nonviolence guide our actions and shape our cultural landscape. It starts with us.

Updated at 3:38 p.m. on 2/2/2024 to add more information.