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STAR SPANGLED GIRLS

WORLD WAR II

5 ACTORS

70 MINUTES

THE LIFE AND TIMES OF

FANNIE LOU HAMER

CIVIL RIGHTS

4 ACTORS

70 MINUTES

 

PIECE WORK

TEXTILE INDUSTRY

6 ACTORS

60 MINUTES

 

FAMILY BUSINESS

FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS

5 ACTORS

90 MINUTES

LET YOUR CHILDREN TELL

HOLOCAUST

5 ACTORS

45 MINUTES
 

BIRDS OF A FEATHER

CHARACTER EDUCATION

4 ACTORS

45 MINUTES

 

UPCOMING

PRODUCTIONS

 

A Character Speaks:

Bill put me on bar tacking             

once he saw I could do most anything.             

It was piece work then.             

I think we started off at $1.90             

per hundred dozen. Seemed             

like easy money at the time.             

We finally got up to $2.90 per 100.             

I was doing about 500 to 550 a shift.             

One day Bill had a mean spell on, said,              

“Pauline, I’ll bet money you can do 600.”             

I said, “You are dreaming big now.”             

But I did get 604 dozen two days in a row.              

As far as I know no one else has ever got that many.

In eight hours. It liked to a killed me.

 

 

PIECE WORK   |  60 minutes

Adapted by Brenda P. Schleunes

Based on the work of North Carolina writer, Barbara Presnell, Piece Work  honors and celebrates the dignity of work and those who

do the work.   Even though Ms. Presnell's characters are connected to textiles, their

voices resonate with the ring of tobacco farmer, the factory worker, the nurse’s aid, the hotel maid and other Southerners. Specifically, these characters have lively conversations with themselves and each other about their work, the history and  traditions of their work, their family life and relationships and their values.  

Charlie, the first shift-foreman at the textile mill, is proud to say, “What I do means something in this world.”  Other workers— Tonisha, Sherry, Jimmy, Bill—could say so too but probably won’t.  In Piece Work, one of the strongest, most truthful books of poetry I have ever read, Barbara Presnell says it for them, to them, with them, in lines of pure and heartfelt respect.  Here are some of the words—courage, exhaustion, hope, despair, persistence, defiance—never spoken but always profoundly lived.  In this fine poet’s hands, they are more than words.

              --Former North Carolina     

               Poet Laureate, Fred Chapell

Copyright © 2008 Touring Theatre of North Carolina