
|          Hip-hop has had one of the largest cultural effects on the globe and is the most lucrative form of music. Like African storytelling, call and response, it is a new chant for our youth, one whose full potential remains vastly untapped. As Russell Simmons, CEO of Def Jam, once said, �We�re trying to make decisions on what wings to add to this great house.� |
The Story of Hip Hopera � 1999
         Three years ago in San Francisco, Cleveland-born, April Chelsea Mosley, created one of the other wings. She called it Hip Hopera---an urban musical drama that aims to instill thoughts of statehood into the stream of black consciousness. It is the first work of its kind to draft a Hip Hop Constitution. She wanted to change notions of how the music could be made and was driven by a desire to forge a new hip hop genre. With her work and others like it, she hopes to pave the way for hip hop to become as worthy of civic dialogue and academic study as any other art form. Ms. Mosley received her formal training from Tisch College and Lee Strasberg Theater Institute at NYU, and by attending Sundance workshops. Currently she is the director of public relations and drama instructor at Cleveland's Dale House. Here she speaks candidly of her vision for Hip Hopera:
         After showcasing the first act of her three-act, nine-song musical in San Francisco, Ms. Mosley moved to Cleveland, Ohio, where, for the past several months, she has been tirelessly working on the production, performing excerpts from her play throughout the area, forming an executive project committee, and securing a state-of-the-art venue. In March 2001, Ms. Mosley was invited to be keynote speaker at the Conference on the Arts given by the Black Studies Department at Cleveland State University. For her participation in the Third Annual Youth Conference of April 2001, she was awarded a Congressional Service Honor (below). The playwright's project is also currently under consideration for development at the Institute of Arts and Civic Dialogue at Harvard University. The executive project committee is very much aware of Hip Hopera�s timeliness and potential for commercial success, especially in view of the spring 2000 MTV televising of Carmen Hip Hopera, based on the opera and directed by Robert Townsend.
         YOUR HELP IS NEEDED! CONTRIBUTE $5, $10, $20. In partnership with RAMSEN GROUP, the project committee is seeking to raise production costs for a 2002-Cleveland Hip Hopera premier through donations and sponsorships. Our plea is that those in a position to contribute to a project that influences young people in a positive way will do so. DONATE SECURELY to Hip Hopera using PayPal. All major credit cards are accepted. Or send payment to the address below.
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