JAMAICA’S HISTORIC BLACK  
 SPECTRUM THEATRE CELEBRATES  
 MILESTONE ANNIVERSARY 
 The Black Spectrum Theatre Company is a world-class performing arts center and nonprofit organization located at the Roy  
 Wilkins Family Center in Jamaica. 
 BY CARLOTTA MOHAMED 
 When Carl Clay, a visionary writer,  
 producer and filmmaker, founded the  
 Black Spectrum Theatre Company in  
 1970 in Jamaica, it became a platform  
 for African American artists to share  
 their  stories  in  theater,  film,  music,  
 and videos examining issues of social  
 significance to the African Diaspora.  
 It’s one of the only black professional  
 theaters  in  New  York  City  serving  
 nearly 20,000 audience members and  
 reaching  thousands more  through  its  
 various programs. It is the recipient  
 of 10 AUDELCO Awards and three National  
 Black Theatre Festival Awards  
 for  excellence  in  African  American  
 theatre.  
 Now,  the  theater  is  preparing  to  
 host its 50th Anniversary Gala on  
 April  25  to  continue  to  nurture  the  
 next generation of artists for the 21st  
 Century. 
 “There are so many theaters going  
 out of business, so many organizations  
 having to end their mission. To  
 be around for 50 years, and to be able  
 to look back and see some continuity,  
 from beginning to the present is an  
 awesome feeling,” Clay said. “This is  
 not a journey I’ve taken by myself in  
 any means. We have a wall in the theatre  
 called ‘The Wall of the Ancestors,’  
 and we honor those 30 people who gave  
 their life, blood, sweat and tears to create  
 the theatre.” 
 The Black Spectrum Theatre hosts  
 22  events  during  the  season  between  
 PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE BLACK SPECTRUM THEATRE COMPANY 
 October and August every year, according  
 to Clay. At least seven or eight  
 of those are theater production among  
 special events ranging from comedy  
 shows,  jazz  concerts,  speakers  and  
 book signing parties.  
 From its early beginnings in a  
 church to basements and homes of  
 members and their parents, the Black  
 Spectrum Theatre became a traveling  
 theatrical troupe performing along the  
 eastern seaboard in colleges, churches, 
  festivals, and event venues.  
 In 1977, they moved into a converted  
 100-seat theater venue that was previously  
 an abandoned drug store at 205th  
 Street  on  Linden  Boulevard.  Eventually, 
   they  renovated,  converted,  and  
 assisted in the architectural design of  
 an abandoned Navel Hospital Officers’  
 Club that hadn’t been used since World  
 War II.  
 Today, it is the Roy Wilkins Family  
 Center and the Black Spectrum Theatre  
 is located inside, where it continues  
 to be a cultural anchor and educational  
 resource for the community.  
 In 1986, the Black Spectrum moved  
 into its own 400-seat state-of-the-art  
 theatre, located in the recreation complex  
 in Roy Wilkins Park, just three  
 miles south of downtown Jamaica. The  
 theatre is equipped to double as a film  
 and video studio. It also houses the administration  
 offices,  rehearsal  space,  
 and a small cabaret theatre within the  
 complex as well.  
 “I think we’ve had a very good reputation  
 in the community for presenting  
 and giving opportunities to young people  
 and presenting productions that  
 have a cultural, as well as historical  
 and social meaning,” said Clay.  
 Over the years, the theatre has produced  
 and presented over 450 plays and  
 27 films that have not only impacted  
 southeast Queens, but also the city and  
 the nation, according to Clay.   
 Its first movie, “Babies Making Babies,” 
  was shown across the country  
 educating young people on the issues  
 of teen pregnancy, followed by another  
 film, “The Follower,” speaking on the  
 male role  in  teen pregnancy. The  theatre  
 also showed one of the first theatrical  
 productions on the AIDS crisis in  
 New York City in the 1970s.  
 As a nonprofit organization with  
 an  annual  budget  of  $1.7  million,  the  
 Black Spectrum receives funding from  
 individuals,  government  foundations,  
 corporations, and volunteer support  
 from  its  board,  community  members  
 and youth company parents.  
 In celebration of its milestone anniversary, 
  the theatre observed Black  
 History Month in February with a  
 series  of  special  programs  highlighting  
 African American achievements  
 in  film,  theater,  literature and music.  
 Its Women’s History Month program  
 in March is featuring the lives of Mae  
 Jemison, Thurgood Marshall, and  
 Zora Neale Hurston.  
   Additionally,  the  theatre  is  reintroducing  
 its  first-ever  production,  
 Black  Love,  written  and  directed  by  
 Clay.  Black Love  is a kaleidoscope  of  
 stories  exploring  different  types  of  
 love from self-love to the relationships  
 Carl Clay, founder and executive  
 producer, of Black Spectrum  
 Theatre. 
 From  the  play  of  Thurgood  
 Marshall — one of the productions  
 in Black Spectrum Theatre’s  
 50th Anniversary Season. 
 between  lovers,  siblings,  friends  and  
 family.  
 “People think of the African American  
 community as young guys in  
 hoods, thugs and criminals, which are  
 misplaced images for our community,”  
 Clay said. “It’s important for them to  
 see how much love there is in our community. 
  Growing up, my parents never  
 taught me to hate anybody. Black Love  
 is an example of the love in our community, 
  and it’s a great joy to bring a  
 show like that after 50 years and the  
 people who were a part of it.”  
 As the major highlight of this milestone  
 season, the historic theatre will  
 also host its 50th Anniversary Gala  
 celebrating its rich legacy and honoring  
 legendary performers Louis Gossett  
 Jr., Leslie Uggams, Ben Vereen,  
 and Clay on Saturday, April 25, at 6  
 p.m. at the LaGuardia Plaza Hotel, located  
 at 104-04 Ditmars Blvd. in East  
 Elmhurst. Tickets for the gala are $150.  
 A ticket package including admission  
 to the Gala, an afterparty, and an overnight  
 stay at the hotel is $400.  
 Hosted by NY1 News reporter Dean  
 Meminger and WBLS/Steve Harvey  
 Morning Show Personality Anne  
 Tripp,  the  star-studded  evening  will  
 include  an  elegant  seated  dinner,  feature  
 special presentations and celebrity  
 performances,  appearances,  and  
 will culminate with a  fun-filled afterparty  
 led by a DJ.  
 Reach reporter Carlotta Mohamed  
 by e-mail at cmohamed@schnepsmedia. 
 com or by phone at (718) 260–4526. 
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