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Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992
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Twilight is a stunning work of "documentary theater" that explores the devastating human impact of the five days of riots following the Rodney King verdict. From nine months of interviews with more than two hundred people, Smith has chosen the voices that best reflect the diversity and tension of a city in turmoil: a disabled Korean man, a white male Hollywood talent agent
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Paperback, 320 pages
Published
March 15th 1994
by Anchor
(first published March 1st 1994)
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Start your review of Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992
I genuinely wish I could make this required reading for ... everyone. Everyone in America at least, especially fellow white people who cannot feel the pain and the tension that was prevalent in 1965, that was prevalent in 1992, that is still prevalent today in 2016. I finished reading this book around the same time news broke that a police officer had shot Terence Crutcher, an unarmed black man whose car was having trouble. It's 2016 and somehow the fact that black people should not be murdered
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The Los Angeles riots were an eye opening account of the racial and socioeconomic tensions that were occurring within the citizens of L.A. It was a mixture of different factors for a long time that was adding strain to already fragile tensions. After the verdict was announced for the Simi Valley trial all these tensions that people were internalizing finally exploded. Anna Deavere Smith’s play Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992 does a great job at giving a verbatim account of many individuals own opini
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Extremely fascinating analysis of the 1992 Rodney King riots in LA using real quotes from interviews and court hearings. This piece touches on so many racial nuances and perspectives of the whole situation. It's amazing how relevant this play is still in our historical moment, and there are so many parallels to modern current events. I would recommend this play to anyone, but especially those who are unfamiliar with Rodney King and the 1992 riots. Smith is truly a pioneer of documentary theatre,
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This book is, essentially, a re-ordered transcript of Anna Deavere Smith's act. These pages include more of the interviews, and each interview is presented as a kind of lyric. While I appreciated that choice (to present the interviews as poetry), the transcripts don't have anywhere near the same impact as watching the interviewees being acted out. The documentary is particularly effective as a means for discussing race because of Smith's embodiment of various people...but this book seems most ef
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Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992 is a play written by Anna Deavere Smith telling the thoughts and feelings of people who resided in Los Angeles during the 1992 riots. Sparking the tension was the unjustified beating of Rodney King by four white cops which later led to an acquittal of all four policemen. The verdict is essentially what started the fire blazing riots that killed 53 people and caused over one billion dollars in property damage. The L.A. riots are considered the deadliest riots in the hi ...more
I pulled this book out of my stack of books that I had bought but never read (but did write papers on?) for an honors seminar class while I waited for all the trending books on racism that I rushed to purchase to arrive in the mail. This was a fairly quick read about the LA riots and was in a unique style - a collection of short interviews meant to be performed as a play. Although I sometimes struggled with that style it also allowed for so much more emotion and such a wide range of viewpoints a
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I would like to have given this book three and a half stars. On one hand I consider it a book well worth reading; my understanding of the time period has been broadened by its content especially the interviews. On the other hand, I found the vehicle of poetry (I am a retired English teacher who loves reading, teaching about, and teaching the writing of poetry) often difficult to follow- not as effective as an actual interview. I'm aware, of course, that this was written primarily to be performed
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Anna Deavere Smith’s Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992 is a work that explores the events surrounding the Rodney King trial and following LA Riots. Smith is a playwright who tries to capture the different voices in the community of Los Angeles. Twilight is a culmination of interviews that Smith had with key players of the events (those who were directly influenced). These interviews serve as the foundation for the dialogue that ends up creating this one person performance play. Each chapter of the pla
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This was such an interesting look at racial conflicts in 1992. I love the format that Anna Deavere Smith decided to use, with the different segments/snippets of people surround the event getting "interviewed." It reminded me a lot of the Laramie Project. I do think this is a play that should be taught to more students because it has so much to say about prejudice and hatred. The world is a messed up place, but by reading and understanding different perspectives, we are closer to peace.
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American history is known for certain signature triumphs. Anna Deavere Smith's Twilight is a crucial exploration of what is arguably American culture's signature tragedy: that whatever it is that one thinks makes the United States "great", that thing exists side by side and in constant tension with our ongoing failure to address social injustice, economic inequality, and the clash of race, power, and privilege.
For those who may not be familiar with Anna Deavere Smith's work, she has pioneered h ...more
For those who may not be familiar with Anna Deavere Smith's work, she has pioneered h ...more
"It was, I think, a media fest of making white people scared of the African American community, and, and nothing had changed." -- Paula Weinstein, movie producer (pg. 211)
"We can't live, our own house burning. This isn't somebody else's house, it's our own house. This is the city we are living in." -- Peter Sellars, director (pg. 200)
"I also said that all of this anger and despair was exacerbated by the excessive use of force by police departments, that the Justice Department has never ever use ...more
"We can't live, our own house burning. This isn't somebody else's house, it's our own house. This is the city we are living in." -- Peter Sellars, director (pg. 200)
"I also said that all of this anger and despair was exacerbated by the excessive use of force by police departments, that the Justice Department has never ever use ...more
Maxine Waters' interview/speech in this play is legendary and she's forever a badass. Smith does a good job choosing a variety of people to include for telling the story of the 1992 riots from multiple angles (journalist, storekeeper, juror, family members, etc). She writes a "realness" to their stories via dialect (Angela King's stutters and pauses), emotion (Paul Parker's outrage that people across the world only cared about Reginald Denny's beating because he's white), and stage directions (M
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This book like Fires In The Mirror was inspired by a racial tension. This was inspired by the Rodney King riot riot in Los Angeles. The riot was sparked by the brutally beaten of an African American man by four white policemen. This incidence like the Fires in the mirror incidence was associated with racism and many people stood up to let their voices to be heard.
Anna Smith interviewed many people from both sides and also people from other races and she turned made them into monologues. Her s ...more
Anna Smith interviewed many people from both sides and also people from other races and she turned made them into monologues. Her s ...more
This play is thought-provoking, which I think describes Anna Deavere Smith perfectly. The L.A. riots happened when I was only 11, and what I did have access to as a girl leaving in a suburb outside of Atlanta, Georgia was not both sides of the story. It was interesting to dive into these events as an adult and see the effects they had on the place I now call home.
I did find the play a bit hard to read because Smith created it from interviews she did with people who lived through the riots and th ...more
I did find the play a bit hard to read because Smith created it from interviews she did with people who lived through the riots and th ...more
In the introduction Smith talks about the role of theater in society, and specifically the role she tries to take with her theater in her American society. She says she is trying to get to the human quality behind the crisis and thereby trying to get to the process, the inner workings of society's problems. I don't remember much of the LA riots, I think I was too young, too consumed by my own, tangible, immediate issues to care about something so vague and far away in anything but the most basic
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Unlike the other Twilight, Anna Deavere Smith's Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992 is a powerful collection of stories from the 1992 L.A. riots. If you ever get a chance to see this amazing actress (who I first saw as Nancy McNally, the national security advisor on The West Wing) acting out the monologues published in this book, do! She inhabits these characters in a fascinating and compelling way. The text on its own, too--with Smith's added stage directions, etc--is striking and gives those of us who
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The Los Angeles race riots of 1992 erupted after a “not-guilty” verdict was announced for the police officers charged with beating a black motorist named Rodney King. Anna Deavere Smith interviewed people involved with and affected by the chaos in their city at the time. The script for Twilight: Los Angeles was created from the words of those interviewed, verbatim. The power of this form of documentary theatre lies in its ability to capture the far reaching effects of the incident and to allow t
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I hated this book. I think it's just because of Smith's redundant style of writing. Don't get me wrong, I love her acting and her ideas but there was simply too much repetition in this book. Not only were some scenes just slapped on in random places, but to make it worst the scene dealt with the same problem the book went over about five scenes ago. I feel like Smith just waiting for the morning of to put everything together and she took all her interviews with people and put them in a pile and
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Not to be confused with the currently popular Twilight (vampire) series, this is truly a work of art. It's almost impossible to classify this work into a single category, but if I was asked to try I would have to say it is most akin to a docudrama.
Smith's interviews are often wrenching, sometimes humorous, and always powerful. Her use of a poetic structure throughout the work adds to the underlying meaning. It treads on new ground (covering the LA riots) and does so through the eyes of those who ...more
Smith's interviews are often wrenching, sometimes humorous, and always powerful. Her use of a poetic structure throughout the work adds to the underlying meaning. It treads on new ground (covering the LA riots) and does so through the eyes of those who ...more
Set in Los Angeles after the riots in the early '90's, Twilight is a startlingly unabashed look at the event that led to a city almost burning. Written in the manner of a reality TV show; Twilight is like watching one half of an interview. This play is much more powerful when it is watched as opposed to when its read. The true charm of this piece is the fact that one actress plays every part and with a talented actress, the show really comes to life. Don't sell this work short--do yourself a fav
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The Rodney King arrest was such a turning point. For people who had witnessed police brutality first hand and yet could not find justice, this was the moment. There was video; there was no question that the police were violently and viciously brutal. So the verdict in the King trial was not just shocking, it was shattering. The justice so many expected to finally find was denied--the riots were tame compared to the explosion that could have come. This play--a document of various voices of people
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The first hand accounts of the LA Riots, transcribed in a faithful manner by Smith and translated to the stage are still fascinating in book form. Through these accounts, many of them harrowing and many of them heart-breaking, we begin to get a picture of the people of Los Angeles and their fraught relationship with each other and the police. Many of these insights are distressingly relevant today, over twenty years later. If the book suffers from anything, it's a sense that there are many many
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Twilight: Los Angeles is another book by Anna Deavere Smith. Similar to Fire in the Mirror, Anna Smith uses interviews as her source to portray the beating of a man named, Rodney King. Anna Smith also uses people of all perspective to portray this event. Since this event was video type, the police, which is the perpetrator was clearly shown.
This book is fine, I like Fire in the Mirror more because it is more back and forth between the Jewish and Black community and it is very interesting in com ...more
This book is fine, I like Fire in the Mirror more because it is more back and forth between the Jewish and Black community and it is very interesting in com ...more
Compared to Fire in the Mirrors by Anna Deavere Smith, I enjoyed this book better because it was easier to follow. This book describes what happened in Los Angeles in 1992 and the people who were affected were interviewed. The moments of the incident is specific and Smith provided the occupation of each interviewee. In Fire in the Mirrors, the Jews supported the Jews while the Blacks helped the Blacks. All of them just complained how they suffered from discrmination. I dislike books that are too
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Re-reading for class, but I was happy to return to this text. It's a lot more nuanced than I remember. Having lived in LA, it also impacted me a bit more viscerally than it did the first time I read it. I lived in K-Town, I worked with Watts Village Theater Company in South Central, I've been on the West Side and shopped at the Beverly Center (crazy as that mall is) - so the places are real to me, which made the interviewees that much more real as well. Thanks Anna. You're not perfect, but you d
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3.5 stars, rounded up to 4. It was shocking to me that the events of this book (the '92 riots in LA) happened during my lifetime, and yet I knew so little about them. The form is unique - Smith interviewed a bunch of people and used their words verbatim in short poem-like monologues. Surprisingly, the multitude of voices is not confusing, rather she succeeds in painting a very broad and diverse picture of the time and place. Sometimes, however, I needed a bit more context (usually character-rela
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This book was the first-year summer reading book for Moravian this year and what a fantastic choice! It is an impressively unorthodox choice in that it isn't a classic and it isn't new but it is extremely timely. I love that a school with Moravian's emphasis on the arts would choose a theatrical piece that ties so well to one of the most important issues currently making headlines. I enjoyed reading it and regret I was not able to participate in a dialogue with students about it but I applaud th
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Anna Deavere Smith (born September 18, 1950) is an American actress, playwright, and professor. She is currently the artist in residence at the Center for American Progress. Smith is widely known for her roles as National Security Advisor Nancy McNally in The West Wing and as Hospital Administrator Gloria Akalitus in the Showtime series Nurse Jackie. She is a recipient of The Dorothy and Lillian G
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“He was trying to get me to come inside
and away from the scene,
but I said, "No."
I said, "We have to stay here
and watch
because this is wrong.”
—
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and away from the scene,
but I said, "No."
I said, "We have to stay here
and watch
because this is wrong.”
“I said, “Los Angeles burned but Los Angeles is but one city experiencing this kind of hopelessness and despair,” I said, “and we need a job program with stipends …” I said, “These young people really, ya know, are not in anybody’s statistics or data. They’ve been dropped off of everybody’s agenda. They live from grandmama to mama to girlfriend.” I said, “We now got young people who are twenty, twenty-one, twenty-two years old who have never worked a day of their lives.” I said, “These are the young people in our streets and they are angry and they are frustrated.”
—
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