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Watch the premiere of the new Hopewell Earthworks - Stories Written On The Land video series.

Play about Tamir Rice returns to Cleveland stage to further dialogue

Tamir Rice Memorial plaque
Ygal Kaufman
/
Ideastream Public Media
Tamir Rice was just 12 when he was shot and killed by Cleveland police. This memorial at Cudell Recreation Center was granted landmark status last month.

When 12-year-old Tamir Rice was shot and killed by Cleveland police in 2014, it touched off a national conversation about race, violence and accountability. It also led to the 2016 play 鈥淥bjectively/Reasonable: A Community Response to the Shooting of Tamir Rice.鈥 A reimagined production aims to continue the conversation with a performance Saturday at .

鈥淚 am hoping that the conversation makes folks want to take some type of action,鈥 said Tamir鈥檚 mother, Samaria. 鈥淗aving the hard conversations with the Republican Party or who's ever running the country. When you bring it to the arts, it's a whole different conversation. And it needs to be happening.鈥

The play premiered two years after Rice was shot and killed by Cleveland police while playing with a toy gun at Cudell Recreation Center on the West Side. Officers saw a gun, which was missing the orange tip indicating it was a toy, and thought it was real. Their response was ruled by the Justice Department 鈥,鈥 which is where the play got its name.

Originally commissioned by the company Playwrights鈥 Local, both productions have been directed by Terrence Spivey. The play was shaped by interviews with community members.

鈥淚t was like a combustion. We didn't even think it was going to do anything, because when you do a movie about that you rarely get that many people coming in to see it. But the people came in. It was such a call for action,鈥 he said.

even reached out, making the play the centerpiece for a panel discussion on race. Now Spivey has updated the piece for the new production.

In 2016, Playwrights Local commissioned the original piece about the death of Tamir Rice.
Ideastream Public Media
In 2016, Playwrights Local commissioned the original piece about the death of Tamir Rice.

鈥淚 always wanted to go back to the Black Arts movement of the 鈥70s,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was unflinching.鈥

The new version has less movement and more of the actors reading on stage, embodying different social and legal views of what happened.

鈥淭hey're breaking the fourth wall and talking to the audience,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou're going to see other names and faces up there that have been brutally battered and beaten way after Tamir popping up on that screen.鈥

One of the performers is veteran film and television actress Phyllis Yvonne Stickney. She said Rice鈥檚 death and the aftermath are a story that needs to be experienced by a wider audience.

"There's so much that happened so fast in our lives and in time now that we don't often take that moment, take that breath, to remember and say, 'Hey, this is real, this is what happened to a family and to us, you know, vicariously,鈥欌 she said.

Stickney also said she hopes the new version can be replicated by some of the two dozen organizations that make up the .

When the original play premiered, producers weren鈥檛 sure how Tamir鈥檚 mother might react, given that they try to show different facets of the debate surrounding her son鈥檚 death. However, Samaria Rice has been supportive 鈥 then and now.

鈥淚'm just hoping that people will understand how I'm building Tamir's legacy,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 believe it's much needed in the community to show resilience and to keep our voice elevated. Northeast Ohio needs to be uncomfortable. It's nothing comfortable about a 12-year-old being murdered, violated of their human rights and civil rights.鈥

Last month, Rice finally got the city to bestow landmark status on a butterfly-shaped memorial garden she created at Cudell. She鈥檚 also been working since 2018 to establish a youth center that will mentor kids in the things Tamir loved: music, art, sports and theater.

Kabir Bhatia is a senior reporter for Ideastream Public Media's arts & culture team.