Short plays from Black playwrights take center stage during the Fade To Black Reading Series. Credit: Photo by Rudy Mui

S. Denise Oโ€™Neal, playwright and executive director of Shabach Enterprise, says a short play is not unlike a particularly captivating television ad.

โ€œItโ€™s like a commercial where you capture the audience and then you solve the problem in a very short period of time,โ€ says Oโ€™Neal.

You can catch eight ten-minute plays โ€“ all from Black playwrights โ€“ when Shabach Enterprise presents the Fade To Black Reading Series this January at The MATCH. The series, now in its seventh season, is an offshoot of their annual Fade To Black Play Festival, which occurs every summer.

According to Oโ€™Neal, the โ€œoverflow of amazing playsโ€ submitted for the Fade to Black Play Festival led to the creation of the reading series. So now, from each yearโ€™s submission call โ€“ which generates 150 to 200 scripts โ€“ ten plays are chosen for the June festival and another eight to ten for Januaryโ€™s reading series.

The plays selected for this yearโ€™s reading series include a ghostly encounter with the civil rights struggle in Toma Lynn Smithโ€™s โ€œVoting While Negro,โ€ Krystle Dellihueโ€™s Arthur Ashe-inspired โ€œMatch Point,โ€ which touches on a time before the tennis great revealed his AIDS diagnosis to the public; and Dr. Carlton Moletteโ€™s โ€œIโ€™m Here to Pick Up Monica,โ€ about a grandfather who meets some resistance trying to pick up his grandchild from school.

โ€œThis play makes it clear that the secretary is racially motivated, and thatโ€™s why she doesnโ€™t want to bring the child out,โ€ says Oโ€™Neal. โ€œShe really is hesitant to do it because of the manโ€™s race.โ€

The series will also feature works from Cris Eli Blak, Gregory S. Carr and Velvia Keithley, as well as a first-time effort from Nana Konadu Cann, titled โ€œWash and Go,โ€ and returning playwright Kimberly Ridgewayโ€™s โ€œDouble Standard,โ€ in which a recent lover confronts a woman while sheโ€™s on a date with another man โ€“ or so it seems.

In Oโ€™Nealโ€™s view, the plays featured in Juneโ€™s performance series โ€œcome aliveโ€ with the addition of scenery, costumes and makeup. A play selected for the reading series, however, doesnโ€™t necessarily benefit from โ€œany extra support.โ€

Eight short plays by Black playwrights have been selected for the Fade To Black Reading Series. Credit: Photo by Rudy Mui

โ€œItโ€™s good enough for the audience to envision it without all of the scenery and costumes,โ€ says Oโ€™Neal. โ€œIt stands on its own two feet.โ€

Though the scripts stand on their own, the reading series benefits playwrights who may need to hear their play so it can be further developed and workshopped.

โ€œSome of the plays do need development, but theyโ€™re good enough to have made the cut,โ€ says Oโ€™Neal. โ€œWe try our best to give the playwright as much support as we can because we want to make sure their rendering on stage is the best it can be. For African-American playwrights, especially independent ones, they just have not had that [support] as a mainstay.โ€

In addition to Oโ€™Neal sharing advice and pointers with the playwrights, they are paired with a director to ensure that when the play hits the stage, itโ€™s the best it can possibly be. Because many Black playwrights have to produce their own work, Oโ€™Neal says they often lack such a community of support.

โ€œThey donโ€™t have the people in the mainstream theaters that believe enough in their product to produce it. They may have a situation where the theater doesnโ€™t quite understand the culture, or that theater โ€“ probably more than not โ€“ does not feel like their play will bring in enough patrons to see the work,โ€ explains Oโ€™Neal. โ€œSo, what we have seen and tried to help correct is the ability for the playwright to be seen in the best light so that no one can say we canโ€™t find any Black playwrights.โ€

Oโ€™Neal adds, โ€œWe bring you ten of them each time we do a festival. Weโ€™ll bring you [another] eight for the reading series this year.โ€

Shabach Enterprise is on the verge of bringing even more African-American artistry to Houston, as the organization announced in November the inaugural Fade To Black Arts Festival scheduled for June 8 to 14, 2025.

The Fade To Black Reading Series returns for its seventh season. Credit: Photo by Rudy Mui

Oโ€™Neal says she started pushing the concept of a biennial, city-wide festival back in 2022, right as Fade to Black concluded their tenth season.

โ€œI was at a crossroads personally, as I always am,โ€ says Oโ€™Neal with a laugh. โ€œI was like, โ€˜Weโ€™ve got to do more. What do we do? I want to leave a legacy.โ€™โ€

Following that yearโ€™s National Black Theatre Festival in North Carolina, Oโ€™Neal lamented the fact that nothing like it exists in Texas; in fact, thereโ€™s nothing like it in the entire southern region of the United States. Inspired, Oโ€™Neal figured the state of Texas, and Houston specifically, โ€œwould be the perfect place to start a great arts festival.โ€

โ€œI said, just like starting the Fade to Black Festival, itโ€™s up to me,โ€ says Oโ€™Neal.

Oโ€™Neal began reaching out to the cityโ€™s arts organizations with a proposition: Partner with me, and we will introduce a different demographic of audience members to your organization.

โ€œI said, โ€˜All you have to do is commit to creating an African-American performance. It can be music, film, poetry, theater, whatever you want to do,โ€™โ€ recalls Oโ€™Neal. โ€œThey jumped immediately. It was not even a thought. It was an easy ask.โ€

Though their partner list is still growing, the Alley Theatre, The Ensemble Theatre, Stages, Main Street Theater, Houston Ebony Opera, Houston Grand Opera and Houston Symphony are already on board โ€“ to name a few. Even The Hobby Center for the Performing Arts, which Oโ€™Neal says she didnโ€™t initially contact because itโ€™s a rental facility, offered to sponsor the festivalโ€™s kickoff celebration.

โ€œJust everybody doing a little bit here and there will create this amazing week,โ€ says Oโ€™Neal.

Though Oโ€™Neal says that almost everyone sheโ€™s spoken to about the festival has been excited, โ€œthereโ€™s always that little one percent that needs it to be proven successful first.โ€

โ€œI think that they speak and unknowingly project their fears, project their reservations, because they donโ€™t know of the journeyโ€ฆThey donโ€™t know that weโ€™ve been working on it since 2022,โ€ says Oโ€™Neal. โ€œ[But] we have stayed in a smaller lane for the last 11 years. When is it time to do something big?โ€

Something big is undeniable on the way but, in the meantime, the focus is on the Fade To Black Reading Series. Like the play festival and soon-to-come arts festival, Oโ€™Neal says the reading series offers all Houstonians a unique opportunity.

โ€œThe playwrights are writing about the human experience,โ€ says Oโ€™Neal. โ€œItโ€™s a cool thing because it allows [audiences] an opportunity to tap into African-American culture and experience how well these writers write.โ€

The Fade To Black Reading Series will be performed at 8 p.m. Friday, January 5; 8 p.m. Saturday, January 6, with an artist Q&A immediately following the performance; and 3 p.m. Sunday, January 7, at The MATCH, 3400 Main. (A pay-what-you-can, invited dress rehearsal is also scheduled for 8 p.m. Thursday, January 4.) For more information, visit fadetoblackfest.com. $30-$40.

Natalie de la Garza is a contributing writer who adores all things pop culture and longs to know everything there is to know about the Houston arts and culture scene.