Oh, there is nothing like an old spiritual or traditional when it is sung with deep feeling.
It can break your heart, soothe your soul and open your eyes.
Thatâs what happens when To-Ree-Nee Wolf sings in Invisible Theatreâs production of âBlack Pearl Sings!â
Music, itâs ability to connect us with the past, express what words canât, elevate us, is at the heart of this story about Pearl and the music that shaped her life. And itâs been a hard life; her grandparents were slaves. She was dirt poor. The love of her life died of cancer. Then the man she lived with clearly did something untoward with her 12-year-old daughter, so she took a knife and castrated him.
That last mishap landed her in prison. Which is where Susannah (Katherine Byrnes), a musicologist for the Library of Congress, discovers her. Susannah is looking for old, undiscovered traditional songs to preserve them and possibly bring her the fame she wants in order to be the first female professor at Harvard. And thereâs a tinge of revenge in there, too: She once uncovered some long-lost music and a male colleague took all the credit for it.
Pearl is willing to help her only if Susannah is willing to help her locate her now 22-year-old daughter.
The Frank Higgins play at times comes off as a lecture. And itâs a stretch to pull parallels between Susannahâs struggles as a woman who fights to get the respect she deserves in a male-dominated world and the great injustices that have framed Pearlâs life.
But throw all that aside and listen. Wolf sings the bulk of the songs, most done a capella, and each note reveals unfathomable grief or glorious joy or profound belief. Much of that is inherent in the songs, such as âHard Times in Old Virginiaâ and âDo Lord Remember Me.â But to hear Wolf sing them is an incredibly moving experience.
She was so present, so completely immersed in the character, that there was never any doubt: That was Pearl on stage, not some actor portraying her.
In contrast, Susannah is a bit strident and focused to a fault. It was a difficult character to portray. Still, Byrnes was able to humanize her and give her a life the script seemed to have denied her.
Susan Claassen directed this production with an eye toward allowing the actors the space they needed to drive the story home. As a result âBlack Pearl Sings!â has the time to seep into our hearts. And it does just that.
As the audience prepared to leave the theater, you could hear pockets of people singing âThis Little Light of Mine,â one of the better-known songs in the show. It was clear the music and its message had taken hold.
Invisible Theatre lets âBlack Pearl Sings!â shine. Well done. Very well done.



