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American Voices-Craig Marberry: When black women speak truth, their voices sing. Their songs are as colorful as peacock feathers, as comical as bouncing brims, and as pointed as a pearl hatpin. I always believed that the oral histories I gathered for the book Crowns would work on the stage. These hat queens, I realized, were not really celebrating their singular headgear. They were reflecting on love and loss and, most importantly, sisterhood. Come Sunday morning, when I gaze at fanciful church hats (whether in admiration or disbelief) I hear a spirited chorus. Some of those songs, through the gift of this musical, have found a cozy home in the American Theater. And for that I am eternally grateful.
An award-winning writer, Craig Marberry has written CROWNS: Portraits of Black Women in Church Hats and CUTTIN’ UP: Wit and Wisdom from Black Barber Shops, both of which have been adapted into stage plays and presented at Arena Stage.
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hit musical returns
by Regina Taylor
adapted from the book by Michael Cunningham and Craig Marberry
March 27 through April 26, 2009
at the Lincoln Theatre
Hold onto your hat—one of our most popular musicals returns with a new production of Crowns. Come see the crowns worn by the “hat queens” of the South—women whose storied lives are woven into the straw, silk, wool and lace that adorn their heads.

Arena Stage Crowns Zurin Villanueva As New Yolanda >
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With soulful, spiritual and joyful music, they celebrate family and faith, love and loss, seeking (and finding) one’s true identity. Based on the acclaimed book by photographer Michael Cunningham and journalist Craig Marberry, Crowns captures the thrill of self-expression with an intimate look at six women’s lives. Winner of four Helen Hayes Awards, including Best Resident Musical, Crowns is a series of musical portraits that delighted Washington audiences. See it again—or for the first time—but be prepared for the “hattitudes” that will make you laugh and the music that will let your spirit soar.
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