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Rewriting South Philly High

A Point Breeze teen helped his school to turn racially-charged events into a moving multimedia performance.

By Jess Fuerst
Add Comment Add Comment | Comments: 2 | Posted Dec. 8, 2011

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In 2009, South Philadelphia High School was making headlines. But, in that year, the stories were not very flattering.

The educational facility, 2101 S. Broad St., was in the midst of racial controversy, where violence was erupting among students. Last year, current students decided to take that ignorance and turn it into art.

“We didn’t just start writing stuff. We were given a paper with questions about ourself and our school. We were filling out questions and they turned it into a piece, a master work,” Lamar Winstead, of 23rd and Reed streets, said.

He is one of about 24 students from South Philly High who wrote, directed and produced “We Write South Philly High.”

The collaboration of the school, Philadelphia Young Playwrights, South Philadelphia High School Alumni Association, Asian Arts Initiative, The Wilma Theater and 1812 Productions resulted in a multimedia show responding to the events that unfolded at the school two years ago and its process of mov- ing forward to repair its image.

“They asked me questions like ‘What was your experience at the school?,’ ‘Were you there when the incident happened?’, about the [Asian-American students], ‘Did you like the school throughout the years you have been in it?’” Winstead said of the production process.

The initial collection of stories from students and school officials about the ’09 incident, which was believed to be between Asian-American and African-American students, began in ’10, but Winstead was not on board from the beginning.

“The acting groups that came to school always came to our last period class. At first I didn’t want to be in it, but they kept digging me, asking me if I wanted to be in it,” Winstead, 17, said. “They didn’t know if I act or not, they just kept asking me.”

Winstead decided he’d give it a go and set to work with the project coordinators bringing together the multi-faceted story.

“I started reading the pieces out loud and [they taught us] how to show feeling through body language and how loud you speak and stuff,” he said. “The first performance, I was, I actually was really nervous. A lot people didn’t come like they did now. The first performance was in like June and the people who came to the Wilma Theater were mostly family.”

The June 7 premiere was well-received, which gave rise to the recent four-day run of additional performances. In addition, since the premiere, South Philly High Principal Otis D. Hackney III, along with the participating theaters, received a Barrymore Award for theater education for the project that involved more than 50 students over three semesters. For Winstead, his performance received high marks as well.

“[My mother] didn’t know I was doing the acting stuff. I never acted before, she hadn’t asked me to do anything, act a scene or nothing. So she was actually shocked. She said ‘I did not know Lamar could act like that,’” Winstead said. “When I got on stage, it was easy for me. It’s really fun now.”

Before he came to Southern, Winstead went to Norris S. Barratt School, formerly at 1599 Wharton St. When the ’09 incidents occurred at Southern, he was a freshman.

“I wasn’t at school then,” he said about the day of the incident.

However, he remembers the tension at the school during that time.

“It was crazy. Because, I don’t know, people, people didn’t really get along. I don’t why or what for — I don’t got nothing to do with that,” Winstead said. “It was cool for me. I was getting along with people.”

Winstead, along with many other students, steered clear of the violence. School officials met the problem head on and began making changes.

“It’s a big improvement,” Winstead said of the school’s current climate. “They installed more cameras, [added] more police, stuff like that.”

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1. Anonymous said... on Dec 8, 2011 at 09:33AM

“It's a wonderful thing to see people, adults and students alike, take a tense situation and turn it into art, an opportunity for understanding, and create a scene for change. Great job, Winstead and South Philly High.”

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2. Rockyeveryman said... on Dec 8, 2011 at 01:50PM

“I greatly enjoyed the performance last week at the Wilma. It was an impressive production, including highlights of the history of the school, with comments from faculty and staff and introducing prominent alumni and their accomplishments. Everyone involved has every right to be proud. It reveals the greatness of South Philadelphia High School in the past and now the present. May this be the beginning of a bright new future for this venerable, yet renewed, school. Thanks to all involved. Be well.
Joe McGrory, life long resident of South Philadelphia”

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