‘Plumshuga’ Play Celebrating Life of Legendary Dancer Lauren Anderson to Bow at Stages

‘Plumshuga’ Play Celebrating Life of Legendary Dancer Lauren Anderson to Bow at Stages

DeQuina Moore as Poet Lauren in Plumshuga (Photo by Amitava Sarkar)

HOUSTON CITYBOOK WASN'T the first to describe Houston ballet dancer Lauren Anderson as a legend, as we did in 2018, nor shall we be the last. And now her compelling story — a rise and fall and rise again — is a highly anticipated new show at Stages.


It’s a tale worth telling. At age seven, Anderson began training at Houston Ballet’s Ben Stevenson Academy and joined the company in 1983. In 1990, Anderson became the first African-American Principal dancer of a major ballet house in the United States, winning over audiences with her breathtaking stage presence and powerful technique as she danced the lead roles in such beloved classics as Cinderella and Swan Lake.

Throughout the 1990s, Anderson continued to break ground as a pioneering, internationally renowned Black artist in a performance field choreographer Trey McIntyre has described as “being stuck in another time period.” But at the height of her fame, the pressure of being a legend became too much, and Anderson began a struggle with drug and alcohol addiction, a struggle she would overcome, but which nearly derailed her career. Much like a ballet, Anderson’s story is an archetypal journey of a singular individual.

In 2019, Houston poet and librettist Deborah D.E.E.P. Mouton contacted Anderson to see if she might allow Mouton to tell that story. Three years later, their friendship and collaboration have borne fruit as Plumshuga: The Rise of Lauren Anderson, a cross-disciplinary theatrical work written by Mouton and co-directed by Mouton and Eboni Bell Darcy, comes to life Stages. The unique show brings Anderson’s story to life for audiences both familiar with and new to her accomplishments. Plumshuga begins previews on Oct. 7, premieres on Oct. 15, and runs through Nov. 13.

You would think Mouton, Houston’s third Black poet laureate — whose resume includes collaborations with the Houston Grand Opera, and onstage presence in competitive poetry slams is formidable — would be the ideal person to tell Anderson’s story. But surprisingly, Mouton was a bit intimidated by the prospect.

“I was petrified,” laughs Mouton when asked about her first meeting with Anderson. Her nerves were eased when Anderson expressed how surprised and flattered she was to hear Mouton wanted to write about her life. “She actually knew my work and was really kind of excited about it!”

They decided Anderson’s story would be told in a stage production, incorporate poetry, and avoid the tropes of biographic monologues. “It wasn’t going to be a documentary of her life in dance,” says Mouton.

Nevertheless, Plumshuga features members of the Houston Ballet dancing to original choreography by Harrison Guy and Stanton Welch. All of the named roles in the production, except for “Lauren,” who is played by Dequina Moore, are performed by dancers, including one with the chilling moniker, “Addiction.” “It gave us a great palette to show you all the places that addiction may have entered Lauren’s life, or may have lingered where we wouldn’t imagine it did,” says Mouton of having a dancer embody the condition of addiction.

“It was always there,” says Mouton, “and it’s going to be something she wrestles with for the rest of her life. But she’s determined to keep wrestling.”

Lauren Anderson and DeQuina Moore (Photo by Claire McAdams)

For a show so steeped in Houston history and culture, and the product of some of the finest talent the city has to offer, it may be hard to imagine how Plumshuga would translate before audiences outside of Texas. Mouton has no worries about that. “I hope it travels! I hope it makes it to Broadway!” says Mouton, who believes it’s time for theater to tell stories beyond the sidewalks of New York. “I hope it opens the door widely for people to see that Houston is equal in its ability to celebrate and create excellent art. There are brilliant stories here, and wonderful talents that are able to tell them.”

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