Ithaca College News
January 18, 1999 Volume 21, No. 8

Ithaca College

Racial Awareness Series

Presentation to Depict 'Meeting' between Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X

Malcolm X and the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. were contemporaries fighting for the same cause, yet they never met. That will change, in a way, in a presentation at Ithaca College on Thursday, January 21. The Meeting, a fictional account of a meeting between the two, will be staged at 7:00 p.m. in the Emerson Suites, Phillips Hall. The play is free and open to the public.

Written by Jeff Stetson, The Meeting is loosely organized around three arm-wrestling matches between King and Malcolm X—a metaphor for the ideological struggle between the passive resistance emphasized by the former and the militancy championed by the latter. Before they could ever meet in real life, Malcolm X was gunned down, in 1965; King suffered the same fate in 1968. The play received a Louis B. Mayer Award and eight NAACP Theatre Awards and has been staged throughout the United States and Europe.

The Meeting is being presented as part of Ithaca College’s Racial Awareness Series. The series, which opened last October with a lecture by Latina actor and writer Sonia Manzano, is designed to promote an appreciation of multiculturalism, says Keeon Gregory, director of the Office of Multicultural Affairs. It will conclude in April with a talk by Jeff Yang, founding publisher of A, the largest publication for English-speaking Asians in the United States.

 

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