Finding a niche in black theater: producers specialize in adapting black novels into stage plays.Fed up with the lack of quality parts available to black actors in Hollywood, self-described "starving actor" and Houston native Je'Caryous Johnson left Tinseltown behind and instead decided to create an outlet for African Americans African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. to acquire good roles. Along with his uncle, Gary Guidry, who left a stable job as a senior accountant for an oil and gas company, the two tapped into their creative passions to start I'm Ready I'm Ready is the double platinum second release from R&B singer Tevin Campbell. I'm Ready yielded the biggest R&B hit of his career the #1 R&B smash "Can We Talk", and produce 3 more successful hits in "I'm Ready", "Always In My Heart" and "Don't Say Goodbye Girl". Productions Inc., a now 7-year-old theater, film, and music production company that specializes in adapting black novels into stage plays and films. From its days as a fledgling operation, I'm Beady bead·y adj. bead·i·er, bead·i·est 1. Small, round, and shiny: beady eyes. 2. Decorated or covered with beads. Productions has built its reputation around quality performances and turned itself into a multimillion-dollar enterprise that tours the country. In 2000, I'm Beady Productions took Heaven's Child: The Legacy of Emmett Till Emmett Louis "Bobo" Till (July 25 1941 – August 28 1955) was a fourteen year old African-American boy from Chicago, Illinois brutally murdered [1] in Money, Mississippi, a small town in the state's Delta region. on the road from Houston to Chicago. Heaven's Child is the story of 14-year-old Emmett Till, a black teen from Chicago, who, when visiting family in Mississippi in 1955, was brutally maimed maim tr.v. maimed, maim·ing, maims 1. To disable or disfigure, usually by depriving of the use of a limb or other part of the body. See Synonyms at batter1. 2. and murdered for allegedly whistling at a white woman. Till's death helped mobilize the civil rights movement. It cost $380,000 to create and produce the show and with no experience in national productions and no financial backing from any major investors, Johnson and Guidry turned to their family. "Our family cultivated our talent," says Johnson, 28, who serves as chairman and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. of I'm Ready Productions. After maxing out their oval credit cards, borrowing money from family members who tapped 401(k) accounts and other retirement plans, and withdrawing funds from their personal savings accounts Savings Account A deposit account intended for funds that are expected to stay in for the short term. A savings account offers lower returns than the market rates. Notes: , the co-founders raised $400,000 for the production. "It was definitely a leap of faith," says Guidry, the 33-year-old Houston native who serves as president and COO of I'm Ready. Heaven's Child turned out to be a critically acclaimed hit but a box office miss. The show only grossed $60,000 and Johnson and Guidry were left to face their family and decide the future of I'm Ready Productions. Despite the financial failure, Johnson and Guidry still managed to capitalize on Cap´i`tal`ize on` v. t. 1. To turn (an opportunity) to one's advantage; to take advantage of (a situation); to profit from; as, to capitalize on an opponent's mistakes s>. the experience. The play itself gained critical praise in the Chicago Defender The Chicago Defender was the United States’ largest and most influential black weekly newspaper by the beginning of World War I.[1] The Defender was founded on May 5, 1905 by Robert S. and other local media outlets, as well as from the public. Also, through word of mouth from local promoters who saw the show, investors from all over the country started to take notice of the company. Today, the Houston-based I'm Beady employs 32 people, posted $6.5 million in revenues in 2004, and expects to earn $15 million this year. I'm Beady has found a niche in changing African American novels into plays, and produced three more national shows: 2002's Men Cry in the Dark, which featured Richard Roundtree; followed by The Maintenance Man in 2003, with leading man Billy Dee Williams; and their latest production, Friends and Lovers, based on Eric Jerome Dickey's best-selling novel, stars Leon, Miguel A. Nunez Jr., and Monica Calhoun. The company is currently in negotiations with a major studio distributor for the production and release of a feature film of Friends and Lovers. The fall theater schedule is available at www.imreadyproductions.com. I'm Ready Productions Inc.; P.O. Box 10254, Houston, TX 77206; 713-692-8575; www.imreadyproductions.com |
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