ENTERTAINMENT
O CARIB IB IBB B BB I B BBEAN EAN EA AN A E N LI LIF IF L F LIFEN EN ENE N NE E E NEWS WS. WS S S. W . CO COM OM O C M M/EN / E N TER TE ER E T R TAI A TA AI NME N N
Delcita chewing cane. Husband Patchie
Caribbean L BQ ife, Oct. 11-17, 2019 61
By Nelson A. King
Jamaica’s and the Caribbean’s
foremost female playwright, actress
and comedienne, Andrea Wright,
renowned by her stage name, “Delcita,”
is bringing her latest theatrical
production, “Honeymoon,” to
Richard Green Campus School, 3710
Barnes Ave., Bronx, on Saturday, Oct.
19 at 8:00 pm, according to the
Brooklyn-based Everybody’s magazine.
Herman Hall, the Grenadianborn
publisher of Everybody’s, said
on Tuesday that Delcita and Patchie
(Jamaine Lucas) are the leading
characters in “Honeymoon.”
Other cast members are Gertrude
Campbell-Fraser, Patrick Smith,
Daindra Harrison and Selena Brown.
Technical Director, Dreanna Wiliams,
is one of several young women
managing the performing arts in
Jamaica, Hall said.
“In Jamaica and overseas, patrons
of Jamaican brand theater and comedy
go in droves to see Delcita,” Everybody’s
says.
It says Delcita has two rotten teeth,
but she is not embarrassed.
“She laughs loudly, smiles radiantly
and always happy-go-lucky, except
when someone annoys her,” the magazine
says. “Thanks to cutting edge
dentistry, Delcita’s two rotten teeth
are no longer easily spotted; they are
polished, but an observant person
will realize Delcita once had decaying
teeth.”
The magazine says Delcita Coldwater
was once very dark-skinned.
Continued on Page 62
Book cover of “Kid Activists” by
Robin Stevenson.
“Kid Activists” by Robin Stevenson,
illustrations by Allison Steinfeld
c.2019, Quirk Books
$13.95 / $15.95 Canada
224 pages
By Terri Schlichenmeyer
Someday, this world will be yours.
You and other kids like you will be in
charge of ensuring that the water’s clean,
the air’s breathable, the land is healthy,
and people are safe. Yeah, you might think
you’re just a kid now but as you’ll see in
Continued on Page 62
By George Alleyne
An exhibition of billboards, video
recordings, an interactive virtual museum
and a number of other paraphernalia
have triggered emotions of visitors
and are likely to do so in many others
who attend this display at the Barbados
Museum and Historical Society
(BMHS).
Titled ‘Enigma of Arrival’, taken from
the name of a book written by, VS Naipaul,
someone who went to England on
scholarship and settled there during
the time of the Windrush Generation
arrivals.
The ‘Windrush Generation’ comprises
mainly thousands of Barbadians,
Jamaicans, and persons of Trinidad and
Tobago who responded to a British
Continued on Page 62
FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT, GO TO CARIBBEANLIFENEWS.COM/ENTERTAINMENT
Kids take
a stand
Immigration
exhibition
LOVE
SAGA
‘Honeymoon’ comes to the Bronx
/ENTERTAINMENT