e-Books by Addena Sumter-Freitag
Back In The Days
Stay Black & Die
In Back in the Days, the seventh-generation African Canadian Addena Sumter-Freitag takes us on a memorably intimate journey, relating her experiences growing up as a black girl in Winnipeg’s North End in the 1950's and 1960's. Deeply sorrowful at times and sharply acerbic at others, Sumter-Freitag’s will undoubtedly become one of the most prominent poetic voices of Canada’s Black community. Her emotional sincerity is little short of breathtaking. Playwright, performance artist, and poet, Sumter-Freitag brings her poems to life by fusing the poetically suggestive with the brutally honest and the brazenly humorous with the unspeakably tragic. - Review by Atef Laouyene
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Stay Black & Die is a story that reveals the real deal about growing up as a little black girl in the North End of Winnipeg in the 1950's and 60's. Growing up is difficult and confusing for the sweet and observant Penny as she struggles to find the strength to survive the cruelty of her family and the outside world. A story set in Canada, yet it echoes the experience of racialized minorities throughout the world. Funny, moving, unsettling and beautiful.
E-Book editions of Back in the Days are available at these vendors:
From Addena: The transition of Stay Black & Die from a play to a book.
The original script for Stay Black & Die was very different from the present book. It was a script written from the letters I’d taped to my best friend, Beverly. They started with my anger and frustration at being an actress in a non colour-blind society. I taped my rants about being from a seventh-generation Canadian family and yet not being able to be hired to play the part of a Canadian woman whose husband had gone to war, or a woman in a Canadian neighbourhood—any neighbourhood.
I had gone to theatre school for four years, won two full scholarships to the Banff School of Fine Arts, and I knew I was a fine actor. I had worked for many years in theatre, commercials, and film, yet I had only been cast as a background player: as a maid, or as a hooker. I figured I had paid my dues. There were a few directors who did not typecast, but basically I felt like I was a kid again trying to make the other kids let me play. I gave up. I turned my back on theatre because it had turned its back on me. I quit.
At first the tapes I made were just about present happenings: I had left Canada because I had married a Black American (marriage number two), an Air-force man (I married him for all the wrong reasons, but there I go again—that’s another story), and I moved briefly to Ohio only to leave after a tragic episode that resulted in my running down the highway to escape (that’s another story; actually, it’s a poem).
The first tapes were stories about what I was thinking, and what was going on around me, but then something in those stories would spark a memory from the past—I’m a storyteller from a long line of storytellers—and soon I couldn’t help telling stories about what I remembered or had heard about my family’s past. Soon my tapes began to be stories about my mother, and my family, and my history. Every day I’d go to the post office and mail a tape to Beverly in Winnipeg. And when that tape was sent off, I’d start another. I didn’t know this at the time, but Beverly saved them all, and years later she gave them back to me. I transcribed them, and that is how Stay Black & Die evolved. My stories about growing up in Winnipeg’s North End during the 1950s and ’60s became a script about Penny’s growing up.
The play was conceived in hurt and anger, but it ended up being birthed in joy at the memory of our lives, and love, and hope.
Books in Print by Addena Sumter-Freitag
Stay Black & Die
Stay Black & Die is a funny and provocative story about growing up Black in Winnipeg’s North End during the 1950’s and 60’s.
Back In The Days
Back in the Days is a collection of stories and poetry that also provides a brief outline of Addena's family history.