During the 1930s, African American theatre artists found work in the WPA Federal Theatre Project’s segregated Negro Units. Trained in every aspect of theatrical production, this vital labour force emerged when the Federal Theatre Project was disbanded in 1939. The American Negro Theatre of Harlem in 1940 fostered a generation of black actors and dramatists including Sidney Poitier, Alice Childress, and Ruby Dee. Also important was Harlem’s Club Baron, during the early 1950s. With its premier in 1959 at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre in New York City, Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun became the first drama by an ...(100 of 31765 words)