Akin Babatunde heads the cast as Blind Lemon Jefferson. He is joined onstage by Tony Award winner Lillias White as well as Benita Arterberry, Cavin Yarborough, Alisa Peoples Yarbrough, Walter Fauntleroy and Liz Mikel with guitarist Sam Swank. Babatunde is also the show's director and choreographer and wrote musical arrangements with Cavin and Alisa Peoples Yarbrough. The limited engagement of the show, which features more than 60 Blind Lemon Jefferson songs, plays through Feb. 25.
Blind Lemon Blues, according to press notes, "celebrates the legacy of Blind Lemon Jefferson and his profound influence upon the development of American popular music. Jefferson was a blind street musician who played his guitar with a tin cup tied to its neck at the corner of Elm Street and Central Avenue in Dallas, Texas until a Paramount Records scout discovered him. Between 1926 and 1929, Jefferson made more than 80 records and became the biggest selling-down-home blues singer in America."
The musical is set in Manhattan in 1948 "at the last recording session of the legendary Huddie Ledbetter, better known as Leadbelly, and combines elements of traditional blues, gospel, rhythm and blues, soul, doo-wop, and rap to evoke the enduring legacy of Blind Lemon and his contemporaries, Blind Willie Johnson, Lillian Glinn, Hattie Hudson, Bobbie Cadillac, Lillian Miller and Leadbelly himself."
The creative team includes set designer Russell Parkman, lighting designer Steve Woods, costume designer Tommy Bourgeois and choreographic consultant Norma Miller.
The musical made its world premiere in 2004 at the Forum Meyrin in Geneva, Switzerland.
The York Theatre is located at St. Peter’s at 54th Street between Lexington and Third Avenues. Tickets, priced $35, are available by calling (212) 935-5820 or by visiting www.yorktheatre.org.