Mills & White Lead Black-Eyed Pea Actors' Fund and AMAS Benefit Sept. 25 | Playbill

Related Articles
News Mills & White Lead Black-Eyed Pea Actors' Fund and AMAS Benefit Sept. 25 Grammy winner Stephanie Mills and Tony Award winner Lillias White (The Life) will lead the cast of the Karole Foreman-Andrew Chukerman musical, The Princess and the Black-Eyed Pea, in a benefit performance Sept. 25 at the China Club. James Stovall (Ragtime) directs and co-produces.

Grammy winner Stephanie Mills and Tony Award winner Lillias White (The Life) will lead the cast of the Karole Foreman-Andrew Chukerman musical, The Princess and the Black-Eyed Pea, in a benefit performance Sept. 25 at the China Club. James Stovall (Ragtime) directs and co-produces.

Set in two mythical African kingdoms, The Princess and the Black-Eyed Pea loosely follows the classic Hans Christian Andersen fairytale of a princess in disguise put to the test with a pea inserted in her bedding (also the basis for the Mary Rogers musical, Once Upon a Mattress). Karole Foreman wrote the book and lyrics, with composer and co-lyricist Andrew Chukerman.

Joining Mills and White are Ken Prymus (Cats), Cornelius Bates, Rosalind Brown (Footloose), Terron Brooks, Tracy Nicole Chapman (The Lion King), Dudley Findley, Jr., Mark Ford (Rent), Capathia Jenkins (The Civil War) and Alexis Toomer.

Honorary chairpersons for the event will be film star Samuel L. Jackson, LaTonya Richardson, orchestrator Harold Wheeler and his wife, singer actress Hattie Winston.

Tickets are $45 for limited seating, $20 for standing room. For reservations, call (800) 386-3849 ext. 133, 134. For further ticket information on the web, go to http://www.actorsfund.org/tickets/princess.html. The AMAS Musical Theatre is a nonprofit, multi-racial theatrical organization dedicated to the development of new musicals and new musical talent. Rosetta LeNoire founded the company in 1968.

The nation's "only human service organization for all entertainment professionals," the Actors' Fund of America is best known for providing financial assistance and social services (food, rent, medical expenses) to professionals in need. Given on a night when the show doesn't normally play, an Actors' Fund performance, with all benefits going to the Fund, charges the same box office prices as on other nights and is often well attended by members of the entertainment community.

 
RELATED:
Today’s Most Popular News:
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!