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‘Wicked,’ ‘Hamlet,’ ‘Steel Magnolias’ and more on Memphis stages in April

By , Daily Memphian Updated: April 08, 2024 4:55 PM CT | Published: April 04, 2024 8:55 AM CT

“Your Arms Too Short to Box with God” at Playhouse on the Square, April 26-May 19

An almost-forgotten Broadway musical will experience a resurrection, so to speak, at Playhouse on the Square in April and May. 

”Your Arms Too Short to Box with God” is based on the Gospel of Matthew, with rollicking gospel tunes and spiritual ballads sung by characters representing Jesus, Mary, Pilate, Pilate’s wife, Judas and others.

“We’ve been given the honor and opportunity of bringing this piece back to life,” said Michael Detroit, executive director of Playhouse on the Square. 

The musical debuted on Broadway in 1976; actress Delores Hall won a Tony for her performance in the show the next year. After several runs and a national tour, a 1982 Broadway revival starred Patti LaBelle and Memphis’ own Al Green, who was nominated for a Tony Award for his role. 

Aside from a few one-off and unlicensed performances, Detroit says that 1982 run was the show’s finale for nearly 40 years. He says that no licensing agency picked up the show, and its creators — Vinnette Carroll, Alex Bradford and Micki Grant — worked on other projects. 

POTS board member Tony Horne remembered the show and brought it up to Detroit and the theater team. Detroit had seen commercials for the gospel show when he was a child. 

POTS contacted the creators’ estate through an agency and convinced them Memphis was the best place for a revival production.

“We’re the largest minority-majority city in the United States; 65% African American, that’s obviously a gospel town,” Detroit said he told the agency. But there was a catch.

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Alys Drake

Alys Drake

Alys Drake is a Memphian born and raised in the Bluff City. A theater-lover, she has worked in a variety of marketing and communications roles at entities within the advertising, legal, marketing, religious and financial services sectors. She is a graduate of Memphis Central High School and Millsaps College in Jackson, Mississippi.


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