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Myrna Colley-Lee |
"Gwendolyn Fairfax" from The Importance of Being Earnest and Myrna Colley-Lee
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Colley-Lee always incorporates research into her designs. She says, “A play is always a world, a complete and concise unit; the more you research, the more informed the production and the more it assists the actors, and, therefore, makes it a more valid experience for the audience.”
A native of North Carolina, Myrna Colley-Lee completed her B.F.A. in art education from the Women’s College of the University of North Carolina (now the University of North Carolina at Greensboro) and studied scene painting and properties at Brooklyn College, N.Y. In 1980 she received her M.F.A. in scenic and costume design from Temple University, Philadelphia, Penn.
As a young designer, she designed for the play, Long Day’s Journey into Night, by Eugene O’Neill, which for the first time ever had an all-black cast. Colley-Lee described the idea of doing the play with color-blind casting, saying, “If a man could play a woman’s role a few hundred years ago, why can’t a black person play a role that was written for a white person? Why did it matter? Theater is all about the suspension of disbelief, and creating your own world. We didn’t see how this was any different.”
Colley-Lee’s most recent costume design work was featured in the productions Relativity at the Black Rep, St. Louis, Mo., The Piano Lesson and Forest City at the Cleveland Playhouse, Ohio, and Wedding Band: A Love/Hate Story in Black and White for the Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Chicago, Ill., among other projects. This year she will assist with the premiere of Till, a new work by Ifa Bayeza in conjunction with Rites & Reason Theatre at Brown University, Providence, R.I.
GladRags: Sketches, Swatches and Costume Designs by Myrna Colley-Lee is organized by the Mississippi Museum of Art and supported with funds provided by the Museum’s statewide Traveling Exhibition Endowment, a fund made possible through significant private contributions matched by the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.