PITTSBURGH, PA.- On Saturday, crowds gathered outside August Wilsons childhood home in the historic Hill District here to celebrate the grand opening of the August Wilson House. After a yearslong fundraising and restoration effort, the house where the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright spent the first 13 years of his life will now be open to the public with the goal of extending Wilsons legacy and advancing Black arts in culture.
Wilson, who died in 2005, is perhaps best known for his series of 10 plays called the American Century Cycle, which detail the various experiences of Black Americans throughout the 20th century. Nine of these plays are set in this citys Hill District a bastion of Black history, arts and culture and one, Ma Raineys Black Bottom, is set in Chicago.
The restoration effort was a long time coming. Wilsons nephew, Paul Ellis Jr., began the project after his uncles death. The abandoned house had been left to sit in a state of disrepair. Although it became a spot of cultural pilgrimage for Wilsons fans after his death, those pilgrims saw only decay once they arrived.
With the help of various Pittsburgh foundations and other benefactors among them, the two-time Academy Award-winning actor Denzel Washington the house is now a home for those who will follow in Wilsons footsteps.
The August Wilson House is not a museum. Instead, the restored space is a community center that will offer artist residencies, gathering spaces, fellowships and other programming for up-and-coming artists and scholars. There is also an outdoor stage behind the home, which is currently showcasing the Pittsburgh Playwrights Theater Companys production of Wilsons play Jitney through Sept. 18.
According to Sam Reiman, a trustee of the Richard King Mellon Foundation here and a board member of the August Wilson African American Cultural Center, the space will be the birthplace of August Wilsons successors.
Along with Reiman, Saturdays ceremony featured a star-studded lineup of speakers, including Washington, who helped raise millions toward the homes restoration. Washington also starred in, produced and directed the 2016 film adaptation of Fences, one of Wilsons Pittsburgh-based plays, that filmed throughout the Hill District. He also produced the 2020 film adaptation of Ma Raineys Black Bottom.
Washington praised those in attendance for their support of Wilson and his legacy.
I want to thank the community, Washington said, because Wilson is yours, and you are his. You just share him with the rest of us.
Wilsons widow, Constanza Romero Wilson, who designed the costumes for many of Wilsons later plays, also spoke at the event.
This is sacred ground, she said of the house, located at 1727 Bedford Ave. It commemorates our generations hero August Wilson. August Wilson House belongs to the Hill, to Black Americans, and because his stories are American stories of triumph under oppression, it belongs to all of us Americans.
Also in attendance were local leaders, including Ed Gainey, Pittsburghs first Black mayor, and Daniel Lavelle, a city councilman.
The commencement speaker for Gaineys college graduation in 1994 was none other than August Wilson, whose name the mayor admitted to never hearing before that day. He called his mother, he said, and she told him everything about the playwright.
Theres not a child in this city who should not know who August Wilson is. Not a child, Gainey said. And today speaks volumes to how far weve come in recognizing African American history in this city and celebrating the heroes that came before us.
He added, Today is August Wilsons Day.
It was a sentiment echoed by Lavelle, who had one note for Gaineys speech.
Not only should every kid in our city know who August Wilson is, he said, but every person in this country should know who August Wilson is.
Lavelle also read a city of Pittsburgh proclamation declaring Aug. 13, 2022, Paul Ellis Jr. Day, honoring his work to preserve Wilsons home.
People actually told me that my vision was too big, Ellis explained, adding that when he spoke about what he wanted his uncles house to become, people looked at him as if he was a child proudly declaring hed someday be president.
But as Nelson Mandela said, It always seems impossible until its done.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.