“King Hedley II” Exposes the Weight of Survival—at Lower Bottom Playaz

Koran Streets, Niko Buchanan, Reginald Wilkins, Pierre Scott, Ayodele Nzinga, and Kenzeill Love. Photo by Koran Streets

August Wilson Delivers Raw Power, Community, and Unforgiving Truths

by: Kheven Lee LaGrone

In “King Hedley II,” August Wilson gives us characters who reach for better lives while knowing the odds are stacked against them. Living outside the white American mainstream, they lack access to good jobs, strong social networks, or financial safety nets. With nothing to soften bad luck or bad decisions, even the smallest dream can threaten to make their lives worse.

The Lower Bottom Playaz bring power and clarity to this demanding work. Under Ayodele Nzinga’s direction, the ensemble delivers committed, emotionally grounded performances. The intimate BAM House draws the audience close; watching felt like being a looky-loo leaning over the fence, eavesdropping on three hours of high-stakes, personal drama.

Set in the Hill District of Pittsburgh in 1985, the play gives us plenty to overhear. King Hedley II (Koran Streets) has just returned home after seven years in prison and is determined to rebuild his life. Streets brings fierce energy to the role, animating King with volatility, pride, and a searching vulnerability that persists throughout the evening.

As Tonya, King’s practical and perceptive wife, Niko Buchanan anchors the production with subtle intelligence. She makes careful choices for their survival until she’s pushed to her emotional limit. When Tonya discovers she is pregnant, she delivers one of the play’s most electric moments: an urgent, impassioned monologue explaining why she believes an abortion is the only responsible choice. Buchanan attacks the speech with clarity and conviction, making the character’s pain unmistakably real.

Ayodele Nzinga—doubling as director—also plays Ruby, King’s mother, who left years ago to pursue a singing career before returning to the Hill District. Nzinga embodies the role with the natural authority of a community elder. Regional Wilkins brings swagger and danger to Elmore, an aging hustler who strides onstage looking like trouble—still ready to fight, even if he may be too old for it.

If there is a challenge in Wilson’s writing, it lies in the lengthy monologues that appear throughout the play. Tonya’s speech, though powerfully delivered, occasionally risks pulling attention away from the narrative. At times, the density of Wilson’s long paragraphs feels unwieldy. Still, the cast handles the language with remarkable ease. Even when the text becomes heavy, the actors keep their delivery natural and emotionally truthful, never losing the heart of their characters.

It is no surprise that “King Hedley II” was a finalist for the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. The Lower Bottom Playaz honor the play’s stature by committing fully to its emotional weight and complex themes. Their familiarity with the world they inhabit makes every character feel lived-in and authentic.

Experiencing the production at BAM House also highlights the communal spirit that defines the Lower Bottom Playaz. Before and after the performance, audience members chatted warmly, shared reactions, and greeted friends and family. The sense of community extended beyond the stage, including the theater’s own members who contributed food and hospitality. It all added to the feeling that this story—and this production—belongs deeply to the people who gather around it.


“King Hedley II” by August Wilson, directed by Ayodele Nzinga, assistant director Cat Brooks, lighting design by Stephanie Johnson, lighting assistant Ashley Munday, stage manager and board operator Kenitra Love, at BAM House, Oakland.

Info: lowerbottomplayaz.com - to November 30, 2025

Cast: Koran Streets, Reginald Wilkins, Niko Buchanan, Kenzeill Love, Pierre Scott, and Ayodele Nzinga

 

 

Kheven Lee LaGrone

Reviewer

Kheven Lee LaGrone is a playwright, essayist and curator. He was a 2022 Lambda Literary Award Finalist for his play Pillow Talk (which premiered at Theater Rhinoceros). In 2024, he curated “Black Theatre—Go Home! The Black Arts theater Movement in San Francisco” at the San Francisco Main Public Library which included the panel discussion “The San Francisco Black Theater Movement.” In 2023, LaGrone wrote the biographical liner notes for Peter Barclay’s posthumous album “I’m Not Your Toy.” He also edited a collection of academic and scholarly essays on Alice Walker’s “The Color Purple.” LaGrone is a San Francisco Bay Area native.

(Archive Reviews)

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