The highly experimental nature of Adrienne Kennedy’s plays transformed the landscape of Black American theatre in the past two decades and yet, oddly, left her on the periphery of her field, often feeling like an uninvited guest. Infused with colliding images of torment and tranquility, violence and peace, horror and beauty, her surrealistic dramas open a window into her own life. “The characters are myself,” she has said, the condensed expression of a theatrical mind that integrates diverse autobiographical, political, and aesthetic images into a uniquely personal narrative.
Although a decided departure from her plays, Deadly Triplets: A Theatre Mystery and Journal is the logical extension of Kennedy’s work - equally experimental, equally compelling. The book, as the title suggests, consists of two separate, yet integrally linked, entities. The “Theatre Mystery” (fiction) and “Theatre Journal” (nonfiction) exist simultaneously, mirror images of each other. Both are enshrouded with the same sense of mystery, silence, and eternity, presenting thickening layers of images rather than progressive action to develop their story: an interior monologue that sees that character as author coming to terms with the life of the author as character.
“I remembered the wonderful teas at the Royal Court and I decided to make the Royal Court Theatre at Sloane Square the major setting for my mystery novel: The Tower of London, the Thames, squares shrouded in mist, fog rising over Primrose Hill. . . all of it still mesmerized me.”
Adrienne Kennedy is a playwright and writer living in New York City. Her best-known plays include Funnyhouse of a Negro (which received an Obie in 1964), The Owl Answers, A Rat’s Mass, and A Movie Star Has to Star in Black and White. She has published People Who Led to My Plays and, with Minnesota, Adrienne Kennedy in One Act. “A Movie Star Has to Star in Black and White” is included in the Norton Anthology of American Literature, third edition, volume 2.
A surrealistic intertwining of mystery and autobiography set in the theatre world of 1960s London by Obie-winning playwright Adrienne Kennedy.
“Though markedly different from her plays, Adrienne Kennedy’s mystery story Deadly Triplets gives us insights into the working of a creative mind, how place influences genius, and seemingly innocent events become theatre.”
Barbara Christian
“American Book Award winner Adrienne Kennedy has proven once again that she is among America’s most imaginative and innovative writers.”
Ishmael Reed