77th Annual Abingdon Rotary Frolics
7:30 pm Friday January 30th and Saturday the 31st
Enjoy a night of fun and laughter at the Barter Theatre while together we raise money that goes back into our community supporting children’s needs. $100,000 donated from Abingdon Rotary Club for the Rotary Splash Pad at the Meadows Sports Complex? Frolics helped make that happen. Support of Isaiah 1:17 House? Frolics. Children’s Christmas through Washington Social Services? Frolics. Backpack weekend food program for school children? Frolics. Together through Rotary Frolics, we make our community better, especially for children!
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
The Three Musketeers
Adapted from Alexandre Dumas by Catherine Bush
MARCH 14 – APRIL 4 ON GILLIAM STAGE
All for one and one for all!
This witty and action-packed adventure follows the friendships of young D’Artagnan and his band of swashbuckling Musketeers as they fight to protect the ones they love from the evil Cardinal Richelieu. It’s a story of double crossings, kidnappings, and carefully guarded secrets, complete with lavish sword fights and sweeping romance, set in a time when love and honor ruled the world. This production has been specially adapted for Barter’s Resident Acting Company. An adventure for the whole family!
Content Advisories: (V) – Theatrical violence. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
PICKLEBALL
By Jeff Daniels
MARCH 21 – APRIL 26 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
In America’s fastest-growing game, there’s no place for apologies or excuses, but there is a lot of room for comedy. When four below-average players have an opportunity to compete in a local tournament, they must learn to overcome their limitations and dig deep to find the greatness that lies within. This hilarious new comedy by Jeff Daniels shows us all the possibilities of middle-aged athleticism when combined with the unconquerable human spirit. Join us for the fun!
Content Advisories: (ML) – Mild language. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Peter Pan
Adapted by Catherine Bush from the novel by J.M. Barrie
March 24th - May 12th on GILLIAM STAGE
Wendy and her brothers love to play make-believe in their nursery. Then one night, a young boy named Peter Pan and his fairy friend Tinkerbell fly into the nursery window and whisk them away to a Neverland filled with Lost Boys, pirates, and a man-eating crocodile. Brought thrillingly to life with six quick-changing actors, the Barter Players make this an adventure you will never forget.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Always... Patsy Cline
Written and originally directed by Ted Swindley
APRIL 17 – MAY 10 ON GILLIAM STAGE
Based on a true story, this heartfelt musical celebrates the life and career of country music legend, Patsy Cline. Told through the eyes of her biggest fan and unlikely friend, Louise Seger, this show includes many of Patsy’s unforgettable hits such as “Crazy,” “I Fall to Pieces,” “Sweet Dreams” & “Walking After Midnight.” Complete with down-home country humor, true emotion, and even some audience participation, this musical is a joyful tribute to one of music’s most beloved voices!
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Savannah Sipping Society
Written by Jones Hope Wooten
MAY 12 – AUGUST 8 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
In this delightful comedy, four very different Southern women, all strangers, are drawn together by an impromptu Happy Hour, and decide it's high time to reclaim the excitement their lives once held. Over the next six months, with the help of several hilarious misadventures and the occasional liquid refreshment, these ladies discover that it’s never too late to make new old friends. A guaranteed good time for all!
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
The Da Vinci Code
Adapted by Rachel Wagstaff and Duncan Abel / Based on the novel by Dan Brown
MAY 23 – AUGUST 8 ON GILLIAM STAGE
While visiting Paris, Professor Robert Langdon is called to the Louvre Art Museum in the dead of night, where he unwittingly becomes the center of a murder investigation. When cryptologist Sophie Neveu arrives at the scene, she alerts Robert that, not only is he being asked to solve the crime, he is also the prime suspect. Soon they are in a race against time to clear Robert’s name and decipher a labyrinthine code before a shocking historical secret is lost forever. Based on Dan Brown’s thrilling international best-seller, this is one you don’t want to miss!
Content Advisories: (ML,V, O) – Mild language, violence, other. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
The Sword in the Stone
Adapted by James Hendley
June 9th - July 3rd at BARTER'S SMITH THEATRE
For years, the sword has stood in the stone, waiting for the day that it will be drawn by the one true King of England. But could that king be an absent-minded squire named Arthur? Join Arthur and his mentor, the wizard Merlin, on a series of adventures where they face magical beasts and powerful knights as Arthur learns what it truly means to be king.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Guys & Dolls
Book by Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows / Based on a story and characters by Damon Runyon / Music and lyrics by Frank Loesser
JUNE 9 – AUGUST 9 ON GILLIAM STAGE
Flawlessly blending a fantastic story with unforgettable music- it’s no wonder that Guys and Dolls is often called “the perfect musical.” The show follows the high stakes games of a motley crew of gamblers and the women who unexpectedly steal their hearts. This great American musical comedy features hits like "A Bushel and a Peck" and "Luck Be a Lady," and tells a story of romance, adventure, second chances, and the transformative power of love. Don’t miss this quintessential golden age musical performed by the quintessential American theatre company.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Cinderella
Adapted by Kailey Kyle from the fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm
July 7th - August 8th at BARTER'S SMITH THEATRE
This classic story is brought to life in a brand new adaptation written especially for The Barter Players. Cinderella dreams of a different life, far away from the ceaseless demands of her cruel stepmother and mean-spirited stepsisters. Then the Palace announces that a Royal Ball will be given in honor of the King's son, Prince Anthony. Could it be that happily-ever-after awaits her there? A delightful tale that will make you believe once again in the magic of Love.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Come From Away
Book, music & lyrics by Irene Sankoff and David Heinook
AUGUST 26 – NOVEMBER 1 ON GILLIAM STAGE
When the world stopped on Sept. 11, 2001, kindness soared in an isolated Canadian town. In Come From Away, a big-hearted musical based on a remarkable true story, 38 commercial flights from around the globe are diverted for days to tiny Gander, Newfoundland. Unfazed by the arrival of nearly 7,000 surprise guests, the residents provide light in a dark time, welcoming the stranded travelers with music, open doors, and hope.
Content Advisories: (ML, O) – Mild language, other. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Dracula
Adapted from Bram Stoker’s novel by Kate Hamill
SEPTEMBER 10 – OCTOBER 31 ON GILLIAM STAGE
When your survival is at stake…will you be able to distinguish the monster from the man? Both terrifying and riotous, Kate Hamill’s imaginative adaptation is like no Dracula you’ve ever seen, exploring the nature of predators and reinventing the story as a smart, darkly comic drama. Hamill’s signature style upends this familiar tale of Victorian vampires, driving a stake through the heart of the familiar and giving us a play we can sink our teeth into. Perfect for the Halloween season!
Content Advisories: (V, S) – Violence, sexual situations. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Kings Mountain
By Catherine Bush
SEPTEMBER 17 – OCTOBER 31 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
Kings Mountain -- the battle that turned the tide of the Revolutionary War and eventually led to American Independence. But how did we get there? Barter actors in a theatrical tour-de-force lead us through the events that surround that fateful day, giving us a glimpse into the world of Overmountain Men and the women who loved them, English kings and the soldiers who served them, and enslaved Americans who wondered what Liberty could possibly mean for them. Commissioned by VA250, this is an experience you don’t want to miss.
Content Advisories: (ML) – Mild language. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
Adapted by Catherine Bush from the novel by Mark Twain
September 22nd - November 6th at BARTER'S SMITH THEATRE
Whether it’s fishing with Huckleberry Finn or convincing his friends to whitewash Aunt Polly’s fence, nobody loves life more than the irascible Tom Sawyer. Then one night in a spooky graveyard, Tom and Huck stumble upon a deadly secret. Will they be able to save Muff Potter before it’s too late? Join Tom and Huck on the most exciting adventure of their lives, where they learn that man’s greatest treasure is the gift of friendship.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Elf the Musical
Book by Thomas Meehan & Bob Martin / Music by Matthew Sklar, Lyrics by Chad Beguelin / Based on the New Line Cinema film by David Berenbaum
NOVEMBER 14 – DECEMBER 27 ON GILLIAM STAGE
The hilarious tale of Buddy, an orphan baby who mistakenly crawls into Santa’s bag of gifts and winds up being raised at the North Pole. When Buddy discovers that he is actually human, he embarks on a journey to New York City to find his birth father, discover his true identity, and help New York remember the true meaning of Christmas. This modern-day Christmas classic is sure to make everyone embrace their inner “elf.”
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Wooden Snowflakes
By Catherine Bush
NOVEMBER 22 – DECEMBER 27 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
Certain events have left their mark on Eve Lawson. She has renounced her faith in Love and anything to do with America’s favorite winter holiday. Then, on December 24th, Eve’s car slides off an icy Kentucky road and she finds herself seeking shelter at the home of Simon Peter Whitaker, a woodcarver who wholeheartedly embraces the magic of the season. As the night unfolds, Simon and Eve, believer and skeptic, find themselves clashing time and time again as long-suppressed old wounds struggle to the surface, only to be healed by the Love that is Christmas.
Content Advisories: (ML, S) – Mild language, sexual situations. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Here Comes Suzy Snowflake
Book & Lyrics by Catherine Bush / Music by Dax Dupuy
November 24th - December 24th on GILLIAM STAGE
Of all the residents in Wintertown, no one looks forward to the first Christmas snow more than seven-year-old Maggie Rose Tuggle. The first snow means that her best friend - a snowflake named Suzy - will be coming to play all Christmas long. Then tragedy strikes when Maggie Rose's parents decide to spend the holiday season in sunny Florida. Will Maggie Rose and Suzy survive being apart during the most wonderful time of the year? This brand new musical tale of an unlikely friendship will set your heart aglow.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Show Title
Dates show will play
credits
long form Show description goes here.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Barter at the Moonlite FAQ's
How can I stay up to date about weather related changes to my reservation?
In the event of weather related changes to your reservation, you will be contacted via the email address listed on your Barter Theatre account.
If you would like to opt-in to receive text message notifications, text your show date (in MM/DD/YYYY format) to (276) 262-8066. For example: to opt-in for weather notifications about the performance scheduled for July 31, text "7/31/2021" to (276) 262 - 8066
What if it is hot/cold?
Barter at the Moonlite productions are best experienced from inside your vehicle. If it is chilly or too hot, you are welcome to keep the motor running during these one act shows.
Can I watch from outside my car?
Patrons may sit directly in front of their vehicles during phase three of Virginia’s Phased Reopening.
How will I hear the show?
Patrons may access the audio for the performance though their car’s FM radio. Barter Theatre partnered with Broadcastvision Entertainment to enable this feature.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Salvage
Sunday, February 16th, 11am at Barter's Smith Theatre
Six months after Father’s death, Mother sends an urgent email to her adult children, summoning them home to collect their things. Brother and Sister arrive to find their childhood home in a state of collapse and strewn end to end with the stuff of their lives - dolls, clothes, books, toys -and in one growing pile, the stuff of their father, his vests and cassette tapes and Star Wars ties. Soon the truth is out in this interracial, intergenerational family: Mother is tossing in the towel and “going West” the very next day. In the hours that follow, and as boxes are packed and unpacked and packed again, Mother will fight to leave, and Brother, Sister, and Grandpa will fight to stay, and as they each fight to set the course of their lives, they will struggle with how to save themselves and each other. What will they keep? What will they toss? What will they transform into something new?
Written by: Mary Lynn Owen
Mary Lynn Owen is a playwright, actor, and teacher based in Atlanta, Georgia. Her first full-length play, KNEAD, received its world premiere at The Alliance Theatre in November 2018 and its second full production at Aurora Theatre in January 2024. KNEAD, a one-person play in which Mary Lynn also performs, is the recipient of the 2019 Gene Gabriel Moore Playwriting Award, and The Alliance Theatre’s Reiser Lab Grant for New Work. Successive plays include SALVAGE, a 2022 finalist for the O’Neill National Playwright’s Conference and featured in the 2023 Ethel Woolson Lab Festival and the 2023 Unexpected Play Festival; and LADY PARTS, selected for the 2019 Working Title Playwrights First Light Series, Theatrical Outfit’s 2020 Unexpected Play Festival, and named a 2020 semi-finalist for the O’Neill National Playwright’s Conference. Her commissions include Alabama Shakespeare Southern Writers Festival and MultiShades Atlanta, and she is the recipient of a MAP Grant through Synchronicity Theatre for the development of a play about Women and Work. In 2022, she was named the Travis Bogard Artist in Residence at The Eugene O’Neill Foundation in Danville, California, where she also received the Carey Perloff Award, given to an established theater artist who desires to transition to playwriting. Mary Lynn’s professional affiliations include The Dramatist’s Guild, Working Title Playwrights, Actor’s Equity Association, and SAG-Aftra. She is a recently named finalist for the 2024-25 Dramatists Guild National Playwrights Fellows program.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
4th Annual SHINE: Illuminating Black Stories
FEBRUARY 16TH, 7PM ON GILLIAM STAGE
SHINE: Illuminating Black Stories is an annual evening of powerful theatrical storytelling celebrating the Black experience in Appalachia, curated by Barter Theatre's Black Stories Black Voices initiative. Inspired by the local Black community and the Appalachian landscape, the event features original monologues and scenes by Black playwrights from across the nation. Performed and directed by Barter's artists, these works provide a platform for voices that are often unheard.
Now in its 4th year, SHINE continues to offer a FREE, unforgettable experience that immerses audiences in the diverse stories, histories, and voices of the Black community in our region. This year's theme is Education, with stories set from Glade Spring, Virginia, to Johnson City, Tennessee, and beyond. Written by local Black playwrights from Bristol, Virginia, to New York City, these pieces reflect the rich cultural tapestry of Appalachian Black stories that shape our shared history, future and education.
Join us in celebrating these powerful voices and their unique perspectives!
Meet the Playwrights
Jerry L. Jones
A native of Glade Spring, Jerry L. Jones grew up in southwestern Virginia during the era of segregation. For grades one through seven, he attended the Rosenwald-built Black elementary school in his home town and was bused to the all-Black Douglass High School in Bristol, Virginia, where he graduated as valedictorian in 1965. His bachelor’s and master’s degrees are from the historically-Black Virginia State University and his doctorate is from Virginia Tech.
Beginning as a high school business instructor in Baltimore, Jones’s teaching career continued for twenty-seven years as a professor of computer information systems at Reynolds Community College in Richmond followed by twenty years at Emory & Henry College.
His first book, Structured Programming Logic, was a computer programming logic textbook which ended up being used at various colleges in Virginia and other schools during the 1980s. His second book, a memoir, was Go and Come Again: Segregation, Tolerance, and Reflection; and his third book, another memoir, was They Included Me: A Five-Decade Teaching Career.
Gifted with the ability to pay the piano without any music training, Jones has been a musician for more than 60 years. He has played piano at numerous area churches, events on the campus of Emory & Henry, and Abingdon’s Highlands Festival.
For several years, Jerry Jones’s mother, Mary Waugh Jones, worked in the Glade Spring home of Robert Porterfield, founder of the Barter Theatre.
Tommy Bryant
Associate Professor of English with Virginia Highlands Community College. Ph.D. candidate with Old Dominion University (pursuing doctorate in English with a rhetoric/composition focus).
Appeared on NPR program With Good Reason to discuss the history of African Americans in comics: https://www.withgoodreasonradio.org/episode/drawing-history/
Camille Simone Thomas
Camille Simone Thomas is a 5th generation Detroiter through her father’s side and a first generation Jamaican through her mothers. It’s important for her to name this because her work most often interrogates cultural legacies, familial healing, spirituality + ancestral wisdom, and the general kicking and screaming of how Black folks get free despite the oppressive forces of colonialism, capitalism, and white supremacy. She’s a multi-hyphenate playwright-producer-performer-educator. Her plays have been workshopped and performed at The Connelly Theatre, MCC, New York Theatre Workshop, Playwrights Horizons, Sanguine Theatre Company, Blackboard Playwriting series, Lime Arts Theatre company, American Slavery Project, The Obie Award-winning Harlem9 and Detroit Public Theatre Company, Dixon Place, Workshop Theatre, Barter Theatre Company, The National Women's Theatre Festival, The Brick, and more! She was a 2023 Broadway Advocacy Coalition Artivism fellow. A 2024 finalist for the Eugene O’neill NPC for her play At God’s Back. A 2023 New Harmony Project finalist, 2023 Hedgebrook Writers retreat finalist, 2023 Catskills Creative Residency finalist. She's currently in the 2024/2025 Civilians R&D Group, 2024/25 Artistic Research Fellow at The Folger in DC, and the 2024/25 JACKLabs Artist.
Cris Eli Blak
Cris Eli Blak is an emerging, proud Black playwright whose work has been performed around the world. He is a staff writer on the hit series Power Book III: Raising Kanan. He is the inaugural winner of the Black Broadway Men Playwriting Initiative, the 2024 Charles M. Getchell New Play Award, and the Atlanta Shakespeare Company’s inaugural winner of the Muse of Fire BIPOC Playwriting Festival. He is currently an artist-in-residence with Abingdon Theatre Company, Ojai Playwrights Conference, and Liberation Theatre Company, and a 2024-2027 Core Writer with The Playwrights Center. He was previously an artist-in-residence with Fosters Theatrical Artists Residency, Paterson Performing Arts Development Council, and Quick Silver Theatre. He was the recipient of the Emerging Playwrights Fellowship with The Scoundrel & Scamp Theatre Company and an inaugural fellow with the Black Theatre Coalition. His work has been published by Smith & Kraus, Inc., Ghost Light Publications, 1319 Press, Flowersong Press, YOUTHPlays, Applause Books, The PlayGround Experiment, New World Theatre, Breath of Fire Latina Theater Ensemble, and in the Black Theatre Review.
Tracie E. Morrison
Tracie Evette Morrison resides in Newark, New Jersey. She earned her BA in English from Rutgers University, Douglass College, and her MA in Counseling from Montclair State University. In November 2021, Tracie released her new book, PRAY-ER Talk, Listen Obey: Starting and Strengthening Conversations with God. Her 10-Minute play Bare Chicken was selected for the Honor Roll invisibility Project for production at Polaris North, NYC in November 2024. Preach, Preacher, Tracie’s newest full-length play, premiered in Newark Arts Festival 2024 in October. Her 10-Minute play Water Bar was presented by Chatham Players in the Jersey Voices 2023 Festival and in Rebound Production's 2024 Emerging Artist Showcase in London, UK. Tracie is excited to share her writing with others and hopes to inspire, encourage and empower diverse audiences with her writing!
Kamiah Vickers
From a young age, Kamiah felt a profound calling to share stories, whether it be in the form of performing or writing. Her plays draw from the truth of her personal experiences, weaving them into imaginative works that use the framework of theater to explore honest, human realities. Her time at New York University solidified the importance of her voice, culminating in numerous acting and writing projects. Kamiah’s play In Conversation of Love was later produced as a part of New York Theater Festival’s 2023 season, beginning her journey as an emerging playwright. This past year, she has actively contributed to numerous theater projects, including MCC Ambies, The National 24-Hour Play Cohort, and The Archive Play Festival. She currently works at The Dramatists Guild Foundation and St. Ann’s Warehouse.
She hopes to continue to be able to tell a range of stories that are meaningful, and push theater forward. She wants her words to live on, and has hopes of continuing to advocate and create opportunities for young writers. She is grateful for The Barter Theater and this exciting opportunity.
Kyra Davis
Kyra Davis is a southern artist who traded in southern hospitality to take on the city that never sleeps to further her career in acting, writing, and creating. She was a part of the Inaugural class in the Uptown Collective’s Renaissance Playwright Residency and currently a producing fellow at The Tank in NYC. Her play, SugarHill, has been workshopped at The Flea Theater and further developed with Dramatic Question Theatre. Check out her web series Front of House Faux Pas that she wrote, produced, and starred in on Instagram and Youtube.
Her passion is to create art for underrepresented voices and advancing their opportunities in the industry. Her inspirations are the Black women who came before her and the young Black women who will come after her. She desires to create works that empower and encourage them to live their lives unapologetically. Selected credits include: Law and Order: Organized Crime, Jitney (Rena), Intimate Apparel (Esther), and The Christians (Elizabeth).
SHINE: Illuminating Black Stories is sponsored by Joe & Donna Levine. This event is curated by Barter's Black Stories Black Voices program, which is made possible in part thanks to funding from The Jessie Ball duPont Fund.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Show Title
Dates show will play
credits
long form Show description goes here.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Barter at the Moonlite FAQ's
How can I stay up to date about weather related changes to my reservation?
In the event of weather related changes to your reservation, you will be contacted via the email address listed on your Barter Theatre account.
If you would like to opt-in to receive text message notifications, text your show date (in MM/DD/YYYY format) to (276) 262-8066. For example: to opt-in for weather notifications about the performance scheduled for July 31, text "7/31/2021" to (276) 262 - 8066
What if it is hot/cold?
Barter at the Moonlite productions are best experienced from inside your vehicle. If it is chilly or too hot, you are welcome to keep the motor running during these one act shows.
Can I watch from outside my car?
Patrons may sit directly in front of their vehicles during phase three of Virginia’s Phased Reopening.
How will I hear the show?
Patrons may access the audio for the performance though their car’s FM radio. Barter Theatre partnered with Broadcastvision Entertainment to enable this feature.
Show Title
Dates show will play
credits
long form Show description goes here.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Barter at the Moonlite FAQ's
How can I stay up to date about weather related changes to my reservation?
In the event of weather related changes to your reservation, you will be contacted via the email address listed on your Barter Theatre account.
If you would like to opt-in to receive text message notifications, text your show date (in MM/DD/YYYY format) to (276) 262-8066. For example: to opt-in for weather notifications about the performance scheduled for July 31, text "7/31/2021" to (276) 262 - 8066
What if it is hot/cold?
Barter at the Moonlite productions are best experienced from inside your vehicle. If it is chilly or too hot, you are welcome to keep the motor running during these one act shows.
Can I watch from outside my car?
Patrons may sit directly in front of their vehicles during phase three of Virginia’s Phased Reopening.
How will I hear the show?
Patrons may access the audio for the performance though their car’s FM radio. Barter Theatre partnered with Broadcastvision Entertainment to enable this feature.
Show Title
Dates show will play
credits
long form Show description goes here.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Barter at the Moonlite FAQ's
How can I stay up to date about weather related changes to my reservation?
In the event of weather related changes to your reservation, you will be contacted via the email address listed on your Barter Theatre account.
If you would like to opt-in to receive text message notifications, text your show date (in MM/DD/YYYY format) to (276) 262-8066. For example: to opt-in for weather notifications about the performance scheduled for July 31, text "7/31/2021" to (276) 262 - 8066
What if it is hot/cold?
Barter at the Moonlite productions are best experienced from inside your vehicle. If it is chilly or too hot, you are welcome to keep the motor running during these one act shows.
Can I watch from outside my car?
Patrons may sit directly in front of their vehicles during phase three of Virginia’s Phased Reopening.
How will I hear the show?
Patrons may access the audio for the performance though their car’s FM radio. Barter Theatre partnered with Broadcastvision Entertainment to enable this feature.
Show Title
Dates show will play
credits
long form Show description goes here.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Barter at the Moonlite FAQ's
How can I stay up to date about weather related changes to my reservation?
In the event of weather related changes to your reservation, you will be contacted via the email address listed on your Barter Theatre account.
If you would like to opt-in to receive text message notifications, text your show date (in MM/DD/YYYY format) to (276) 262-8066. For example: to opt-in for weather notifications about the performance scheduled for July 31, text "7/31/2021" to (276) 262 - 8066
What if it is hot/cold?
Barter at the Moonlite productions are best experienced from inside your vehicle. If it is chilly or too hot, you are welcome to keep the motor running during these one act shows.
Can I watch from outside my car?
Patrons may sit directly in front of their vehicles during phase three of Virginia’s Phased Reopening.
How will I hear the show?
Patrons may access the audio for the performance though their car’s FM radio. Barter Theatre partnered with Broadcastvision Entertainment to enable this feature.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Show Title
Dates show will play
credits
long form Show description goes here.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Barter at the Moonlite FAQ's
How can I stay up to date about weather related changes to my reservation?
In the event of weather related changes to your reservation, you will be contacted via the email address listed on your Barter Theatre account.
If you would like to opt-in to receive text message notifications, text your show date (in MM/DD/YYYY format) to (276) 262-8066. For example: to opt-in for weather notifications about the performance scheduled for July 31, text "7/31/2021" to (276) 262 - 8066
What if it is hot/cold?
Barter at the Moonlite productions are best experienced from inside your vehicle. If it is chilly or too hot, you are welcome to keep the motor running during these one act shows.
Can I watch from outside my car?
Patrons may sit directly in front of their vehicles during phase three of Virginia’s Phased Reopening.
How will I hear the show?
Patrons may access the audio for the performance though their car’s FM radio. Barter Theatre partnered with Broadcastvision Entertainment to enable this feature.
Show Title
Dates show will play
credits
long form Show description goes here.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Barter at the Moonlite FAQ's
How can I stay up to date about weather related changes to my reservation?
In the event of weather related changes to your reservation, you will be contacted via the email address listed on your Barter Theatre account.
If you would like to opt-in to receive text message notifications, text your show date (in MM/DD/YYYY format) to (276) 262-8066. For example: to opt-in for weather notifications about the performance scheduled for July 31, text "7/31/2021" to (276) 262 - 8066
What if it is hot/cold?
Barter at the Moonlite productions are best experienced from inside your vehicle. If it is chilly or too hot, you are welcome to keep the motor running during these one act shows.
Can I watch from outside my car?
Patrons may sit directly in front of their vehicles during phase three of Virginia’s Phased Reopening.
How will I hear the show?
Patrons may access the audio for the performance though their car’s FM radio. Barter Theatre partnered with Broadcastvision Entertainment to enable this feature.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Show Title
Dates show will play
credits
long form Show description goes here.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Barter at the Moonlite FAQ's
How can I stay up to date about weather related changes to my reservation?
In the event of weather related changes to your reservation, you will be contacted via the email address listed on your Barter Theatre account.
If you would like to opt-in to receive text message notifications, text your show date (in MM/DD/YYYY format) to (276) 262-8066. For example: to opt-in for weather notifications about the performance scheduled for July 31, text "7/31/2021" to (276) 262 - 8066
What if it is hot/cold?
Barter at the Moonlite productions are best experienced from inside your vehicle. If it is chilly or too hot, you are welcome to keep the motor running during these one act shows.
Can I watch from outside my car?
Patrons may sit directly in front of their vehicles during phase three of Virginia’s Phased Reopening.
How will I hear the show?
Patrons may access the audio for the performance though their car’s FM radio. Barter Theatre partnered with Broadcastvision Entertainment to enable this feature.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Show Title
Dates show will play
credits
long form Show description goes here.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Barter at the Moonlite FAQ's
How can I stay up to date about weather related changes to my reservation?
In the event of weather related changes to your reservation, you will be contacted via the email address listed on your Barter Theatre account.
If you would like to opt-in to receive text message notifications, text your show date (in MM/DD/YYYY format) to (276) 262-8066. For example: to opt-in for weather notifications about the performance scheduled for July 31, text "7/31/2021" to (276) 262 - 8066
What if it is hot/cold?
Barter at the Moonlite productions are best experienced from inside your vehicle. If it is chilly or too hot, you are welcome to keep the motor running during these one act shows.
Can I watch from outside my car?
Patrons may sit directly in front of their vehicles during phase three of Virginia’s Phased Reopening.
How will I hear the show?
Patrons may access the audio for the performance though their car’s FM radio. Barter Theatre partnered with Broadcastvision Entertainment to enable this feature.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Show Title
Dates show will play
credits
long form Show description goes here.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Barter at the Moonlite FAQ's
How can I stay up to date about weather related changes to my reservation?
In the event of weather related changes to your reservation, you will be contacted via the email address listed on your Barter Theatre account.
If you would like to opt-in to receive text message notifications, text your show date (in MM/DD/YYYY format) to (276) 262-8066. For example: to opt-in for weather notifications about the performance scheduled for July 31, text "7/31/2021" to (276) 262 - 8066
What if it is hot/cold?
Barter at the Moonlite productions are best experienced from inside your vehicle. If it is chilly or too hot, you are welcome to keep the motor running during these one act shows.
Can I watch from outside my car?
Patrons may sit directly in front of their vehicles during phase three of Virginia’s Phased Reopening.
How will I hear the show?
Patrons may access the audio for the performance though their car’s FM radio. Barter Theatre partnered with Broadcastvision Entertainment to enable this feature.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
4th Annual SHINE: Illuminating Black Stories
FEBRUARY 16TH, 7PM ON GILLIAM STAGE
SHINE: Illuminating Black Stories is an annual evening of powerful theatrical storytelling celebrating the Black experience in Appalachia, curated by Barter Theatre's Black Stories Black Voices initiative. Inspired by the local Black community and the Appalachian landscape, the event features original monologues and scenes by Black playwrights from across the nation. Performed and directed by Barter's artists, these works provide a platform for voices that are often unheard.
Now in its 4th year, SHINE continues to offer a FREE, unforgettable experience that immerses audiences in the diverse stories, histories, and voices of the Black community in our region. This year's theme is Education, with stories set from Glade Spring, Virginia, to Johnson City, Tennessee, and beyond. Written by local Black playwrights from Bristol, Virginia, to New York City, these pieces reflect the rich cultural tapestry of Appalachian Black stories that shape our shared history, future and education.
Join us in celebrating these powerful voices and their unique perspectives!
Meet the Playwrights
Jerry L. Jones
A native of Glade Spring, Jerry L. Jones grew up in southwestern Virginia during the era of segregation. For grades one through seven, he attended the Rosenwald-built Black elementary school in his home town and was bused to the all-Black Douglass High School in Bristol, Virginia, where he graduated as valedictorian in 1965. His bachelor’s and master’s degrees are from the historically-Black Virginia State University and his doctorate is from Virginia Tech.
Beginning as a high school business instructor in Baltimore, Jones’s teaching career continued for twenty-seven years as a professor of computer information systems at Reynolds Community College in Richmond followed by twenty years at Emory & Henry College.
His first book, Structured Programming Logic, was a computer programming logic textbook which ended up being used at various colleges in Virginia and other schools during the 1980s. His second book, a memoir, was Go and Come Again: Segregation, Tolerance, and Reflection; and his third book, another memoir, was They Included Me: A Five-Decade Teaching Career.
Gifted with the ability to pay the piano without any music training, Jones has been a musician for more than 60 years. He has played piano at numerous area churches, events on the campus of Emory & Henry, and Abingdon’s Highlands Festival.
For several years, Jerry Jones’s mother, Mary Waugh Jones, worked in the Glade Spring home of Robert Porterfield, founder of the Barter Theatre.
Tommy Bryant
Associate Professor of English with Virginia Highlands Community College. Ph.D. candidate with Old Dominion University (pursuing doctorate in English with a rhetoric/composition focus).
Appeared on NPR program With Good Reason to discuss the history of African Americans in comics: https://www.withgoodreasonradio.org/episode/drawing-history/
Camille Simone Thomas
Camille Simone Thomas is a 5th generation Detroiter through her father’s side and a first generation Jamaican through her mothers. It’s important for her to name this because her work most often interrogates cultural legacies, familial healing, spirituality + ancestral wisdom, and the general kicking and screaming of how Black folks get free despite the oppressive forces of colonialism, capitalism, and white supremacy. She’s a multi-hyphenate playwright-producer-performer-educator. Her plays have been workshopped and performed at The Connelly Theatre, MCC, New York Theatre Workshop, Playwrights Horizons, Sanguine Theatre Company, Blackboard Playwriting series, Lime Arts Theatre company, American Slavery Project, The Obie Award-winning Harlem9 and Detroit Public Theatre Company, Dixon Place, Workshop Theatre, Barter Theatre Company, The National Women's Theatre Festival, The Brick, and more! She was a 2023 Broadway Advocacy Coalition Artivism fellow. A 2024 finalist for the Eugene O’neill NPC for her play At God’s Back. A 2023 New Harmony Project finalist, 2023 Hedgebrook Writers retreat finalist, 2023 Catskills Creative Residency finalist. She's currently in the 2024/2025 Civilians R&D Group, 2024/25 Artistic Research Fellow at The Folger in DC, and the 2024/25 JACKLabs Artist.
Cris Eli Blak
Cris Eli Blak is an emerging, proud Black playwright whose work has been performed around the world. He is a staff writer on the hit series Power Book III: Raising Kanan. He is the inaugural winner of the Black Broadway Men Playwriting Initiative, the 2024 Charles M. Getchell New Play Award, and the Atlanta Shakespeare Company’s inaugural winner of the Muse of Fire BIPOC Playwriting Festival. He is currently an artist-in-residence with Abingdon Theatre Company, Ojai Playwrights Conference, and Liberation Theatre Company, and a 2024-2027 Core Writer with The Playwrights Center. He was previously an artist-in-residence with Fosters Theatrical Artists Residency, Paterson Performing Arts Development Council, and Quick Silver Theatre. He was the recipient of the Emerging Playwrights Fellowship with The Scoundrel & Scamp Theatre Company and an inaugural fellow with the Black Theatre Coalition. His work has been published by Smith & Kraus, Inc., Ghost Light Publications, 1319 Press, Flowersong Press, YOUTHPlays, Applause Books, The PlayGround Experiment, New World Theatre, Breath of Fire Latina Theater Ensemble, and in the Black Theatre Review.
Tracie E. Morrison
Tracie Evette Morrison resides in Newark, New Jersey. She earned her BA in English from Rutgers University, Douglass College, and her MA in Counseling from Montclair State University. In November 2021, Tracie released her new book, PRAY-ER Talk, Listen Obey: Starting and Strengthening Conversations with God. Her 10-Minute play Bare Chicken was selected for the Honor Roll invisibility Project for production at Polaris North, NYC in November 2024. Preach, Preacher, Tracie’s newest full-length play, premiered in Newark Arts Festival 2024 in October. Her 10-Minute play Water Bar was presented by Chatham Players in the Jersey Voices 2023 Festival and in Rebound Production's 2024 Emerging Artist Showcase in London, UK. Tracie is excited to share her writing with others and hopes to inspire, encourage and empower diverse audiences with her writing!
Kamiah Vickers
From a young age, Kamiah felt a profound calling to share stories, whether it be in the form of performing or writing. Her plays draw from the truth of her personal experiences, weaving them into imaginative works that use the framework of theater to explore honest, human realities. Her time at New York University solidified the importance of her voice, culminating in numerous acting and writing projects. Kamiah’s play In Conversation of Love was later produced as a part of New York Theater Festival’s 2023 season, beginning her journey as an emerging playwright. This past year, she has actively contributed to numerous theater projects, including MCC Ambies, The National 24-Hour Play Cohort, and The Archive Play Festival. She currently works at The Dramatists Guild Foundation and St. Ann’s Warehouse.
She hopes to continue to be able to tell a range of stories that are meaningful, and push theater forward. She wants her words to live on, and has hopes of continuing to advocate and create opportunities for young writers. She is grateful for The Barter Theater and this exciting opportunity.
Kyra Davis
Kyra Davis is a southern artist who traded in southern hospitality to take on the city that never sleeps to further her career in acting, writing, and creating. She was a part of the Inaugural class in the Uptown Collective’s Renaissance Playwright Residency and currently a producing fellow at The Tank in NYC. Her play, SugarHill, has been workshopped at The Flea Theater and further developed with Dramatic Question Theatre. Check out her web series Front of House Faux Pas that she wrote, produced, and starred in on Instagram and Youtube.
Her passion is to create art for underrepresented voices and advancing their opportunities in the industry. Her inspirations are the Black women who came before her and the young Black women who will come after her. She desires to create works that empower and encourage them to live their lives unapologetically. Selected credits include: Law and Order: Organized Crime, Jitney (Rena), Intimate Apparel (Esther), and The Christians (Elizabeth).
SHINE: Illuminating Black Stories is sponsored by Joe & Donna Levine. This event is curated by Barter's Black Stories Black Voices program, which is made possible in part thanks to funding from The Jessie Ball duPont Fund.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.
Trains
By Quinton Cockrell
FEBRUARY 13 – 28 AT BARTER’S SMITH THEATRE
On October 31, 1919, an angry mob in Corbin, Kentucky, drove 200 Black citizens from town on railcars. Thirteen years later, Travis Hampton and his father, Lester, now living in Knoxville, are still dealing with the memories of that night. One night, Travis’ former friend, a white man named Junior Greevy, shows up at their door with a business proposition. Can Junior be trusted? Or does his presence present an even greater threat than before? Don’t miss this world premiere, the first work to be fully developed through Barter’s Black Stories Black Voices Initiative.
Content Advisories: (IL, P) – Intense language and themes of prejudice. More information.
Barter Theatre is partially funded by:
This project was supported [in part] by the Virginia Commission for the Arts, which receives support from the Virginia General Assembly and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.
A special thanks to the Town of Abingdon, Washington County, and the Virginia Tourism Corporation for their support.




