Who was Elijah McCoy? Until recently I
hadn’t a clue. Probably I’m not alone.
When the good people of the 4thLine Theatre invited me to see a production of their latest play, ‘The Real
McCoy, I soon found out. The play is a loosely historical and biographical
story of McCoy, a black inventor, born in Upper Canada but who moved to the
United States, and made a life for himself as an inventor of many things,
notably a special cup that allowed steam engines to run for longer periods of
time without having to be stopped every so often to be re-lubricated. If this
sounds small, imagine a train trip (as the play asks you to do) interrupted
every fifteen minutes by stops to re-lubricate the engines – the stops lasting
longer than the journey. Sounds like commuter hell.
I confess that I don’t know how much of the
production is historically accurate. McCoy doesn’t get an entry in the
Dictionary of Canadian Biography. He shows up only briefly in Robin Winks’
history of the blacks in Canada, as one amongst many Canadian blacks who
drifted south to the United States in search of opportunity in the latter years
of the nineteenth century. I haven’t done an extensive search, but it seems
hard to find a good deal of material on him. What’s more, the writer of the
play, Andrew Moodie, admits in the program that he has taken some liberties. He
wanted to get at the human story of the man’s life. In this, he more than
succeeded.
This blog isn’t usually the place to find a
theatre review, so I won’t go on at length of the merits of the production
(there are many).
As a work of history, the play is
fascinating. Written and first produced in 2006, the play makes some
interesting choices. The most noticeable is to make the endemic racism of
McCoy’s life only one part of the production. An intelligent and ambitious man
like McCoy would have had to face racism on a continuous and ongoing basis. It
would have stunted his career, blighted many of his hopes. All of this is in
the play, but the play is also much more than this. In many respects it
succeeds at telling a deep and universal human story – at drawing anyone in.
I found myself chuckling at a moment early
in the play when the young McCoy tries to smash a puzzle his father has given
him – frustrated that he can’t get it right. One of my own sons does this on an
almost daily basis, especially when hungry or tired. Lego is just too much. In
the play McCoy’s father shushes his anger, consoles him and says ‘Anger blinds
you. You can’t see when you’re angry.’ The situation is particular; its
application is universal.
As I sat in the outdoor theatre in a crowd
consisting entirely of white folks, watching this play put on by African
Canadian actors, in rural Ontario, it reminded me that the inclusive history
that many academics practice is part of something bigger. A historical play,
whatever the liberties taken, is still a history lesson – and a much more
pleasant one than I could deliver in a lecture hall.
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