When Dame-Jasmine Hughes takes the stage, she takes no prisoners. Marrying charisma, craft and fearlessness, she demands the audience go there with her — wherever "there" might be, emotionally and spiritually.
It could be digging under the complicated scars of a drug dealer ("Sunset Baby"), or the damaged psyche of a stripper ("Pussy Valley"), or a seen-it-all-before slave ("An Octoroon") or a same-sex lover wondering where the fire has gone ("Bright Half Life").
Now Hughes will turn a New York spotlight onto one of the Twin Cities stages she has commanded for the past three years. This spring she won an Obie Award for her portrayal of a vengeful sister in "Is God Is," Aleshea Harris' Afropunk spaghetti western revenge comedy, which premiered in February at the bold off-Broadway company Soho Rep.
"Jasmine has the deepest emotional well of actors I know," said her mentor Nataki Garrett, who has directed Hughes in two productions at Mixed Blood Theatre in Minneapolis — and will add a third when "Is God Is" opens there next Friday.
Hughes plays Racine, one of twin sisters who were wronged at birth. Now orphans, they're out to seek justice, and revenge. In a rave review, the New York Times praised her performance, calling Racine "an insolent, lip-smacking extrovert, to whom violence comes almost naturally."
"The thing about these characters is that they're really angry, and that's something rare to see onstage," said Garrett. "The world seeks to destroy women who're angry, and there's a deeper fear about black women's anger."
Hughes is accustomed to playing edgy, serious characters, but she finds Racine refreshing.
"She is bold, reckless and unconcerned with respectability politics — what people think of her," Hughes said. "She's blinded by purpose. But most of all, she's unapologetically black and Southern."