
āHotel Berryā production tells untold stories of Athens, highlights Black community

The 51ĀŅĀ× College of Fine Arts professional theater company, Tantrum Theater, produced a new work spotlighting one of many untold parts of Athens history, the Berry Hotel.
The play, āHotel Berry,ā was years in the making, said playwright Jacqueline E. Lawton, having been conceptualized in 2019. Lawtonās goal was to tell a story about Athens that wasnāt widely known, but that residents were proud of.
The play was funded with the help of a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts awarded to Tantrum Theater in 2021.
Actors, writers, producers and directors worked with the Mount Zion Baptist Church Preservation Society, a nonprofit working to recognize the āhistory and ongoing concerns of Black Americans in Southeast Ohio and throughout the region.ā
The Mount Zion Baptist Church Preservation Society was a completely invested partner in the realization of the play from script to stage, and two characters in the play are even named after Society board members.
āThis is a story of Black entrepreneurs that were incredibly successful and how they lived their lives ⦠in 1912,ā said Josh Coy, producing director of Tantrum Theater. āItās really a window into a community story that people should be proud of.ā
Trevellya Ford-Ahmed, communication and media director for the Society, said the Society has never been this intimately involved with a play about their town and said creating āHotel Berryā was a unique experience for the organization. Ford-Ahmed said this involvement included reading and giving feedback on the play for historical accuracy and publicity.
āItās a story that really needs to be told, and especially for our youth,ā she said. āWe hope that it will attract students ⦠so that they can really get the inside scoop of this marvelous building that was torn down to make a parking lot.ā
āHotel Berryā centers around Edward Berry and his wife, Martha āMattieā Berry, a Black couple who owned the hotel and were trailblazers in the hospitality business at a time when equity was far from realized. Lawton explained that the couple, specifically Mattie, was responsible for practices that are commonplace in the hotel industry today, such as placing Bibles and small toiletries in rooms. The play also explores Edwardās desire to run for public office at a time when Black people were not being elected to political positions, Lawton explained.
āThis really could be a trilogy, I could tell so many plays just on this one idea,ā said Lawton, who noted that she fell in love with the āenergy of the cityā while visiting and researching Athens. āThe hardest part is, always in theater, narrowing down what aspect of the story youāre telling.ā
Director JaMeeka Holloway said her vision for āHotel Berryā was to include all voices in the process, including actors and community partners, and to portray the characters as more than just historical figures.
āMy goal is to take what it is that they are bringing into the room, and then support them,ā Holloway said. āItās never my intention to fill the role of executive thinker.ā