May 21 2022
Song from the Uproar

Song from the Uproar

Presented by AWAACC at August Wilson Cultural Center

COVID-19 Safety Protocols: To ensure that we are able to move forward with the performance in the safest way possible, we are now requiring all participants – artists, musicians, stage crew, staff, and attendees age 5 and older – to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19. The only approved masks are N95 & kN95 masks. Individuals who cannot wear a mask are asked not to visit at this time. “Fully vaccinated” means on the day of the performance date as shown on the valid ticket, a guest is: at least 14 days after their second dose of the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine, or at least 14 days after their single dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, and fully up-to-date on boosters based on eligibility determined by the CDC. Those not yet eligible for a booster will be able to continue to enter with proof of full vaccination against COVID-19 (including at least two weeks since the second dose of a two-dose vaccine or a single dose of a one-dose vaccine). Guests under the age of 5 who must be accompanied by an adult that meets our venue’s vaccination requirements.

To learn more about the Center’s health policies, please visit here.


An opera in one act by Missy Mazzoli with a libretto by Royce Vavrek and Mazzoli. It is inspired by the life of Swiss explorer and writer Isabelle Eberhardt. “Inspired by the fascinating salvaged journals of early-twentieth-century explorer Isabelle Eberhardt, the 2012 chamber opera has been called “powerful” (The Wall Street Journal) and “a captivating multimedia spectacle” (The New York Times).

Singing Isabelle Eberhardt is Amanda Van Story Lewis, the first Black woman to star in the opera.  At age 21, after the death of her father, mother, and brother in quick succession, she travelled alone to Algeria. She dressed as a man, converted to Islam, and joined a Sufi order, roamed the desert on horseback, and fell in love with an Algerian soldier. After surviving an attempted assassination and a failed suicide pact with her lover, Isabelle drowned in a desert flash flood at age 27. Her journals were salvaged from the wreckage. This is her song.”

Dates & Times

2022/05/21 - 2022/05/21

Location Info

August Wilson Cultural Center