WHYSEEART.

Draw inspiration for the sequel.

A Childhood Dream: Sketching Superheroes


February 7, 2023 by Chuck Schultz

New York Theater Workshop

The play, The Half-God of Rainfall, by Inua Ellams takes us on a spiritual journey. It showcased diverse divine systems of gods and goddesses that protect their devotees. At the end, a lesson learned about superiority took the form of the afterlife as a triumphant spiritual resolution. A history of ancient times which intime becomes mythology continues to apply to the modern world. Diverse cultures can be seen in a journey into mythology through ancient times. As in an epic cycle, the actors transformed emotionally and physically. We began to recognize two opposing forces, the rebellion against an ungodly power over the universe, and the divine protection over a heroic character.



In Yoruba ceremonial arts, there are poetic incantations that perform the ideals of the ethical gestures of wisdom in Yoruba belief. On stage at the New York Theater Workshop, during the weaning summer months of July and August 2023, the projection art by Tal Yarden presented a design which looked carefully toward the medium and its setting prior to the play itself. The digital collage of DNA in a geometric pattern construed as a cosmos, braided intricately to African hair culture in constellations, or cave drawings that sketched or weaved our ancestors’ observations into this physical world. It drew together materials for sacred purposes pointing to the Kuba Cloth, of the Shoowa people. A connection of heritages in tribal, or primitive arts which has its place in a state of duty to civilization, and involves generations, traditions, and archetypes weaved together to form these rites of passage. The creation of arrangements in Kuba cloths, and its relationship to the archeology of Nigerian art shows similar sacred objects, and the weaving of raffia palms for family lineages helps to look critically at the mode of performance, and its subjective purposes. In modern technology, for example, the mode of multimedia for groups of people collectively in the internet age gives agency to identify with others, and takes on new modes of performance for kindred spirits. While looking at the influences behind the play, it became more evident as one became more aware of Yoruba mythology. Their forms, at first glance were unfamiliar or inaccessible, and once brought into perspective with its actors, it organized African thought for a comparable dream state of popular thought. It actively questioned the possibilities for myths in society, and framed a geographical position for restoring a strong feminine deity displaced in an existing hierarchical system within western thought.

Yoruba culture and the African diaspora gave us another trial, of a Nigerian boy that grew up, traveled to the U.S, and goes on to play in the NBA for his claim to fame in the international games for the Nigerian basketball team. Acknowledgement of the Greek gods and goddesses that appear in the play at best represent a patriarchal history of the western world. It was the basis for our conflict between two mythologies. A confessional moment between Jason Bowen and Mister Fitzgerald clearly defined the boundaries set forward for half-gods. They revealed begotten fame, love, and ecstasy, yet it was all hindered neither for mortal gains, nor an emphatic goal, to reveal a diversity in a chaotic world. Zeus’s power is the upper hand that obstructed Demi’s dreams for playing basketball, as in an ironic misogynistic system gone to disarray. It playfully mirrored tyranny in an autonomous fashion that went against a preconceived social order or a humane code of conduct. This hypocrisy metaphorically narrates the multiplicity of genres; modes of athleticism and heroism in good faith portrayed by the obstacles against one’s free will. The everlasting afterlife of Demi, and justice served by the hands of his Yoruba mother that nurtured his myth are acts of piety; other times these myths share a similar transcendence of childhood dreams which are lost, but not forgotten. In pluralistic society, an agent of change can be misconstrued by a system polarized by diversity for illegitimate reasons.

A viewpoint of rebellion, or this reaping revenge for one’s free will from a dogma of unacceptable behavior, shows the disadvantages and sacrifices for classes of migrant identified groups, such as the African diaspora and the spread of Yoruba culture. We become entranced by their strength, and the athlete is personified in the appropriation of the warrior that Demi represents. A diverse world transcends our own familiarity, and in its interpretation is drawn with the aid of superheroes to represent the worship of divine spiritual protection. The simplicity condensed in the multiplicity of diversity compared to a clashing of opposing myths, genres, and viewpoints.

Adhering to Yoruba thought, one’s character, is seen as a life force or capacity, called “ase,” in the Yoruba world, empathized in the details of naturalism. The epic downfall presents another redemptive quality for the role of the Yoruba woman. There is a destructive force in nature that divides people by our own competitiveness. Whether in sports, in politics, in religions, or even greater ideological differences between people. The external forces that can be seen to divide us can leave us unknown to their source of origin.


The moral tag for myth-making in the modern world came in our introduction of Elegbra, the messenger God in Yoruba mythology, played by Lizan Mitchell. This point of view narrated an omniscient perspective for the narrative, while also aligning a scale for a bigger than life movement. For one, warring cultures or opposing basketball teams, and secondly how they may weigh against different realities, such as, superheroes or myths. Mitchell plays Elegbra, the role that comes between the humans and the spiritual world. Elegbra is also known to sometimes cause mischief or aid in human matters, or sometimes they play tricks on the vulnerable mortal beings. Mitchell has this line at the beginning of the play, “We must avoid conflict by all means possible.” The matriarchal powers in the Yoruba faith came to be nurtured, and a form of aggression that overcame the flow of nature for justice. The supernatural in Yoruba mythology reconstructed the pathways for understanding “ase,” and allowed equality to exist in diverse worlds based on moral character.

The amazing break away in this play was in the match up of gods and goddesses, their control over human life which builds over layers of raw human emotion, and our myths emulated nature. What differentiates the derivative nature is our willingness to nurture customary beliefs, and defend our social being in society. A representation of popular beliefs, Yoruban spirits and divinity, and the whimsical imagination intertwined within mythology was preserved in my drawings from the play. In their similarities, myth-making reflected my childhood dreams of superheroes and villains that depicted the elusive, yet often the illicit threat of the unknown. It was at Demi’s lowest point that left us with a grim reaper reimagined in his vengeance for the game. This dramatic change in character was pivotal for the humor in all seriousness. The gravity was taken out of his basketball, literally making his ball fall short to the basket, and his ‘air balls’ fell flat.With this characterization for our epic hero, we looked toward Modúpé with the spiritual guidance from Osún by her side. The rivaling display of naturalism, and a nurtured value in good faith appeared in warring mythologies. Perhaps, how the half-god became the God of Rainfall, was the downfall of the visceral heroic stature for an overarching feminine aptitude.