Jerry G. White

Jerry G. provides School based and Family interactive Programming for Libraries and all other venues. All of his programs is centered around the ability for the audience to easily find books and or source materials. His programs includes: Music Percussion Instruments, Storytelling, and Theatre. Jerry G. is the Author of the Children's Book; Anansi and the colorful kente cloth.

A PEFORMANCE METHOD‐ ANANSI AND THE COLORFUL KENTE CLOTH

AudienceFamilies
Delivery MethodLive & Indoors Live & Outdoors
Music and Theatre: A PERFORMANCE METHOD: ANANSI AND THE COLORFUL KENTE CLOTH Is a one-man show that brings to life the debut Children’s book Anansi and the colorful kente cloth Written by Jerry G. White and Illustrated by Courtney Strickland. You get reintroduced to the number one West African trickster Anansi the spider You will also meet his friends Efie the Elephant and Tuako the Tortoise. The performance incorporates theater, music, percussion instruments, and singing.

A PERFORMANCE METHOD-BREAKING GROUND

AudienceFamilies
Delivery MethodLive & Indoors Live & Outdoors
Music/Theatre: A PERFORMANCE METHOD‐BREAKING GROUND‐a one‐man performance that incorporates theater, music, percussion instruments, and singing.Breaking Ground is about how Alex Johnson, a member of the famed 54th Massachusetts Infantry during the U.S. Civil War, Bass Reeves, Federal Marshall, Horace King,Architect and Bridge Builder, George Washington Carver a Botanist and inventor, and Satchel Paige Major League Baseball Pitcher had to break ground to achieve their greatness.

A Performance Method: Juneteenth-Breaking Ground

AudienceFamilies
Delivery MethodLive & Indoors Live & Outdoors
Music/Theatre: Juneteenth-Breaking Ground is an interactive program based on the book. Lil Dan the drummer boy/A CIVIL WAR STORY by Romare Bearden. The audience will learn about the history of the Civil War and how the book fits into the history of when in Galveston, TX, Union Major General Gordon Granger gave General Order No. 3 on June 19, 1865 two years after US President Abraham Lincoln announced the Emancipation Proclamation on September 22, 1862 announcing that all enslaved were free!