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Elder, Lonne, III

(born December 26, 1931, Americus, Georgia, U.S.—died June 11, 1996, Woodland Hills, California) American playwright whose critically acclaimed masterwork, Ceremonies in Dark Old Men (1965, revised 1969), depicted the dreams, frustrations, and ultimate endurance of a black family living in the Harlem neighbourhood of New York City in the 1950s.

Orphaned as a boy, Elder was raised in New Jersey by an aunt and an uncle who ran a numbers game (i.e., an illegal lottery) out of their home. As a young man, he moved to New York City, where he worked a number of odd jobs while learning the acting trade and writing poems, short stories, and, finally, plays. From 1959 to 1962 he played the role of Bobo in the classic drama A Raisin in the Sun, at the personal invitation of its author, Lorraine Hansberry.

Ceremonies in Dark Old Men was presented as a dramatic reading in 1965 and then produced for the stage by the Negro Ensemble Company in 1969. The drama centres on the fractured Parker family, whose aging patriarch dreams of lost youth while his daughter toils at a dead-end office job, his two hustling sons sell bootleg liquor and engage in petty thievery, and a smooth-talking con artist runs numbers out of their decrepit barber shop. The play enjoyed instantaneous success, bringing Elder many prizes and being produced for television in 1975.

By that time Elder had moved to Los Angeles, where he wrote scripts for television shows, for the motion picture Sounder (1972; Academy Award nominee for best screenplay), and for A Woman Called Moses (1978), a television miniseries based on the life of abolitionist Harriet Tubman. Elders's only other play to be staged, Charades on East Fourth Street (1967), was produced for a New York social service agency.

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