It's 1997, and successful businessman Harmond Wilks is poised to become Pittsburgh's first African-American mayor. Wilks also has a surefire plan to revitalize the decrepit Hill District of his youth, but standing in his way is a ramshackle old house and the determined old man who claims to own it. Both moving and funny, this final chapter – depicting a fragile community wrestling with the temptations and risks of paving over its heritage – shows that while the challenges change, the struggle endures.
The late August Wilson is the celebrated author of the landmark ten-play cycle that chronicles the African-American experience through the 20th century. The Huntington has produced seven previous Wilson plays, several of which went on to national acclaim and numerous awards. Director Kenny Leon also directed August Wilson's Gem of the Ocean with Phylicia Rashad at the Huntington and on Broadway, and the 2004 Broadway production of A Raisin in the Sun.
"Wilson's Radio Golf is a splendid finale!" — Seattle Post-Intelligencer
"Tightly interwoven with the preceding plays yet entirely understandable on its own, Radio Golf is funny, thoughtful, and reverberant."" — The Los Angeles Times
"It's a renewal of the spirit – as symbolized by the home of that ancient seer [Aunt Ester] – that Wilson suggests as an agenda item for the new millenium." — The Washington Post
"A warm, wise, and richly humorous play, which adamantly speaks to the way we live now." — The Seattle Times
"A splendid conclusion to August Wilson's 100-year African-American drama cycle. Radio Golf is a rich, carefully wrought human tapestry that is colorful, playful, thoughtful, and compelling." — The Hollywood Reporter
"Radio Golf and August's incomparable 10-play cycle demonstrate how valuable the nurturing of new and diverse voices has been and remains for culture, the art of drama, and, of course, our society." — Gordon Davidson, former Managing Director, Center Theatre Group in Los Angeles.