Painted Red ran at the Shelter Studio 54 until April 27th. This
writer saw it only days before its close. I am sure some of you heard
about the heroine in the play but I can imagine many more of you know
nothing about Henrietta Lacks whose living cells was a panacea for the
world of medicine in this true life tale.
“Painted Red” tells
the story of Lacks as her life progressed from the Tobacco farm to
Baltimore, Md., where the family moved in hopes of seeing better times.
Tara Taylor does a fine job portraying Henrietta Lacks, an African
American woman who was the unwitting source of what became known as the
HeLa cell line. Since John Hopkins was Lacks only choice of a nearby
hospital that accepted people of color in the 1950s, Henrietta went
there after falling ill. Dr. Gey (Alan Thurston) discovered a lump in
her cervix and cut off a small part of the tumor forwarding it to the
pathology lab. The prognosis was that Henrietta had a malignant
epidermoid carcinoma of the cervix. This was bad news for the mother of
5.
Painted Red was written and directed by Cynthia Stephens
and most of the supporting cast played multiple characters, so I will
list the Painted Red cast herewith: Michael Broadhurst, Jeff Burchfield,
John Cannon, Jeffrey Allen Desalu, Jamyl Dobson, Milton Elliott, Kevin
Gordon, Tiffany Nichole Greene, Deaon Griffin-Pressley, Sahirah Johnson,
Ro Milner, Liz Morgan, Waleed Richardson, Tony Robinson and Rocky
Friedman Vargas.
Lacks received treatment for her cancer via
sewn in place radium tube inserts that were removed several days later.
Henrietta was released from the hospital and told to return for X-ray
treatments as a follow-up. During her radiation treatments for the
tumor, two samples of Henrietta's cervix were removed—a healthy part and
a cancerous part. This was done unbeknownst to Lacks and without her
permission. Cells from her cervix were given to Dr. George Otto Gey.
These cells eventually became the HeLa (initials taken from her first
and last name) immortal cell line, a commonly used cell line in
biomedical research.
Henrietta’s condition worsened, making
traveling to her appointments a hardship, so Henrietta asked to be
committed to the hospital where she remained until her death. The
cancer had spread throughout her body and Henrietta was in significant
pain, unable to even make it to the window to view her family standing
below. To add insult to injury the doctors discovered Henrietta had
developed gonorrhea, a venereal disease passed on to her by her husband.
Meanwhile, the doctors secretly continued to experiment on Ms. Lacks
keeping it secret from her family. Realizing her impending death,
Henrietta begged her family and friends to protect and care for her
children. In the play, Painted Red, family and friends did agree to
care for Henrietta’s children but sadly after Henrietta’s death, it
would be her very family who would abuse and prey on her children.
Henrietta
Lacks’ died at age 31 of uremic poisoning leaving her husband and
children devastated. After her death, her family continued to struggle
unaware that Henrietta’s immortal cells lived on and were being cloned
and utilized by doctors throughout the world, netting huge profits for
John Hopkins and medical science.
While conducting research in
his lab, George Gey, discovered that Henrietta's cells were unlike
other cells. Hers did something scientists had never seen before: They
remained alive and grew, which was miraculous for doctors who ordinarily
could not keep cells alive past a few days. Gey isolated a cell from
Henrietta, duplicated it and started a cell line. Henrietta’s cells
were the first immortal cell line, so doctors were able to conduct
multiple experiments such as polio research wherein in 1954, Jonas Salk
developed a vaccine for polio. The cells were put into mass production
in the first ever cell production factory.
HeLa cells have
been used in a variety of tests such as human sensitivity to cosmetics,
glue, tape and other products. Scientists have grown some 20 tons of
Lack’s cells. There are nearly 11,000 patents involving HeLa cells. The
HeLa cells have also been beneficial to HIV-AIDS Research.
In 1973,
the Lack’s family discovered John Hopkins' deception when a scientist
called to ask for blood samples from the family as part of a genetic
experiment. For 40 years or so, researchers continued to cultivate
millions, and perhaps billions of Lacks' cells, while her family sought
information, to gain a portion of the proceeds and gain control of
Lack’s cell line. At last knowledge, the National Institutes of Health
worked out an agreement to give partial control and return of the cell
line, but no compensation to the family. However, the medical
establishment must now get permission from the family for further use of
Henrietta Lacks’ cell line.
For further information about the
life of Henrietta Lacks, interested parties can read "The Immortal Life
of Henrietta Lacks" written by Rebecca Skloot. I do not know if the
playwright and producers of "Painted Red" will again present the show at
another time, but if so, please go see it. It's a turn in the pages of
African American history well worth discovering and rediscovering.
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