"Funnyhouse of a Negro, Adrienne Kennedy's 1964 one-act play set, essentially, inside the head of a disturbed young black woman named Sarah, catches perfectly that moment in time when the struggle could have gone either way: black identity might have been erased, or it might have reasserted itself. We know now what happened: black power, black is beautiful. That perspective makes Ms. Kennedy's play... doubly interesting. It's still a fearlessly innovative piece of theater." - The New York Times