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“Portrait of Ludmilla as Nina Simone”: a scene of resistance in Louisiana

“Portrait of Ludmilla as Nina Simone”: a scene of resistance in Louisiana
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Performances of Frenchman David Lescot's show, a vibrant tribute to the African-American artist, rocked audiences in New Orleans and Lafayette. "Libé" followed its American tour in a state with a slave-owning past and threatened by Donald Trump's crusade against education and culture.
Ludmilla Dabo at the Lupin Theater at Tulane University in New Orleans, March 18, 2025. (Camille Farrah-Lenain/Libération)
by Anne Diatkine , special correspondent in New Orleans and Lafayette (Louisiana)

Can a tiny French show take the pulse of the political tragedy sweeping through the United States? And more specifically, how Trump's inauguration is corroding civil rights by amplifying discrimination while legitimizing it? Is a huge international star like Nina Simone more subversive in 2025 than in the 1960s? What would happen if she returned today to stride across the stage as she did in Harlem, New York, in 1969 during an open-air concert, echoing the words of poet David Nelson: "Are you ready, Black people? Are you ready to do what it takes? Are you ready to kill if necessary? Are you ready to tear down the white world? To burn down buildings? Are you ready to build a Black world?"

Yes, what would happen to him under the Trump era who, busy as he is with achieving "peace" in the world, still finds time to get himself appointed president of the prestigious Kennedy Center in Washington because "wokeism is over in this country" ? And what happens when the

Libération

Libération

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