Jitney
Jitney
Set in an unlicensed jitney station in Pittsburgh’s Hill District, August Wilson’s Jitney bears witness to a community standing its ground in the face of erasure. As redevelopment threatens to dismantle both livelihoods and legacy, a group of Black men—drivers, workers, fathers, and friends—build dignity, humor, and survival in the margins of a system never designed to serve them. It is a world Trenton knows well: where official structures fail, people create their own, and joy becomes an act of resistance rather than escape. At the center is Jim Becker, a hardened owner whose fragile order is shattered by the return of his son, Booster, newly released from prison. Long-buried truths surface, forcing a reckoning between generations as private wounds collide with public struggle. Yet Jitney ultimately insists on something radical: that joy is the answer. Not naïve or accidental, but earned through truth-telling, reconciliation, and the refusal to disappear. In a city like Trenton—where survival itself requires courage—Jitney affirms that community endures, relationships can heal, and even in uncertain times, joy remains possible.
Nov 27-Dec 20, 2026



