True Colors Theatre’s National Monologue Competition Finals Anniversary: They’re Not the Future, They’re the Voice We’ve Been Ignoring

Date:

If you want honesty? This wasn’t a “nice youth arts event.”

This was a room full of young people refusing to be underestimated, in real time, under pressure, with receipts.

On Monday, May 4th, 2026, inside the Apollo Theater, the stage didn’t feel historic because of who had stood there before.

It felt historic because of who was standing there now.

The Lie We Tell About Youth

There’s this narrative adults love to run:

“That young people are the future.”

And it sounds supportive, but if we’re being real? It’s also dismissive. Because it quietly suggests: you’re not fully formed yet…you’re not ready yet…you matter later.

But what I witnessed that night?

Was a room full of young people saying without asking permission:

“We are not in rehearsal for our lives.”

The Details Don’t Lie

You can always tell when something is real by the details.

Not the big applause moments, the in-between ones.

Like when Isaiah Hyde stepped into his monologue, “Happier” and somewhere in the middle of it, he paused.

Not a forgotten-line pause.

Not a nervous stumble.

A choice.

He looked out into the audience, really looked, and for a split second, it felt like the room exhaled with him. And then he continued, not louder, not more dramatic, just truer.

That’s the moment everything clicked.

This wasn’t performance.

This was ownership.

Or the performer who let a line sit, didn’t rush it, didn’t chase the next beat. Just let it land, heavy, honest. And the audience didn’t clap right away because we were too busy processing what had just been handed to us.

That’s not beginner work.

That’s presence.

Inside the Night: The Program That Held the Room

Because what made the night land wasn’t just the performances, it was the intention behind every moment.

From the very beginning, the evening was anchored by voices guiding the experience:

  • Welcoming Remarks — Jamil Jude
  • Introduction of Sponsors — Chandra Stephens-Albright
  • Introduction of Judges / Co-Host — Justen Ross

And then, one by one, the finalists stepped into the light:

National Finalists & Performances

  • Elijah Ghant — “Icons of Black History Want Snacks” by Idris Goodwin
  • Mesgana Alemshowa — “I Don’t Want to Be Another First Story” by Alayna Jacqueline
  • Rogelio Romo-Rodriguez — “Broken Apology” by K.W. Jackson
  • Dante Cannon — “Happier” by Rachel Lynett
  • Amani Stubbs — “Boys Will Be Boys” by Nubia Monks
  • J’Vion Outlaw — “The Hunt” by Star Finch
  • Zora Rose — “Sparking Joy” by Francisca Da Silveira
  • Zharick Manrique Puentes — “I Want You to Know” by Alayna Jacqueline
  • Eshani Lucas — “The Recurring Dream, or Small Baby Hands” by Psalmayene 24
  • Kalin Clark — “Chuck” by Jonathan Norton
  • Amelie Davis-Quiroz — “Daddy’s Blues” by Parker
  • Ayari Malrey — “Queer Black Creative License” by Nick Hadikwa Mwaluko
  • Jaylen Hamilton — “Not Supposed To” by Donnetta Lavinia Grays
  • Jasmine Crumpton — “I Want You to Know” by Alayna Jacqueline
  • Isaiah Hyde — “Happier” by Rachel Lynett
  • Naimah Doczi — “What’s Left” by Imani Vaughn-Jones
  • Azariah Robertson — “I’m Magic Man” by Josh Wilder

Alumni Performances

Khylee McBryde

Ndeye Niang

Tyrik Iman-Washington Jr.

Benne’ McCants

Seine Young

Closing Moment

Presentation of Winners

And behind every name on that list was a moment the room won’t forget.

They Are Fluent in Complexity

Let’s talk about what these young people are carrying.

Because the material? It’s not light.

Identity.

Queerness.

Mental health.

Family expectations.

Cultural pride.

The quiet, constant negotiation of existing in systems that weren’t built with you in mind.

And here’s what stood out:

They didn’t flatten those experiences into something digestible.

They let them be messy.

One moment you’re laughing, like real laughter, the kind that catches you off guard and then two seconds later you’re like, “Oh…that’s not funny. That’s real.”

This generation understands something a lot of people older than them are still avoiding:

Two things can be true at once.

The Courage Was the Headliner

Yes, the technique was there. Absolutely.

But technique isn’t what made the room lean forward.

It was courage.

Because it takes something to stand on a stage like the Apollo and say:

  • “This is how I feel.”
  • “This is what I’ve experienced.”
  • “This is who I am becoming.”

Without softening it.

Without translating it for comfort.

Without asking, “Is this okay to say?”

And what made it even more powerful?

They weren’t doing it alone.

Community Was the Real Win

You could feel it, backstage, in the audience, in the way they watched each other.

No weird competitive energy. No silent comparison.

Just:

  • “You got this.”
  • “I see you.”
  • “We’re all up here together.”

That kind of support doesn’t just make better performers.

It makes healthier artists.

And let’s be clear, we need more of those.

The Apollo Didn’t Make Them, They Met It

People love to talk about the Apollo like it’s the thing that validates you.

But here’s what I saw:

These young people didn’t shrink to meet the legacy.

They matched it.

And in some moments? They expanded it.

Because legacy isn’t something you protect by keeping it frozen.

It’s something you honor by letting it evolve.

Screenshot

About Those Winners…

Third place: Zora Rose

Second place: Kalin Clark

First place: Isaiah Hyde

And yes, celebrate them. That matters.

But if all you take away from this night is who placed, you missed it.

Because what actually happened is this:

A group of young people walked onto that stage as participants…

and walked off as people who now understand the power of their own voice.

Isaiah Hyde’s win felt earned. Grounded. And if that moment in his performance was any indication, it’s only the beginning.

But so did everyone else’s moment.

Because not everybody gets a trophy, but everybody got transformed.

Watch It, But Don’t Just Consume It

You can watch the full National Finals here:

And you should.

But don’t treat it like background noise.

Watch how they pause.

Watch how they listen to each other.

Watch the moments where they choose honesty over perfection.

Because that’s the part people can’t teach.

What This Night Actually Proved

We don’t have a “youth problem.”

We have an adult listening problem.

Because these young people are already:

  • thinking deeply
  • feeling fully
  • questioning systems
  • creating meaning

And when you give them the tools and more importantly, the space, they don’t just rise to the occasion.

They redefine it.

So no, this wasn’t about “the next generation.”

This was about right now.

And if we’re smart?

We’ll stop asking them to wait and start catching up.

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Larnez Kinsey
Larnez Kinsey
Larnez Kinsey is a writer for Black Westchester Magazine, a public-health advocate, and a seasoned New York State civil servant with two decades of service, including the last ten years as a Security Hospital Treatment Assistant in a maximum-security forensic psychiatric facility. With deep expertise in crisis management inside one of the state’s most demanding environments, she brings unmatched frontline insight into trauma, safety, human behavior, and the systemic gaps that influence community outcomes. A lifelong supercreative, Larnez is also the Co-Founder and CEO of BlackGate Consulting Group, where she uses her multidisciplinary skill set to drive transformative change for businesses, nonprofits, and community-based organizations. Her work bridges policy, protection, and healing, grounded in a clear understanding of cybernetic ecology, New York’s cultural landscape, and the interplay between mental health and community resilience. Larnez is additionally a co-host on Black Westchester Magazine’s flagship shows, People Before Politics and The Sunday Rundown, where she elevates community voices and engages in conversations that challenge systems and amplify truth. She also serves as the Economic Development Chair for the Yonkers NAACP and is a Reiki Master Teacher, integrating holistic wellness with strategic advocacy. Through every role, Larnez remains committed to empowering individuals, strengthening communities, and moving resources to the places where they can create the greatest impact.

1 COMMENT

  1. I love it Larnez, now I will watch the video to capture the present leaders speak to us so we can hear.

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