Skip to content
The Historic New Orleans Collection
A black and white portrait of a man wearing a dark headwrap and a light-colored button-up shirt. He gazes directly into the camera with a neutral expression, against a plain background.

Never Fight a Shark in Water

The Wrongful Conviction of Gregory Bright

September 19, 2024, 7–8:30 p.m.

520 Royal Street
Tricentennial Wing
1st Floor

HNOC presents Never Fight a Shark in Water: The Wrongful Conviction of Gregory Bright, a one-man documentary stage play based entirely on the words and recollections of Gregory Bright. Bright spent 27½ years in prison for a murder he did not commit. The play, written by Lara Naughton and performed by Bright himself, tells the remarkable story of Bright’s wrongful conviction and exoneration.

This program is presented in conjunction with HNOC's exhibition Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration, on view until January 19, 2025.

A black and white photo of a man sitting on a doorstep. He wears a light t-shirt, a do-rag, and a chain necklace. He is holding onto an iron gate with one hand and resting the other on his knee, looking pensively into the distance.

“Never fight a shark in water; get him on land and you got him. Well, it took me 27½ years but I finally got that shark on land.”

Related Exhibition
1937 2 3 o6 Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration
July 19, 2024 to February 16, 2025

On Halloween weekend, 1975, a 15-year-old was killed in the Calliope Projects in New Orleans. Gregory Bright, 20 years old at the time, was arrested along with a co-defendant he had never met before, charged with 2nd degree murder, wrongfully convicted, and sentenced to life in Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola without the possibility of parole or suspension of sentence. Bright, who was illiterate when he entered prison, taught himself to read, then taught himself the law, getting his appeals all the way to the State Supreme Court before a lawyer from the Innocence Project New Orleans stepped in to help unravel the case. It took Gregory Bright 27 ½ years to prove his innocence and come home.

Says Bright, “The odds were against me, but it’s like my main man Wing Ding used to say when we was in prison: Never fight a shark in water; get him on land and you got him. Well, it took me 27½ years but I finally got that shark on land.”

Never Fight a Shark in Water explores the universal experiences of anger, forgiveness, and compassion. It exposes the criminal justice system failures that lead to wrongful convictions and challenges us to rethink our understanding of freedom.

Support

Media Partner
WWL-TV
Exhibition Program Partner
Spark Justice Fund (Borealis Philanthropy)

Related Exhibitions

View More
Exhibitions

Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration

July 19, 2024 to February 16, 2025

Related Books

View More
Books

Captive State: Louisiana and the Making of Mass Incarceration

CAPTIVE STATE cover

Related Stories

View More
First Draft

Processing Hope and Loss in the Prison Portraits of “One Big Self”

First Draft

Death on Display

Related Collection Highlights

View More
A screenshot from a vintage color film shows part of a ship with the name "VERNON C. BAIN" written on the side.

“Vernon C. Bain” Christening Ceremony Video

When New York City’s war on drugs sent incarceration rates soaring, officials commissioned a floating jail built and christened downriver from New Orleans.

The cover of the newspaper "Hospital Banner" from August of 1955.

Hospital Banner Newsletters

An unusual periodical, written and produced by residents of the state mental hospital in the mid-20th century

Related News

View More
A painting depicting a New Orleans police car with two officers inside and a distressed Black man in the back seat. Another officer is in a second police car, and houses are visible in the background under a dark blue sky.
Resources

Reflecting on “Captive State”: How to Take Action

February 26, 2025
Explore resources from our curatorial team about how to advocate for change in America’s carceral system.
A tour guide gestures towards an exhibition display at HNOC.
HNOC in the News

In NOLA.com Guest Column, HNOC Historian Discusses “Captive State” As Public History Project

October 20, 2025
Curator Eric Seiferth explains how HNOC’s 2025 exhibition and companion book serve as an important public telling of privately known truths.
Stay Connected

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

2015 0364 51 o6