After college and graduate school, Mwalim chose to settle on Cape Cod as opposed to back to New York. He worked with a small group of local performers to co-found Oversoul Theatre Collective, Inc., and became the group's artistic director. He has used music, theater and storytelling as a platform to explore the Black and Native American experience; and the American phenomenon of having to choose one race, despite the rhetoric of the American melting pot. He has called himself a "Black Wampanoag." In 2000, Mwalim became a part of the
Lincoln Center Theatre's Director's Lab program, and later held residencies at the Harlem Theatre Company,
The POINT CDC/Live From The Edge theater, and the Bronx Writer's Center, where he presented his original plays and performance pieces as well as taught workshops in creative writing, filmmaking and drama. He was also a very active presenter and performer at the Nuyorican Poet's Cafe,
the Afrikan Theatre, and The Baggot Inn in
Greenwich Village, where he led the house band. His plays also began getting picked up for productions by various Off-Broadway and Off-Off Broadway theater groups as well as productions throughout the US, Canada, the U.K. and the Caribbean. His award-winning one-man show "A Party at the Crossroads" is subtitled the tales and adventures of a Black Indian growing up in a Jewish neighborhood, has been presented at the
Mashantucket Pequot Museum in
Connecticut and as a part of the Indian Summer series at the
American Indian Community House in
New York City. His performance piece, based on memories of Mashpee of the past, "Backwoods People" was presented at the 1999 National Black Theatre Festival in Winston-Salem, NC. His romantic comedy, Working Things Out was a hit at the 2005 festival. Mwalim became a professor of English and African American studies at
UMass Dartmouth in 2003 and the Director of Black Studies (formerly African & African American Studies) in 2011. He sometimes calls himself "DaPhunkee Professor." According to
Black Masks Magazine, Mwalim is considered a leading voice in the new generation of artists. Some of his musical recordings have won awards from the New England Urban Music Awards WGBH, Boston's PBS television station, selected Mwalim as a Filmmaker-In-Residence. He will be producing a film adaptation of Look At My Shorts, a collection of Mwalim's short plays exploring contemporary Black Indian experiences in Massachusetts. == Books ==