In a way, the play Actually is cheating. The show, which deals with the
ripped-from-the-headlines subject matter of sexual consent on college campuses,
spends a great deal of time providing an extensive backstory of the two
protagonists. The scenarios, while multifaceted
and psychologically thought-provoking, providing audience members with plenty
of information to process, make for good theater, but would have little
relevance at an actual campus hearing on the charges. The impression playwright Anna Ziegler gives
is just the opposite--that all the occurrences on stage are important in
determining the central question of consensual sex.
The focus of Actually is on two incoming Princeton
University freshman—Tom, a handsome, self-confident African-American male who
has a way with the women and Amber, a pretty, somewhat self-deprecating, Jewish
female. After a couple of meet-ups they attend
a campus party, where they both become extremely drunk, and head back to Tom’s
residence hall for a sexual encounter.
The next morning, neither remembers exactly what happened, but soon Amber
is talking about the escapade as a rape and not a consensual fling. From there, there are brief snippets of
scenes with unseen Deans and faculty representatives intermixed with pithy
monologues about the night’s events. In
the end, nothing is resolved, letting the audience come up with their own
judgement.
What makes this issue so confounding
for all parties is who to believe with very little outright evidence or
witnesses. Again, most of what is
presented in Actually would not be
available to a University hearing panel.
What the play does get right, in fleeting glimpses, is the sometimes
free-wheeling and undisciplined nature of a campus hearing with poorly trained
campus personnel deciding life-changing charges. It would have been interesting if Ms. Ziegler
would have spent more time commenting on the administrative process.
The play is structured as a
combination of the two characters interacting and making direct comments,
speeches, and pleadings in the direction of the audience. It is not that the audience is being acknowledged. Instead, these asides and digressions have
the feel of an accuser and accused making their case, presenting their version
of the truth.
Ronald Emile, who plays Tom and
Arielle Siegel, who portrays Amber, are both very good and convincing as two
University Frosh somewhat over their heads.
They produce a realistic sense of empathy for their situation. When need be they are playful, forceful, vulnerable
and sexy.
Director Taneisha Duggan shows
restraint and compassion. She adroitly
teases out each character’s personal history and circumstances to present
well-defined portraits of two undergraduates coming together for a fateful
night. Ms. Duggan adeptly utilizes the
empty-laden stage to create a fullness to the production. She seamlessly alternates the action from
character interaction to character orations to the audience.
Jean Kim’s scenic design of
highly polished steps leading to the empty stage gives the set the feel of a
campus lecture hall or classroom. Adding
a screen at the back of the stage, allowing the characters to be occasionally portrayed
in silhouette, adds to the sometimes shrouded nature of this type of episode.
Amith A. Chandrashaker’s
lighting design, with colored hues and bright, intense spotlights, contributes
to the under-the-microscope complexion of the play.
Actually,
a
challenging and provocative work that, nonetheless, only “actually” skims the
surface of the subject of consensual sex on college campuses.
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