Jeremy
Harris’ provocative, sometimes funny, and challenging work, Slave Play, uses the sexual difficulties
of mixed race couples to explore Black identity and empowerment. The playwright roots his examination through
the lens of slavery and its historic subjugation of African-Americans.
The
play pulls no punches in its first extended scene (the show runs 2+ hours with
no intermission). A section of the
mirrored set, which reflects a large, white plantation manor, opens to reveal a
Black female slave (Joaquina Kalukango) and her White overseer (Paul Alexander
Nolan). Their interaction, tentative at
first, grows more pained and, finally, sexually charged. As they vanish behind the highly-polished set
another doorway opens and a four-poster bed is pushed on stage. This vignette reveals the mistress of the
plantation (Annie McNamara) and her educated, properly uniformed Black
manservant (Sullivan Jones). Soon, their
interaction devolves into a compromising position that includes a large black
dildo. The final set involves a Black supervisor
(Ato Blankson-Wood) and the indentured servant (James Cusati-Moyer) he looms
over. They taunt each other until
clothes are finally torn asunder and their carnal passions overtake them.
Just
when you begin to scratch your head in clueless wonderment the second scene is
introduced.
[Note:
The following paragraph is a spoiler alert.
You can skip to the 3rd paragraph down.]
What
is now presented to the audience are three couples, one African-American, the
other White, lounging on folding chairs in, what we learn, is a room set up to
process the role playing we have just witnessed. Two therapists, one Black, Tea (Chalia La
Tour), the other Latino, Patricia (Irene Sofia Lucio), have developed, what
they call, “Antebellum Sexual Performance Therapy” as a way for mixed couples
to deal with their sexual dysfunction using the brutality of slavery as a
release mechanism. The two Yale
University doctoral candidates (which they mention numerous times) excitedly
explain how the processing of their role playing experience will help each
partner move closer together as they confront and delve into their feelings
from the simulation.
What
transpires are high charged monologues, recriminations, and soulful
introspections by the participants - Kaneisha (Joaquina Kalukango) and her
husband Jim (Paul Alexander Nolan), Alana (Annie McNamara) and her spouse Phillip
(Sullivan Jones), and Gary (Ato Blankson-Wood) and Dustin (James Cusati-Moyer). The third, and final, scene takes place back
home in the apartment of Kaneisha and Jim.
What begins as a potential reconciliation between the two quickly
devolves into a delusional and abhorrent action by Jim, which leaves their marriage
in total disrepair.
Harris
is focusing on significant issues in Slave
Play, while also taking time to poke fun at social scientists, by dreaming
up an outlandish therapy regimen and masking their efforts in psychobabble and
questionable results. He questions what
is the Black identity within a mixed relationship and, in order to provide
harmony, is it necessary for African-Americans to subvert their identity as
they did during slavery? And how must
their White partners reassess their role and actions? The play, though, is too heavily layered and
dense with messy and jumbled connections and overwrought statements. Director Robert O’Hara provides strong,
measured guidance of the material, but the production could have benefitted
from the perspective of less is more.
The
cast is fully committed to their roles, which brings on uncomforting reality to
the production. Each portrayal has its
own strengths and merits. Sullivan Jones
brings a nonchalant air to the role of Phillip who, after detached bantering
with his spouse and others, shockingly realizes his lack of racial identity and
connection to his wife. Annie McNamara
gives a nuanced performance as Alana, Phillip’s married partner. Her nervous tics and eagerness to please tell
volumes about their fragile relationship.
Ato Blankson-Wood’s portrayal of Gary is, initially, more passive then
the other characters, but when he finally confronts his partner and his
idiosyncratic kvetching, the actor demonstrates a fierce acrimony that finally
explodes over his White soulmate’s irrational fixation. The actor James Cusati-Moyer, who portrays
Gary’s self-centered, somewhat obnoxious partner, Dustin, is superb. He is oblivious and shallow as he baits his
partner, questioning who is more Black?
Paul Alexander Nolan’s Jim is one of the more complex characters in the
production. Trying to put himself above
the fray, he shows an unsteadiness on how to lovingly proceed with the
African-American wife he adores. His
misguided resolution in scene three explodes in horror and pity. Joaquina Kalukango’s Kaneisha, the spouse of
Jim, comes across as the most affected of the six participants. She silently smolders during the therapy
processing before unleashing a tirade full of angst and realization. The two Yale therapists, Chalia La Tour as
Teá and Irene Sofia Lucio, a couple themselves, are less developed then the
other characters. They serve as provocateurs
and guides as the group continually processes their feelings. Their personas do, however, mask an undercurrent
of uneasiness within their bubbly facades.
Slave Play, at Broadway’s Golden
Theatre through January 19, 2020.
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