Threaded Order Chronological Order
| re: If I had to guess... | |
| Last Edit: whereismikeyfl 07:34 pm EDT 09/05/21 | |
| Posted by: whereismikeyfl 07:32 pm EDT 09/05/21 | |
| In reply to: re: If I had to guess... - dlittle 12:56 pm EDT 09/05/21 | |
|
|
|
| Your conversation with people of color would be just as anecdotal as mine. But you should have the conversation--it is eye opening. And when you think about it, with the playwright and director both white with not connection to Jamaican culture, it is going to be very hard for the production to overcome a "white" p.o.v. Perhaps they expected the novelist to be more involved, not knowing she would be too ill to. I was trying to learn more about the production, and found this. It brings up some of the issues with the second act. I reminded me of the intensely dramatic situations in Hortense and Gilbert's story....which are described rather than dramatized. |
|
| Link | Review: Small Island at National Theatre |
| reply to this message | |
| Another view | |
| Posted by: whereismikeyfl 07:37 pm EDT 09/05/21 | |
| In reply to: re: If I had to guess... - whereismikeyfl 07:32 pm EDT 09/05/21 | |
|
|
|
| Here is another interesting writer. You can feel the balance between pleasure and frustration just like the other posted reviewer had. | |
| Link | Shades of Noir |
| reply to this message | |
| re: Another view | |
| Posted by: dlittle 09:23 pm EDT 09/05/21 | |
| In reply to: Another view - whereismikeyfl 07:37 pm EDT 09/05/21 | |
|
|
|
| I have had conversations with people of color, students, but I chose not to bring them up here BECAUSE they’re anecdotal. However, that does not diminish your valid points. And I read both reviews. I am a cis gendered, white male…so I don’t feel comfortable arguing against any of these points. But I do think the conversation about who is allowed to tell which stories is a valid and interesting one. As a gay, male, director, should I only be allowed to direct plays about gay men? I don’t think so. But I also recognize that sexuality and race are different things. It’s all complicated. I appreciate what the first reviewer said in terms of the production being thrilling, and telling an important story, but still feeling like something was missing because of the POV of the play and its creators. It just becomes incredibly complicated when it’s such an epic story that incorporates aspects of race, and gender roles, and historical context. There is no one person who can properly address every issue the play touches on from a personal perspective. | |
| reply to this message | reply to first message |
Time to render: 0.010794 seconds.