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To: mandaladon
This might amuse: Upscale school revives a satire about race - Student actors confront their fear of offending people, as they depict a 1960s Southern town that can't function when all the black folk disappear
12 posted on 03/28/2014 4:24:51 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
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To: Cincinatus' Wife

I went to the article and copied this. Do you think a public school could do this play especially with 7th and 8th graders and in a mixed racial area??

Without triggering a big uproar? From various factions???

“At first, we didn’t want to do it, didn’t want to say the word ‘nigra’.... But we learned this is a way to bring a message. I hope [the audience] figures out this isn’t a negative message.”

Fears lurked near the surface among her fellow thespians-in-training. Maybe blacks in the audience would take offense at references to “darkies” or “jigaboos.” Or whites would resent being portrayed as fumblers who couldn’t change a diaper or cook an egg without help. Or maybe everyone would sigh impatiently at yet another lecture on the virtues of diversity.

“I’m sure I’ll get comments, like, ‘Enough of this white-bashing,’ “ said Ms. Freeman, a 22-year-old English and theater teacher. “Of course, I worry about it, but I’d rather that theater be provocative than predictable.”

The students’ production of “Day of Absence” opened with actors in white masks - a modified version of the original use of white face paint. Soon they lifted the masks, but they continued to caricature the white characters, whose panic spread with news that their nannies, garbage collectors, delivery persons, and switchboard operators had vanished.”

All of the people are stereotyped by RACE.

And that’s just wrong.


15 posted on 03/28/2014 6:43:46 AM PDT by txrangerette ("...hold to the truth; speak without fear. -Glenn Beck)
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