Regional
Emergence-See!
(Freedom Repertory Theater, Philadelphia; 299 seats; $35 top)
|
|
Most Viewed:
'New Moon' shines at box office(7900 views)'New Moon' takes opening day record(1366 views)Vivendi holds up NBC Universal deal(590 views)ABC adopts 'Find My Family' show(581 views)The Blind Side(560 views)Animated short films get on short list(501 views) |
With: Daniel Beaty.
The show begins with the appearance of a ghost slave ship in the Hudson River near the Statue of Liberty. Four hundred years ago, an African chieftain threw himself overboard rather than become enslaved, and his spirit possesses a deranged Shakespeare scholar who climbs aboard the bone-filled vessel. The question "To be or not to be?" morphs into a political, sociological and philosophical inquiry about the future of black people in America.
The ship's appearance is both media event and social catalyst as the reporters and crowds gather. Beaty shifts from interviewer to interviewee, from "slavologist" to slave, from Yalie to derelict, from little girl to her grandmother. He can sing soprano and baritone, he can do gay and straight, thuggish and chic. He can illustrate the internal conflict between "the Nerd and the Nigger," illustrate the violent fantasies of a polite BMW driver stopped by a cop, and portray the little boy within the grown man still waiting for his father who never came home from prison.
Among the show's diverse strengths is its sophistication, rejecting the predictable polemics without losing the passion. Just as each of the many pieces looks as though it might turn into harangue or kitsch or slush, it veers off into self-ironizing humor or fiercely sane cultural analysis.
Beaty is the 2004 Grand Slam Champion of the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, and he uses a poetry slam as part of the architecture of the show: Four characters are performing poets at the Cafe, all wildly different, each presenting knockout poems that actually further the plot. Narrative links among the characters emerge as they develop and reappear, and Beaty shapeshifts with astonishing ease.
Beaty urges his audience to "reconnect" with the past and to "choose to see" as the ghost ship disappears from sight. Without ever becoming ponderous, he suggests the Jungian ideas of racial memory and the collective unconscious to link the African past with the American present. The triumph is that even with its seriousness of purpose, "Emergence-See!" is remarkably entertaining.
At a time when everyone and his uncle seem to be performing multiple-character solo shows, this one's a standout.
Set, Lewis Folden; costumes, Alex Rapley; lighting, Curtis V. Hodge; sound, Nan Yaw Aboagye, Walter Dallas and Keith Sheffield.; production stage manager, John Scutchins. Opened, reviewed Feb. 4, 2006. Running time: 1 HOUR, 20 MIN.
Variety is striving to present the most thorough review database. To report inaccuracies in review credits, please click here. We do not currently list below-the-line credits, although we hope to include them in the future. Please note we may not respond to every suggestion. Your assistance is appreciated.








