Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Thinking Theater: The Conclusion: The Power of Theater

Final Blogpost

Actions are things that we must carry out every single day. Our survival depends on carrying out actions: to eat, to walk, to pee, etc. In our modern world: to work, to shop, to chat… There is, however, more than just the action itself, for every action is carried out in a specific way. With a certain style which is repeated over time. Due to the fact that humans are programmed to learn through imitation, we often copy these styles. The way we dance. The way we speak. The way we walk. The way we sit. The way we reach out for things and then pass them over to the next person. They are all carried out with a specific style. They can be energetic and lively, or they can be slow and elegant. When we find ourselves within a group that carries out actions in a style that is similar to ours, this is not something we often keep in mind; but when an outsider sees these actions, they tend to categorize the actions to the bodies performing them. This is how we begin to perceive certain races, certain biological sexes as behaving in a specific way, as having a specific style to the way they do things. Judith Butler mentions that these perceptions of particular races and sexes are performed in a “mode of belief.” In other words, the style has become so engrained into the minds of the people performing the actions that it is no longer an attempt at an imitation. It has become their reality, their belief.

The production of Young Jean Lee’s The Shipment is all about racial constructs, pointing them out for the audience and then acting them out. The production is divided in two distinct acts, both of which are separate in terms of the plot that they follow. Similar to Hell House, where the audience is taken through a variety of different plot-disjointed scenes which portray sin, the fact that the two acts of The Shipment are separate allows the play to address a certain narrative instead of just providing some sort of escape for the audience through a plot that provokes empathy. This Brechtian element of addressing a narrative, rather than a plot in the Aristotelian sense, allows the play to make the audience think about what it is they are seeing. It also allows them to perceive the actions they see as something that pertains to a more general condition, both on stage and in the outside world, rather than to a specific situation.

Young Jean Lee’s The Shipment’s cast is comprised of only black actors. 4 male, 1 female. The first act opens with a frantic dance performed by two of the male actors wearing a suit. In the dance they move freely, keeping the their limbs stretched out, free; liberated. There is no picture of sophistication in this dance. It is therefore something that would be commonly associated with the perception of a black person: vigorous and thoughtless. This is followed by a rap song – a genre of music commonly associated with black people – and then one of the male actors playing a comedian comes on stage and begins a routine in which he complains about white people and racism, clearly pointing this theme out for the audience, prompting them to be more conscious of race in the production. The actor blatantly points out that some people have accused him of playing on stereotypes, and then he says that it is true. The comedian makes many sexual jokes and swears constantly, both of which are ideas typically associated to black bodies. The skit that follows this moment in the comedy show is done in a way that is heavily Brechtian: there are jumps in the plot, the movement and voices of the actors is not aimed at being realistic, but it simply tells a plot in an energetic and effective way. It tells the story of a young black man who wants to be a rapper, who goes to prison for selling drugs, gets famous out of nowhere, and ends up depressed at the grave of his best friend saying that he hates his life. This is continued by a song that essentially summarizes what happened. All of this constructs an image of what it means to be black: vigorous movement, loud expressions, religious inclinations, sexual vigorosity, etc. Throughout the act and the rest of the play, the actors are dressed in formal attire, which is not closely linked to the scenarios being played, and thus keeps pointing out to the audience that what they are seeing is just a performance. One where all their expectations about what a black person should be like gets realized.

The first act is very interesting in the way that it condenses time. The temporality in it, created by the skipping from scene to scene and showing actions that are not necessarily linked to the plot being told at the time; it is more orature-like. Yet this is carried out in a frantic way. Time jumps and moves around crazily, which is mimetic of the way black people are often perceived: frantic and disorganized. This contrasts heavily with the second act, which follows an entirely continuous “plot.” In the second act all of the actors play the stereotype of white people: the care for diet, the worrying about being punctual, the formal movement, where limbs are held closer to the body, the worrying about being politically correct, arguing whether Berkley or Stanford is more prestigious, when both of them really are. On top of that, they change their accents to a more neutral one, which is more commonly associated with whiteness. And the concerns and “tragedy” that takes place is all due to the simple fact that none of them have their relationships in order. And all of this is done in a form that is similar to that of a sitcom, a form of entertainment that favors white people and is largely part of white culture. All of this highlights the way in which white people behave and puts it in direct contrast with the style of actions black people follow. On top of this, the temporality in the act is continuous, it follows a single scene. This gives a sensation of the act being performed in an orderly fashion; everything is controlled and well-planned, which is something that is also commonly associated to white people. The act itself is also hilarious, which keeps the audience form empathizing too much; which Boal argues makes the play more effective in creating change among the audience’s minds.


The entire play highlights the heavy contrast between the way in which we perceive white and black bodies, but also does something important, which is suggesting that it does not have to be that way. In the second act, the actors don’t explicitly reveal they are white until near the end when they say that there is no black person among them. The audience sees black bodies engaging in white performance. This can have the power to suggest to the audience the breaking of stereotypes. Especially when this is seen in the theater; a medium which is usually the one setting the standard for the way in which bodies should behave; yet also has the power to change the way in which we see this. Adrian Piper writes about how art that can involve an observer with the “other” in the indexical present causes us to see this “other” as something different, makes us think about it. The audience in this case does not only perceive what is happening on the stage, thus brought to think about their expectations on race, but they also perceive the other audience members; especially in such an energetic performance where the audience was so often cheering and laughing. As the comedian in the first act pointed out, there is white people in the audience; and it is very likely that there are also black people. Theater is a place where people can come together within a single space and see each other, think about each other. It is a medium that truly allows for change to be effected effectively, as the audience can directly make connections with the real world from what they are seeing. Just the way in which Ta’aziyeh can involve the audience with the community, bringing them together in the form of laughter; The Shipment brings the audience together in laughter and joy. The audience beholds itself enjoying the same thing, brings them closer together. And therein lies the true power of theater. But it is not only the ability to convey narratives that can make people come together under a common sensation. It is also it’s power to address a narrative as a whole, in a direct way. It is really the power of orature, in transmitting directly from oral to aural receptions. The fact that many black bodies with different genders can exist, in a suit, in a high-end theater, entertaining a mixed race audience from probably a high-end society means that the audience can really be changed to think differently; to think that bodies do not necessarily have to be in the way they always perform. 

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