Slave Play

Slave Play
Broadway promotional poster for Slave Play, by Jeremy O. Harris and directed by Robert O'Hara
Broadway promotional poster
Written byJeremy O. Harris
Characters
  • Kaneisha
  • Jim
  • Phillip
  • Alana
  • Dustin
  • Gary
  • Teá
  • Patricia
Date premieredNovember 19, 2018 (2018-11-19)
Place premieredNew York Theatre Workshop
Original languageEnglish
SubjectRacism, sexuality, power relations, trauma, interracial relationships
Official site

Slave Play is a three-act play by Jeremy O. Harris[1] about race, sex, power relations, trauma, and interracial relationships.[2][3] It follows three interracial couples undergoing "Antebellum Sexual Performance Therapy" because the black partners have begun struggling to feel arousal or pleasure when engaging sexually with their white partners. The title refers both to the history of slavery in the United States and to sexual slavery role-play.

Harris originally wrote the play in his first year at the Yale School of Drama,[4][5] and it debuted on a major stage on November 19, 2018, in an Off-Broadway New York Theatre Workshop staging directed by Robert O'Hara. It opened on Broadway at the John Golden Theatre on October 6, 2019. In 2019, Slave Play was nominated for Best Play in the Lucille Lortel Awards,[6] and Claire Warden won an Outstanding Fight Choreography Drama Desk Award for her work in the play.[7] The play has been the center of controversy due to its themes and content.[8] At the 74th Tony Awards, Slave Play received 12 nominations, breaking the record set by the 2018 revival of Angels in America for most nominations for a non-musical play, though it did not receive any awards. The record was broken in 2024 when Stereophonic received 13 nominations.[9]

Characters

  • Kaneisha – A 28-year-old black woman who is in a relationship with Jim. She plays as a slave in the first act and she has anhedonia. She speaks in a natural Southern dialect throughout.
  • Jim – A 35-year-old wealthy white man who is in a relationship with Kaneisha. He plays a slave overseer in the first act, and has a British accent in the following acts.
  • Phillip – A 30-year-old mixed-race man who is in a relationship with Alana. He plays a mulatto servant in the first act and he has anhedonia.
  • Alana – A 36-year-old white woman who is in a relationship with Phillip. She plays a mistress in the first act.
  • Dustin – A 28-year-old gay Latino man who is in a relationship with Gary. He is called "a white man but the lowest type of white—dingy, and off-white" despite being of another race. He plays as an indentured servant in the first act.
  • Gary – A 27-year-old gay black man who is in a relationship with Dustin. He plays a black overseer in the first act and he has anhedonia.
  • Teá – A 26-year-old light-skinned black woman who is in a relationship with Patricia. She studies black feminism and queer theory, and is holding a study in Racialized Inhibiting Disorder in interracial couples with Patricia.
  • Patricia – A 30-year-old mixed-race Latina woman who is in a relationship with Teá. She studies cognitive psychology, and is holding a study in Racialized Inhibiting Disorder in interracial couples with Teá.[10]

Plot

Act One: "Work"

At McGregor Plantation, a southern cotton plantation in pre-Civil War Virginia,[11] the song "Work" by Rihanna plays in the overseer cottage.[12] Kaneisha, a slave, begins to twerk to the song when Jim, a white slave owner, walks in holding a whip. Jim is repeatedly uncomfortable when Kaneisha calls him "Master," but berates her for not cleaning the room better and throws a cantaloupe on the ground and tells Kaneisha to eat it. As Kaneisha eats the cantaloupe, she begins to dance again, which confuses and arouses Jim.[12] The overseer then initiates sex with Kaneisha.[13] When she asks to be called a "nasty, lazy negress," he instead proceeds to perform cunnilingus.[12]

At her boudoir, Madame McGregor, the wife of Master McGregor, or Alana, calls upon Phillip, her mulatto servant, and asks him to play the fiddle. Phillip begins to play Beethoven's Op. 132. Alana stops him, calling European music boring, and asks him to play "negro" music. Phillip plays "Pony" by Ginuwine and Alana dances, then initiates sex, saying she is under Phillip's mulatto spell.[12] She then uses a dildo to penetrate him, asking him if he likes being in the woman's position.[14] Phillip replies that he is unsure.[12]

In the McGregor's barn, Gary, a black slave, is in charge of Dustin, a white indentured servant. Gary taunts Dustin, finding their allocation of power amusing. Gary kicks Dustin down, calling him lesser than other white people.[12] The song “Multi-Love” by Unknown Mortal Orchestra begins to play. The two fight before they engage in sexual intimacy.[2] Gary has Dustin lick Gary's boot clean; this causes Gary to orgasm. He starts crying and cannot be comforted by Dustin.[12]

Meanwhile, Phillip keeps playing music that Alana does not like on his fiddle and Kaneisha and Jim are engaged in sex. Kaneisha asks again to be called a "negress." Even as Kaneisha nears orgasm, Jim stops participating when Kaneisha calls him "Masta Jim". Jim then switches to speaking in a British accent and tells Kaneisha that he is not comfortable with the situation.[12] Jim uses his safeword,[13] "Starbucks," to end the encounter.[12]

New characters in modern clothing, Patricia and Teá (also an interracial couple[14]) then come into the room. They recommend for the three couples to meet back at the main house soon.[12] It is revealed that in reality the characters are modern couples participating in a role-playing exercise meant to improve intimacy between white and black partners.[13]

Act Two: "Process"

There is a contemporary group therapy session among the three couples to treat their inability to experience sexual pleasure.[11] The therapists, Patricia and Teá, speak through affirmations and academic jargon for most of the session.[15] They are on Day Four of the therapy, which focuses on fantasy play.

Dustin begins by noting that Gary came, which he could not do before, but Gary counters that Dustin was uncomfortable in making his whiteness hyper-visible. Alana enjoyed the release of the fantasy and asks Phillip if he enjoyed it too, noting that he got an erection when he had trouble before.[15] Jim keeps interrupting speakers with laughter; Teá asks him to share, especially since he was the one who said the safeword. Jim is confused and overwhelmed by the therapy. Teá clarifies that the therapy, titled Antebellum Sexual Performance Therapy, was designed to help black partners feel pleasure again with their white partners. Jim is uncomfortable playing the role of the slave overseer and demeaning his wife, and believes the experience is traumatizing and ruining his relationship with Kaneisha. Kaneisha feels frustrated and betrayed that Jim did not give what she asked of him.[15]

After Patricia and Teá read back to the group what they have said, Alana points out that mostly white men are speaking. Dustin insists that he is not white. Dustin and Gary get back into an old argument over Dustin wanting to move into a more gentrified neighborhood. Dustin refuses to label himself as white, and Gary feels that through this he erases Gary's identity.[15] Phillip, who has not spoken much, says that the therapy seems fake to him. Alana speaks over him, still upset about Jim saying the safeword.[15]

Patricia and Teá explain the origins of Antebellum Sexual Performance Therapy in treating anhedonia, with Patricia speaking over Teá. The couple shaped it as their thesis together at Smith and then Yale. They are foregrounding the study both through their experiences in their own relationship and their academic background. They state that anhedonia is caused by racial trauma passed down through history: black partners may be unable to enjoy sex with their white partners because of “Racialized Inhibiting Disorder." Teá previously experienced anhedonia with Patricia, and it was through fantasy play that she worked out her racial trauma. Symptoms associated with Racialized Inhibiting Disorder include anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and "musical obsession disorder."[15]

Phillip says none of his partners are able to see him as black and he struggles with being mixed race. Gary realizes that the song he often hears, “Multi-Love”, was imagined due to "musical obsession disorder." Kaneisha says she felt in control during the fantasy play, but Jim took that away from her by using the safeword; Gary agrees but Phillip does not. It is revealed that Phillip and Alana met because her ex-husband had a cuckold fetish, and that when Phillip was with her under those pretenses, he felt sexually excited because he was viewed as black by her husband, thus affirming a sense of categorized sexual identity other than just “Phillip” after a lifetime of feeling like he didn’t belong as “black” or “white.” Alana insists it had nothing to do with race, and now that they are in a committed relationship Alana views him as a complex person. Alana breaks down. Gary confronts Dustin, asking why he always says he is not white. Gary questions why they are still together, and he and Dustin almost get into a fight before Patricia and Teá break it up.[15]

Jim starts to read something he wrote on his phone. He does not understand why Kaneisha looks at him with disgust, like he is "a virus," nor does he know what he is supposed to do. Kaneisha realizes that "virus" is the description she has been searching for, referencing the diseases introduced by Europeans which decimated the indigenous peoples of the Americas.[2] She says she knows now that she cannot experience pleasure because she cannot forget her disgust with Jim's race.[15] She confronts Patricia and Teá, saying they are wrong: the problem is within the white partners, not a disorder within the black partners.[15] Kaneisha is overwhelmed as “Work” by Rihanna begins playing again.[15]

Act Three: "Exorcise"[11]

"Work" plays as Kaneisha is packing in a room and Jim comes in. Kaneisha says that what she needs is not better communication, but for Jim to simply listen. Jim is silent as Kaneisha recounts how they met, and then times in her childhood when she had to visit plantations on school field trips. As the only black girl, she felt a need to act proud for her "elders" watching her. She says she fell in love with Jim, a white man, because he was not American.[16] Jim begins to initiate foreplay and the music rises while Kaneisha continues that the relationship went downhill three years ago, when she stopped feeling sexual pleasure because she began to see him as foreign and frightening. She saw Jim's whiteness and power, and that he also has "the virus", because though he is not American, he benefits from being white while being unaware of the privilege that whiteness gives him. She says that Antebellum Sexual Performance Therapy and the fantasy play gave her a sense of peace because she feels the elders watching her again; the elders do not care that she is with "a demon / who thinks he’s a saint", but simply want the two of them to know he is a demon.[16]

Jim calls Kaneisha a "negress" and gags her; the music stops. Jim returns to performing his slave owner role, dominating and insulting Kaneisha. She silently consents to continue, but when Jim initiates forceful sex she struggles free and screams the safeword. She begins to cry, then laugh, and Jim cries as well as they comfort each other. Kaneisha stands and thanks Jim for listening.[17]

Themes

Slave Play deals with the themes of race, sex, power relations, trauma, and interracial relationships.[2][3] Lapacazo Sandoval wrote that the play provides a real look at racism in America, especially in how racism persists even past the abolition of slavery.[3] The play attempts to uncover current racism and microaggressions through the lens of slavery.[3] Aisha Harris, writing for The New York Times, said the play “bluntly confronts the lingering traumas of slavery on black Americans."[18] Through the reoccurring theme of psychoanalysis, Jeremy O. Harris examines how slavery still impacts both the mental states, and the relationships, of black people in the present.[18]

By staging a conversation between slavery and the present, the play uses the theme of time and history to depict how the trauma of slavery persists.[18] As Tonya Pinkins writes, racism does not have a safe word in the play, and throughout the narrative, white characters are forced to recognize their historical and social locations in relation to their partners.[8] The play dwells on the impact of black erasure in interracial relationships.[11] Throughout the narrative, the white partners are incapable of recognizing, or naming, their partner's race, rather it is because of guilt, or because they get defensive.[11] The play also explores the intersection of gender and race in the context of various relationship types (black woman and white man, white woman and mixed-race man, black man and white man, mixed-race woman and brown woman), thus further complexifying the characters’ individual concepts of identity, power, connection, and pleasure. By placing sex and racial dynamics in both juxtaposition and overlap through the Antebellum Sexual Performance Therapy, the play makes whiteness, and white privilege, hyper visible in interracial relationships. [11] Soraya Nadia McDonald points out that the play works to uncover racial innocence.[14] Racial innocence is the concept that white people are innocent of race, and therefore they are racially neutral.[19] By placing the white characters in the position of the master, the mistress, or the indentured servant, the play makes whiteness visible to the white characters.[14]

Background

Author Jeremy O. Harris
Director of New York Theatre Workshop and Broadway productions Robert O'Hara

Author Jeremy O. Harris has said that he wrote Slave Play during his first year at the Yale School of Drama,[5] from which he graduated in 2019.[20] In October 2017, a production of Slave Play was presented at the Yale School of Drama as part of the annual Langston Hughes Festival.[21][22] The first workshop production was directed by Em Weinstein.[23]

Production history

Off-Broadway (2018)

The play was announced for the 2018–2019 season of the New York Theatre Workshop (NYTW)[24] and was taken into the development program of the National Playwrights Conference at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center.[25][26] Later that month, Robert O'Hara,[27] who had known Harris since his brief studies at De Paul University and was one of his teachers at Yale,[28] was announced as director.[29] At the end of July 2018, the first public reading of the work was held at the conference.[30]

Previews of the production at NYTW, under the patronage of the production company Seaview Productions, began on November 19, 2018.[31] Due to high demand, the duration of the show's run was extended before the official December 9 premiere, with the final performance being postponed from the original closing date of December 30, 2018, to January 13, 2019.[32] Over the next two weeks, tickets for all performances sold out.[33][34]

Broadway (2019)

On September 18, 2019, the play ran and hosted a Broadway Blackout night where the audience consisted of only black identified artists, writers, or students.[35] The play began its Broadway run at the John Golden Theatre in October 2019.[36][37] The play opened its 17-week limited Broadway engagement on October 6, 2019, and closed as scheduled on January 19, 2020.[37][38] Harris and his team promised that 10,000 tickets would be sold at $39 in an effort to diversify the crowd.[39]

In June 2020, the producers and creative team of Slave Play made a donation of $10,000 (~$11,599 in 2023) to the National Bailout Fund and released a statement in support of Black Lives Matter.[40]

Broadway remount (2021)

In September 2021, it was announced that a new engagement of the play will run at the August Wilson Theatre from November 23, 2021, to January 23, 2022, with plans to then transfer to Los Angeles. Most of the cast returned, with the exception of Joaquina Kalukango, due to a prior commitment to the pre-Broadway run of Paradise Square; she was replaced by Antoinette Crowe-Legacy, who originated the role of Kaneisha at the Yale School of Drama. The producers said they intended to repeat their previous efforts to sell 10,000 tickets for $39 each.[41] The production later transferred to the Center Theatre Group's Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles from February 9 to March 13, 2022, after plans to stage it in 2020 were delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[42]

West End (2024)

In February 2024, it was announced that the production would transfer to London's West End for a limited engagement. The show began performances 29 June 2024 at the Noël Coward Theatre and is scheduled to run through 21 September 2024. Appearing in the cast are Fisayo Akinade, Kit Harington, Aaron Heffernan, and Olivia Washington, alongside James Cusati-Moyer, Chalia La Tour, Annie McNamara, and Irene Sofia Lucio reprising their roles from the original Broadway production.[43][44] "Black Out" nights return in this run, wherein two performances will be exclusively available for black-identifying audience members, facilitated through partnerships with outside organizations.[45][46] Additionally, a select number of tickets will be reserved for each performance as pay-what-you-can, along with an additional selection of £20 tickets released each performance day.[47]

Roles and principal casts

Character Off-Broadway Broadway Broadway Remount Los Angeles West End
2018 2019 2021 2022 2024
Kaneisha Teyonah Parris Joaquina Kalukango Antoinette Crowe-Legacy Olivia Washington
Jim Paul Alexander Nolan Kit Harington
Phillip Sullivan Jones Jonathan Higginbotham Aaron Heffernan
Alana Annie McNamara Elizabeth Stahlmann Annie McNamara
Dustin James Cusati-Moyer Devin Kawaoka James Cusati-Moyer
Gary Ato Blankson-Wood Jakeem Dante Powell Fisayo Akinade
Teá Chalia La Tour
Patricia Irene Sofia Lucio

Reception

Critical reception of Slave Play has been polarized.[3][8] Due to themes revolving around sexuality and slavery, reviewers have either defended the play or criticized it.[48] In particular, Harris believes that making a play palatable would be buying into respectability politics, and reviewers such as Tim Teeman and Soraya Nadia McDonald have noted how Slave Play's explicit content is utilized to critique racism in the United States.[11][14][48]

There have been petitions to shut down Slave Play because of its themes.[49] In particular, audience members and writers have criticized the play for its treatment of Black women characters, and voicing that it disrespects the violent history of rape in chattel slavery.[49] In 2018, a petition titled "Shutdown Slave Play" was started, with the petitioner describing the play as traumatizing and exploitative of human atrocities.[49] Critic Elisabeth Vincentelli noted the similarities between the themes and style of Slave Play and those of the plays An Octoroon (2014) and Underground Railroad Game (2016).[50][51]

Despite the controversy, many reviewers have met the play with acclaim.[8] Peter Marks describes the play as funny and scalding, while Sara Holden wrote that Harris manages to make every character an archetype while at the same giving them depth.[52][13] Positive reviews of the play herald Slave Play as both confronting racism and unpacking the nuances of interracial relationships, and cite it as comedic and entertaining.[52][13] Aisha Harris wrote about the experience of seeing Slave Play as a Black woman, stating that the uncomfortable narrative of the play allows for productive thought.[18]

Other reviewers have reviewed the play negatively. Thom Geier reviewed the play as intentionally designed to provoke, and calls the play uneven.[2] Juan Michael Porter II, a Black theater writer, reviewed the play as consisting of oversimplified confessions meant to titillate the audience.[53]

Black out performances

The concept of the black out performance originated during the initial Broadway run of Slave Play.[54] The performances were aimed at a Black or Black-identifying audience, including people of mixed race.[55] The black out performances were replicated in the London run of the play which led to criticism by a spokesperson for the British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak that they were "wrong and divisive". Harris defended the idea on BBC Radio 4's The World At One, saying: "The idea of a Black Out night is to say: this is a night that we are specifically inviting black people to fill up the space, to feel safe with a lot of other black people in a place where they often do not feel safe. I think that one of the things that we have to remember is that people have to be radically invited into a space to know that they belong there. In most places in the West, poor people and black people have been told that they do not belong inside of the theatre."[56]

Awards and nominations

Original Off-Broadway production

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2019 Lucille Lortel Awards[6] Best Play Nominated
Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play Ato Blankson-Wood Nominated
Drama Desk Award[7] Outstanding Lighting Design for a Play Jiyoun Chang Nominated
Outstanding Fight Choreography Claire Ward Won
Outer Critics Circle Award[57] John Gassner Award Jeremy O. Harris Nominated

Original Broadway production

Year Award Category Nominee Result
2020 Tony Awards[58] Best Play Nominated
Best Leading Actress in a Play Joaquina Kalukango Nominated
Best Featured Actor in a Play Ato Blankson-Wood Nominated
James Cusati-Moyer Nominated
Best Featured Actress in a Play Chalia La Tour Nominated
Annie McNamara Nominated
Best Direction of a Play Robert O'Hara Nominated
Best Original Score Lindsay Jones Nominated
Best Scenic Design of a Play Clint Ramos Nominated
Best Costume Design of a Play Dede Ayite Nominated
Best Lighting Design of a Play Jiyoun Chang Nominated
Best Sound Design of a Play Lindsay Jones Nominated
Drama League Awards[59] Outstanding Production of a Play Nominated
Distinguished Performance Award Ato Blankson-Wood Nominated
Outer Critics Circle Award[60] Outstanding Actress in a Play Joaquina Kalukango Honoree
GLAAD Media Award[61] Outstanding Broadway Production Nominated

References

  1. ^ Megarry, Daniel. "Jeremy O. Harris". Gay Times (09506101), Mar. 2019, pp. 32–35.
  2. ^ a b c d e Geier, Thom (December 9, 2018). "'Slave Play' Theater Review: A Twisty Play That's One Giant Trigger Warning". The Wrap. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e Lapacazo Sandoval, Contributing Writer. "'Slave Play' by Jeremy O. Harris a Real Look at Racism in America —Opening on Broadway, Oc-Tober 6." Los Angeles Sentinel (CA), October 9, 2019.
  4. ^ Daniels, Karu F. (January 7, 2019). "Rising Playwright Jeremy O. Harris Addresses Backlash Over Controversial Slave Play". The Root. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  5. ^ a b Cuby, Michael (March 8, 2019). "For Jeremy O. Harris, Playwriting Is Just the Beginning". them. Condé Nast. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  6. ^ a b Gans, Andrew (April 3, 2019). "Nominations for 34th Annual Lucille Lortel Awards Announced; Carmen Jones and Rags Parkland Sings the Songs of the Future Lead the Pack". Playbill. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  7. ^ a b Fierberg, Ruthie (July 2, 2019). "Tootsie, Hadestown, and The Ferryman Lead 2019 Drama Desk Award Winners". Playbill. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  8. ^ a b c d PINKINS, TONYA. “Racism Doesn’t Have a Safe Word.” American Theatre, vol. 36, no. 6, July 2019, pp. 40–41.
  9. ^ "'Hell's Kitchen' and 'Stereophonic' lead Tony Awards with 13 nominations each". NPR. Retrieved April 30, 2024.
  10. ^ Harris, Jeremy O. "Slave Play." American Theatre, no. 6, 2019, p. 39-67.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Teeman, Tim (September 12, 2018). "What Makes Jeremy O. Harris' 'Slave Play' Such a Powerful Play About Racism". The Daily Beast. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Harris, Jeremy O. "Slave Play." American Theatre, no. 6, 2019, p. 42-50
  13. ^ a b c d e Holdren, Sara (December 10, 2018). "Theater Review: Slave Play Blends the Terrifying and the Tantalizing". Vulture. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  14. ^ a b c d e McDonald, Soraya Nadia (December 14, 2018). "The subversive 'Slave Play' peels back the veneer of racial innocence in Northern whites". Andscape. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Harris, Jeremy O. "Slave Play." American Theatre, no. 6, 2019, p. 50-64
  16. ^ a b Harris, Jeremy O. "Slave Play." American Theatre, no. 6, 2019, p. 64-67
  17. ^ Jung, E. Alex (March 6, 2019). "How to Fuck With White Supremacy". Vulture. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  18. ^ a b c d Harris, Aisha (October 7, 2019). "What It's Like to See 'Slave Play' as a Black Person". The New York Times.
  19. ^ Bernstein, Robin. Racial Innocence.
  20. ^ Murphy, Tim (August 19, 2019). "These Boundary-Pushing Playwrights Talk Theater, Creative Activism, and Turning Trauma Into High Art". Departures. Time Inc. Archived from the original on October 1, 2019. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
  21. ^ Kafadar, Eren (October 27, 2017). "Langston Hughes Festival: Giving Voice to New Playwrights". Yale Daily News. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
  22. ^ "Friday, October 27, 2017". Yale Calendar of Events. Yale University. October 27, 2017. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  23. ^ Hankinson, Bobby (March 12, 2021). "Em Weinstein, Thank You For Coming Out (While Staying In) – Gay City News". gaycitynews.com. Retrieved July 2, 2023.
  24. ^ Clement, Olivia (April 4, 2018). "New York Theatre Workshop Unveils 2018–2019 Season". Playbill. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
  25. ^ Cox, Gordon (April 17, 2018). "Beth Henley, J.T. Rogers and Sarah DeLappe Set for 2018 O'Neill Playwrights Conference". Variety. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
  26. ^ Goldberg, Wendy C. "national playwrights conference — NPC '18". Eugene O'Neill Theater Center. Archived from the original on June 8, 2019. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
  27. ^ Clement, Olivia (April 27, 2018). "Robert O'Hara Will Direct World Premiere of Jeremy O. Harris' Slave Play". Playbill. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  28. ^ Simpson, Janice C. (July 16, 2019). "In Conversation With Jeremy O. Harris and Robert O'Hara on Slave Play". Broadway Direct. Nederlander Organization. Retrieved October 10, 2019.
  29. ^ "Jeremy O. Harris Talks New York Theatre Workshop's "Slave Play"". BUILD Series. YouTube. December 6, 2018. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  30. ^ "One year ago today, SLAVE PLAY by Jeremy O. Harris (NPC '18) had its first public reading on our campus". Eugene O'Neill Theater Center. Twitter. July 25, 2019. Retrieved October 2, 2019.
  31. ^ McNerney, Pem (July 31, 2019). "From Baked Goods to Broadway Productions: Shoreline Trio Tackles One of the Hottest Plays of the Season". Zip06. Shore Publishing. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  32. ^ Clement, Olivia (December 7, 2018). "Slave Play Extends Another 2 Weeks at NYTW". Playbill. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  33. ^ Harris, Jeremy O. (December 21, 2018). "The ⁦@nytimes⁩ is making me love ⁦@Mr_NaveenKumar⁩ even more than I did last month with this beautiful #tbt. Slave Play sold out but get a ⁦@vineyardtheatre MEMBERSHIP to guarantee a "Daddy" ticket!". Twitter. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  34. ^ Peitzman, Louis (December 21, 2018). "The Best Plays And Musicals Of 2018". BuzzFeed News. Retrieved September 30, 2019.
  35. ^ Smith, Kyle (September 18, 2019). "'Broadway Blackout'". National Review. Retrieved November 5, 2019.
  36. ^ Riedel, Michael. "Hot Ticket A Captive Audience? Downtown's Provocative 'Slave Play' Is Proving a Hard Sell on B'way." New York Post (New York, NY), 2019.
  37. ^ a b Lapacazo Sandoval. "'Slave Play' by Jeremy O. Harris a Real Look at Racism in America —Opening on Broadway, October 6.” Los Angeles Sentinel (CA), October 9, 2019.
  38. ^ Wetmore, Brendan (January 21, 2020). "'Slave Play' Changed Broadway's Accessibility Forever". Paper. Retrieved June 5, 2020.
  39. ^ Fierberg, Ruthie (October 30, 2019). "Why Jeremy O. Harris' Slave Play Is Inextricably Linked to Rihanna: The playwright talks about Rihanna's influence on the Broadway play, texting in the theatre, the price of theatre tickets, and more". Playbill.
  40. ^ Evans, Greg (June 4, 2020). "'Slave Play' Team Pledges $10K To National Bailout Fund, Challenges Broadway Community". Deadline. Retrieved June 5, 2020.
  41. ^ Paulson, Michael (September 27, 2021). "'Slave Play' Was Shut Out at the Tonys. But It's Coming Back to Broadway". The New York Times. Retrieved September 27, 2021.
  42. ^ Evans, Greg (October 13, 2021). "'Slave Play' Back On Track For Los Angeles After Venue Pledges Commitment To Address Gender Imbalance". Deadline. Retrieved February 19, 2024.
  43. ^ Wood, Alex (February 26, 2024). "Slave Play to run in the West End – with cast to include Fisayo Akinade, Kit Harington, Olivia Washington and more".
  44. ^ Rosky, Nicole (July 11, 2024). "Review Roundup: SLAVE PLAY Arrives in London". BroadwayWorld. Retrieved July 11, 2024.
  45. ^ Simpson, Craig (February 28, 2024). "West End play stages shows to all-black audience 'free from the white gaze'". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved February 28, 2024.
  46. ^ "Black Out". blackoutnite. Retrieved February 29, 2024.
  47. ^ Culwell-Block, Logan (February 26, 2024). "Jeremy O. Harris' Slave Play Is West End-Bound". Playbill. Retrieved February 29, 2024.
  48. ^ a b Street, Mikelle. "No Intermission." Out, vol. 27, no. 4, Nov. 2018, pp. 80–83.
  49. ^ a b c B, Ashley. "Shutdown Slave Play". change.org.
  50. ^ Vincentelli, Elisabeth (December 15, 2018). "I have seen it. And i have also seen the plays it rips off, namely An Octoroon and Underground Railroad Game". Twitter. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  51. ^ Vincentelli, Elisabeth (December 17, 2018). "I'll rephrase: the play covers very similar thematic and aesthetic grounds the earlier ones did, just not as imaginatively or skillfully". Twitter. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  52. ^ a b Marks, Peter (October 6, 2019). "'Slave Play' Is a Funny, Scalding, Walk along the Boundary between Black and White in America". The Washington Post.
  53. ^ Porter II, Juan Michael (October 15, 2019). "Despite the Hype, I Hated 'Slave Play' [Op-Ed]". COLORLINES.
  54. ^ Peck, Patrice (December 3, 2019). "At 'Black Out' Performances, the Power of Healing Through Community". New York Times. Retrieved March 3, 2024.
  55. ^ Lukowski, Andrzej (February 29, 2024). "Why are Black audiences-only London theatre nights causing a scandal?". Time Out. Retrieved March 3, 2024.
  56. ^ Chi-Santorelli, Leisha (March 1, 2024). "Slave Play: No 10 criticises black-only audiences plan". BBC News. Retrieved March 4, 2024.
  57. ^ Andy Lefkowitz. "Hadestown Leads Winners of 2019 Outer Critics' Circle Awards". Broadwaybuzz.com. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
  58. ^ Libbey, Peter (October 15, 2020). "Full List of the 2020 Tony Award Nominees". The New York Times. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
  59. ^ "Drama League Award nominees 2020". dramaleague.org. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
  60. ^ Caitlin Huston (May 11, 2020). "Outer Critics Circle names 2019-2020 honorees". Broadway News. Retrieved June 10, 2020.
  61. ^ "The Nominations for the 31st Annual GLAAD Awards". glaad.com. January 8, 2020. Retrieved June 10, 2020.

Read other articles:

Gambar benteng Solor Pulau Solor adalah sebuah pulau yang terletak di Kepulauan Nusa Tenggara. Pulau ini terletak di sebelah timur dari Pulau Flores. Pulau ini dibatasi oleh Selat Lowotobi di barat, Selat Solor di utara, Selat Lamakera di timur, serta Laut Sawu di selatan. Secara administratif, Pulau Solor termasuk wilayah Kabupaten Flores Timur, Provinsi Nusa Tenggara Timur, Indonesia. Pulau ini merupakan satu di antara dua pulau utama pada kepulauan di wilayah Kabupaten Flores Timur. Pulau ...

 

Djonne Ricky Lumintang Dirdik Akademi MiliterMasa jabatan19 April 2022 – 27 April 2023 PendahuluYudi YulistyantoPenggantiI Made Suryawan Informasi pribadiLahir0 April 1971 (umur 52)Kawangkoan, Minahasa, Sulawesi UtaraSuami/istriErlies FitriaOrang tuaDantje Lumintang (ayah)Luisa Walukow (ibu)Alma materAkademi Militer (1994)Karier militerPihak IndonesiaDinas/cabang TNI Angkatan DaratMasa dinas1994—sekarangPangkat Brigadir Jenderal TNINRP11940017620471SatuanInfanteriP...

 

Akademi Ilmu Pengetahuan Tiongkok中国科学院Institut Teknologi Komputer, Akademi Ilmu Pengetahuan Tiongkok, Beijing.Informasi lembagaDibentuk1949; 75 tahun lalu (1949)Kantor pusatBeijing, TiongkokPejabat eksekutifBai Chunli, PresidenLembaga indukDewan Negara Republik Rakyat TiongkokSitus webenglish.cas.cn Akademi Ilmu Pengetahuan Tiongkok Hanzi sederhana: 中国科学院 Hanzi tradisional: 中國科學院 Alih aksara Mandarin - Hanyu Pinyin: Zhōngguó Kēxuéyuàn - Wade-Giles: Chun...

Anjir Pulang PisauDesaNegara IndonesiaProvinsiKalimantan TengahKabupatenPulang PisauKecamatanKahayan HilirKode pos74813Kode Kemendagri62.11.05.2004 Luas1,44 km²Jumlah penduduk... jiwaKepadatan... jiwa/km² Anjir Pulang Pisau adalah sebuah nama desa di wilayah Kahayan Hilir, Kabupaten Pulang Pisau, Provinsi Kalimantan Tengah, Indonesia. Pranala luar Pulangpisaukab.go.id Diarsipkan 2017-02-02 di Wayback Machine. lbsKecamatan Kahayan Hilir, Kabupaten Pulang Pisau, Kalimantan TengahKeluraha...

 

Virgin Atlantic Airways IATA ICAO Kode panggil VS VIR VIRGIN Didirikan1984Mulai beroperasi22 Juni 1984Pusat operasi Bandar Udara London Gatwick Bandar Udara London Heathrow Program penumpang setiaFlying ClubLounge bandaraVirgin Atlantic ClubhouseAliansiSkyTeamArmada37 (+31 pesanan)Tujuan35Perusahaan indukVirgin GroupKantor pusatCrawley, Britania RayaTokoh utamaSir Richard Branson (Presiden)Stephen Murphy (Chairman)Steve Ridgway (CEO)Situs webwww.virgin-atlantic.com Virgin Atlantic Airways Lim...

 

Type of reconnaissance drone This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: BQM-147 Dragon – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) BQM-147 Dragon Role Reconnaissance droneType of aircraft National origin United States Manufacturer BAI...

Melozzo da Forlì, affreschi della volta della sagresta di San Marco a Loreto Melozzo, Angelo dall'abside di Santi Apostoli a Roma, Pinacoteca Vaticana Nell'ambito delle arti figurative, con scuola forlivese si può indicare un gruppo di artisti, principalmente pittori, che era attivo nella città romagnola di Forlì dalla fine del Medioevo fino al Manierismo. A Forlì, in particolare, lavorò la coppia Melozzo da Forlì-Marco Palmezzano che pose l'accento su complesse, e in parte inedite, fo...

 

Not to be confused with Tokyo Medical University or Tokyo Dental College. Tokyo Medical and Dental University東京医科歯科大学MottoCultivating Professionals with Knowledge and Humanity 知と癒しの匠を創造するTypePublic (National)Established1928PresidentYasuyuki Yoshizawa[1]Academic staff677[2]Administrative staff1,205Undergraduates1,380[2]Postgraduates1,409[3]Other students255LocationBunkyō, Tokyo, JapanCampusUrbanColorsBloom Gold  Missio...

 

Pour les articles homonymes, voir Industrie (homonymie). Ne doit pas être confondu avec Branche d'activité : le terme anglais « Industry » regroupe les deux notions, mais ce n'est pas le cas en français. Si ce bandeau n'est plus pertinent, retirez-le. Cliquez ici pour en savoir plus. Cet article ne cite pas suffisamment ses sources (avril 2017). Si vous disposez d'ouvrages ou d'articles de référence ou si vous connaissez des sites web de qualité traitant du thème abor...

American poet and 9th Librarian of Congress Archibald MacLeish1st Assistant Secretary of State for Public AffairsIn officeDecember 20, 1944 – August 17, 1945PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt Harry S. TrumanPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byWilliam Benton9th Librarian of CongressIn officeJuly 10, 1939 – December 19, 1944PresidentFranklin D. RooseveltPreceded byHerbert PutnamSucceeded byLuther H. Evans Personal detailsBorn(1892-05-07)May 7, 1892Glencoe, Illin...

 

Jacques-Alexis Francheteau de La GlaustièreFonctionDéputé aux États généraux de 17894 avril 1789 - 30 septembre 1791BiographieNaissance 18 juin 1731LegéDécès 25 septembre 1815 (à 84 ans)NantesNationalité françaiseActivité Homme politiquemodifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata Jacques-Alexis Francheteau de La Glaustière est un homme politique français né le 18 juin 1731 à Legé et décédé le 25 septembre 1815 à Nantes. Biographie Avocat en parlement, il est él...

 

Artikel ini perlu diwikifikasi agar memenuhi standar kualitas Wikipedia. Anda dapat memberikan bantuan berupa penambahan pranala dalam, atau dengan merapikan tata letak dari artikel ini. Untuk keterangan lebih lanjut, klik [tampil] di bagian kanan. Mengganti markah HTML dengan markah wiki bila dimungkinkan. Tambahkan pranala wiki. Bila dirasa perlu, buatlah pautan ke artikel wiki lainnya dengan cara menambahkan [[ dan ]] pada kata yang bersangkutan (lihat WP:LINK untuk keterangan lebih lanjut...

32°43′23″N 35°18′57″E / 32.723055555556°N 35.315833333333°E / 32.723055555556; 35.315833333333 الرينة (بالعبرية) כפר ריינה بلدة الرينة تقسيم إداري البلد  إسرائيل[1] المنطقة لواء الشمال خصائص جغرافية إحداثيات 32°44′51″N 35°20′22″E / 32.74738°N 35.33942°E / 32.74738; 35.33942 المساحة 10902 كم² الارتفاع 3...

 

Bernard Kouchner Menteri Luar NegeriPetahanaMulai menjabat 17 Mei 2007Perdana MenteriFrançois FillonPendahuluPhilippe Douste-BlazyPenggantiPetahanaMenteri KesehatanMasa jabatan6 Februari 2001 – 7 Mei 2002Perdana MenteriLionel JospinPendahuluDominique GillotPenggantiJean-François MattéiMasa jabatan4 Juni 1997 – 7 Juli 1999Perdana MenteriLionel JospinPendahuluJacques BarrotPenggantiDominique GillotMasa jabatan2 April 1992 – 29 Maret 1993Perdana MenteriPie...

 

习近平 习近平自2012年出任中共中央总书记成为最高领导人期间,因其废除国家主席任期限制、开启总书记第三任期、集权统治、公共政策与理念、知识水平和自述经历等争议,被中国大陸及其他地区的民众以其争议事件、个人特征及姓名谐音创作负面称呼,用以恶搞、讽刺或批评习近平。对习近平的相关负面称呼在互联网上已经形成了一种活跃、独特的辱包亚文化。 权力�...

Film poster for Loetoeng Kasaroeng, the first locally produced film released in the Dutch East Indies A total of 112 fictional films are known to have been produced in the Dutch East Indies (modern-day Indonesia) between 1926 and the colony's dissolution in 1949. The earliest motion pictures, imported from abroad, were shown in late 1900,[1] and by the early 1920s imported serials and fictional films were being shown, often with localised names.[2] Dutch companies were also p...

 

Railway station in China This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Hongshaba railway station – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Hongshaba railway station is a station of Jingbao Railway in Inner Mongolia. See also List of stations on Jingbao railway vte...

 

Sporting event delegationAustralia at the1936 Summer OlympicsIOC codeAUSNOCAustralian Olympic CommitteeWebsitewww.olympics.com.auin BerlinCompetitors32 (28 men, 4 women) in 7 sportsFlag bearerDunc GrayMedalsRanked 30th Gold 0 Silver 0 Bronze 1 Total 1 Summer Olympics appearances (overview)189619001904190819121920192419281932193619481952195619601964196819721976198019841988199219962000200420082012201620202024Other related appearances1906 Intercalated Games ––––  Australasia (...

For the Game of Thrones episode, see A Golden Crown. Imperial Iranian Air Force Aerobatic Team Golden CrownGolden Crown insigniaActive30 October 1958-11 February 1979Disbandedafter 1979 Revolution (revival is still ongoing)Country IranBranchImperial Iranian Air ForceRoleAerobatic display teamPart ofpart of 1st Fighter Interceptor SquadronGarrison/HQMehrabad (THR)Khatami Air BaseColours■□■(three colours of the flag of Iran)CommandersLeaderNader Jahanbani (1958-1962,1969)Amir Hossein...

 

Thomas Forsyth TorranceLahir30 Agustus 1913Chengdu, Sichuan, TiongkokMeninggal2 Desember 2007(2007-12-02) (umur 94)Edinburgh, SkotlandiaPendidikanUniversitas Edinburgh, Universitas Oxford, Universitas BaselPekerjaanTeolog Penghargaan Member of the Order of the British Empire (en) Penghargaan Templeton Fellowship of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Thomas Forsyth Torrance, MBE FRSE (30 Agustus 1913 – 2 Desember 2007), yang umumnya disebut sebagai T. F. Torrance, adalah seor...