Goin’ South
No Niggers, No Jews, No Dogs
Written by John Henry Redwood
Directed by Stephanie Barton-Farcas
Nicu’s Spoon
Spoon Theatre,
Equity Showcase (through
Review by Michael D. Jackson
John Henry Redwood’s social
drama had its
The play concerns a poor
black family of four in 1949
The more successful story
line is about the mother, Mattie, getting raped by a white man while her
husband is out of town working to support the family. She knows that if her
husband were to know the whole truth, he would get himself killed trying to
kill the white man who raped her. Instead, she swears her daughters and Yaveni
to secrecy and lets her husband believe she had an affair. Although this causes
the family to separate, Matti believes she can eventually prove her love to her
husband and bring the family back together.
Included in the story is a
ghostly character known as Aunt Cora (Dana
Jones), who wanders through the play without any lines, only singing and
humming “Amazing Grace.” Her story is
told to us in a long monologue by Mattie, that she too once suffered a rape,
but until the end of the play, which won’t be revealed here, she is only a
confusing character and finally rescues the situation like a melodrama hero
showing up at that last moment to right the wrongs and tidy up the play for
a convenient ending.
The pace of this play is a
bit relaxed as written, but director Barton-Farcas did little to move the show
along. Direction feels loose and unfocused. The movement of the story felt
interminable until reaching the handful of really good dramatic scenes. Gabrielle
Montgomery’s set is basic, barely depicting the front porch of the family’s
home. It looks improbably poor, even for this family, with a drape of cloth for
a door as if the family were struggling through the slave years. No single
person is given credit for the costumes and they serve well enough, save for
the confusing garb worn by Patrick Mitchell as Rawl. He is in modern jeans, a
white v-neck t-shirt and barefoot. He never changes from this outfit and even goes
off on his trip barefoot and without at least a small satchel of belongings. Lighting
by Julia Berman served the play well
under limited conditions. But, overall there was a general carelessness of
completing basic details that lowered the production value considerably.
Nicu’s Spoon has been capable
of presenting some very fine productions, finding solutions to the many
creative challenges faced by limited resources of the off-off Broadway world,
but they could not rise to the occasion this time around.
Writing: 1
Directing: 0
Acting: 1
Sets: 0
Costumes: 0
Lighting/Sound: 1
Copyright 2008 by Michael D.
Jackson
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