Tell Me Again
Read this post by Jaime at "surplus," especially this paragraph:
I realized something about a month ago. I was sitting in a lovely off-Broadway theatre, watching lovely actors on a gorgeous set, hearing pretty words and watching the characters go through their personal strife. And it hit me: I am sick to death of plays. Granted, I thought this was a pretty bad one - though lots of smart folks and also a major critic at the paper of record thought it was totally awesome - but just plays in general. Blah blah blah blah blah. Middle-class white people talking about their problems, having babies and getting divorced and dying and falling in love and talking about it for two hours. (emphasis added)Now tell me again why we shouldn't be working really hard to produce new plays by people with diverse backgrounds and experiences. Tell me again how sifting our playwrights through the same "elite" playwriting programs that are filled doesn't lead to the homogeneity that the phrase "write what you know" really fosters. Tell me again how the current system works so well because it puts individual "choice" at the forefront. Because I just don't see how the current system can stay healthy the way it is. Unless, of course, we keep doing the classics, which seems to be our favorite answer. Could we get some imagination going, PLEASE??? (h/t 99Seats)
Comments
then some people have the nerve to tell me that white people can't relate to my plays because it's got South Asian, Muslim, punk rock, anarchistic characters!
Replacing a system that is imperfect and relies on choice with a lottery that relies on even weighted chance is like replacing waging war with mass suicide. I just am completely unconvinced that it's an improvement on the current system. Different does not equal better.
I don't know anyone who is saying we shouldn't be looking for diversity. In fact, I think that's not even a remotely new thing to say, clamor for, or reach for. I'd also say that if you want to find diversity, you might find a WHOLE LOT of it in the New York, Chicago and Los Angeles scenes you treat like geographic landmines at times.
You're welcome to your apoplectic tone, but I think individual choice is a basic good, and I stand by it. Choice is fallible, and it will let you down. But at least someone's steering the ship.
I dont know that I'm in favor of thi idea at all, but I'm trying use my imagination to expand on ideas here.