On the two
one-woman shows that are just as evocative on the page as on the stage.
In this era of
tablets and smartphones (which Word doesn’t identify as a spelling error, just
to drive the point home), there’s no reason we’d have to limit beach reads to
written texts. You can watch a YouTube video clip just as easily, and when it
comes to theatrical performances, there’s a lot to be said for doing so, for
getting at least a sense of their performative (that one Word underlines, but I’m
going to keep it) qualities. So I’d be remiss if I didn’t first link to this opening part of Anna
Deavere Smith’s Fires in the Mirror
(1991) and this trailer
for an adaptation of her Twilight: Los
Angeles (1992).
As the first clip’s
introduction notes, Smith works in a very unique and compelling way:
interviewing hundreds of people in response to a particular historical event (New
York’s Crown Heights riot for Fires,
the 1992 LA
riots for Twilight), and then turning
their words and voices into a crowd-sourced document that she performs herself
in their various characters (although the above-linked Twilight adaptation uses multiple actors instead). Smith is as
talented a performer as she is a writer, and so again there’s much to be said
for watching and hearing her take on these voices and stories, as you can do (if
you have an hour and some good wifi) with all four parts of the above-linked
version of Fires.
But if you’re on
the beach without internet access or a high-tech 21st century
device? Well, I was introduced to Smith through the
published, textual version of Twilight,
and I can say with certainty that she makes these voices and characters and
communities come to life just as powerfully in that form. Indeed, there’s
something to be said for the opportunity to hear them all in our own head, with
no performance choices filtering them, distinguishing them from one another,
perhaps rendering one or another sympathetic or annoying to our ears. Their
subjects are the height of divisive and violent controversies, moments that
pitted Americans against Americans in the worst ways—but the texts offer us the
chance to hear all sides, and, as
Walt put it, “filter them from your self.” Pretty good way to spend some
quality beach time if you ask me.
Next beach read
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Nominations
for AmericanStudies beach reads? Share ‘em please!
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