Aisle Say (NY): WHITE NOISE

AISLE SAY New York

WHITE NOISE

by Suzan-Lori Parks
Directed by Oskar Eustis
Public Theater

Reviewed by David Spencer

April 25, 2019

I come within inches of recusing myself from reviewing White Noise, the latest from Suzan-Lori Parks, not because I have any conflict of interest, but because it leaves me so conflicted. But upon rumination, that may be part of the intended experience. Before I go into detail, I’ll add that it’s a four-character play, it clocks in at three hours, including ‘mish, it favors moving back and forth between long asides to the audience (each character gets one) and heightened realism…and it isn’t dull for a minute.

            It is of course basic dramaturgy that if you start with a group of four very close-knit and dedicated friends, thirtysomethings who’ve known each other since college and before, who have become two committed mixed-race couples…the play is going to chronicle the dissolution of that bond.

And here’s the triggering incident.

In the wake of a kind of post-traumatic stress reaction to having been beaten to a pulp by bigots, young black writer Leo (Daveed Diggs) decides that his way toward liberation is to quite literally be a slave; if he’s the property of a white man, he has a pass to go where he pleases. He turns to his best bro bud Ralph (Thomas Sadoski) to be his master for a contracted experiment that will last 40 days. Ralph agrees. This of course appalls their respective partners, crusading liberal defense lawyer Dawn (Zoë Winters) and internet podcast personality—hostess of Ask a Black—Misha (Sheira Irving).

Now of course it is also basic dramaturgy that this understanding between bros must become strained, as the white master begins to explore the full range of his power over his new, human acquisition. And indeed it does.

On the one hand: No character’s hands are completely clean in this scenario: Leo’s in denial about the stress and self-delusion he’s under. Ralph, when we meet him, establishes himself as not quite liberal enough not to resent it on a systemic level when he is unfairly passed over for a job he was promised by a far-less-qualified colleague of darker ethnicity. Dawn is a champion for the oppressed, but when it’s in her brief to defend a client she knows to be guilty because she knows she has the goods for the win, she makes the bargain with her conscience. And Misha’s podcast is a product of calculated blacksploitation, ethnicity and culture as salable commodity.

But the very title of the play, White Noise also suggests, as part of the premise, that white privilege is a corrosive, insidious enough to invade even the most well-intended liberal-minded relationships. (Though the term has a double meaning here; in the play the term only literally refers to continuous aural hiss; but the sound comes to represent something symbolic.) And I found myself wondering if the play’s examination of systemic dysfunction doesn’t itself stack the deck. All four of these characters are ticking time bombs—pretty much from the go, in retrospect, though Ms. Parks doesn’t give that away all at once—so if the takeaway is supposed to be about inevitable breakdown as long as white privilege is a trigger, how are we to take this group of people as axiomatic examples? And if that’s not the intended takeaway…then what are we learning? I can even put these questions aside, because over and above all this, there was something else on my mind: I felt the characters being manipulated by the author. Because the lines of breakdown and compromised loyalty in the play are not merely societal, social, ethical and philosophical…they’re sexual. Like, potboiler paperback partner-change juxtaposition sexual. It makes for racy storytelling (pun not at first blush intended) but it tends to blur the point of the game.

All this said, I repeat, the material is pretty gripping stuff, and tremendously well acted, under the direction of Oskar Eustis. And, biggest irony of all…White Noise, not just despite the debates that can be fired up by its ambiguities, but because of them…may be Ms. Parks’ best play. I’m just coming to that as I type the words, so I’m surprising myself as much as I may be surprising you.

And I’ll leave it at that.


Go to David Spencer's Profile
Return to Home Page

  • Road (National) Tour Review Index
  • New York City & Environs Theatre Review Index
  • Berkshire, Massachusetts Theatre Review Index
  • Boston Area Theatre Review Index
  • Florida Theatre Review Index
  • London Theatre Review Index
  • Minneapolis/St. Paul (Twin Cities) Theatre Review Index
  • Philadelphia & Environs Theatre Review Index
  • San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Review Index
  • Seattle Area Theatre Review Index
  • Toronto, Ontario (Canada) Index