Pass Over, Kiln Theatre review - fierce critique of racist brutality | reviews, news & interviews
Pass Over, Kiln Theatre review - fierce critique of racist brutality
Pass Over, Kiln Theatre review - fierce critique of racist brutality
Waiting for Godot meets Exodus in American drama about Black Lives Matter
The Black Lives Matter movement is such an important international protest that it is odd how few contemporary plays even mention it. Since the hashtag #BlackLivesMatter has been around since 2013, following the acquittal of George Zimmerman who shot African-American teenager Trayvon Martin in February 2012, there is little excuse.
The title is evocative: passing over means dying, but it also brings to mind the Jewish festival of Passover (Exodus from oppression), and this is certainly a symbolic drama, not a naturalistic one. More absurdism than journalism. Two young black men, the angry Moses and his loyal if naïve friend Kitch, hang around a street corner in an anonymous American city. They pass the time in banter, in rituals and in repeating the same kinds of conversations over and over again. They are poor; they long for something good to eat. And although they dream of moving away from the block, and of the high life – caviar, fine wines and women – they are stuck. Their only interaction is with two white men, Mister and Ossifer.
Mister, who appears dressed in white and carrying a basket covered with a red gingham tablecloth, is presented as a light satire on a jovial old world of tradition. Is this stranger a Mormon or a cop? No, he's just passing by, blaming his fallen arches for his painful feet, on his way to visit his mother. He should be off, but he's tired so he stays and shares the abundant picnic he carries with the two black men. His speech is peppered with expressions such as "gosh" and "golly gee", while Moses and Kitch use the N-word liberally and insistently. With typical self-reflexivity, they even have a discussion about it. By contrast, Ossifer is a cop: brutal harassment is his job. And he does it well.The show's publicity stresses the fact that Nwandu's powerful 80-minute drama is inspired by Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot. Indeed, his initial stage directions – "A country road. A tree. Evening" – here becomes "A ghetto street. A lamppost. Night". Irish lilts and sallies are substituted by street slang, snatches of pop music lyrics and a mixture of fantasy (reminiscent of rap music videos) and Protestantism (there is a quotation from Exodus as the epigraph in the playtext). But can Moses, in this situation of modern slavery (poverty), really defy Pharaoh's son (Mister) and his army (Ossifer), and lead his people (Kitch) to the promised land?
Nwandu's writing deftly juggles the three symbolic time zones – Bible times, plantation times and contemporary times – and her text sings with an evident joy in language. Moses and Kitch have a call-and-response routine in which "yo kill me now" is a greeting, always answered with a coolly arch "bang bang". This contrasts beautifully and strongly with the list of their dead friends, recited by Kitch, which seems horribly long. Maybe endless. To them, the force of the police can be neutralized by calling officers "po pos", but when power arrives they fall to their knees in dread. The evening is a powerful mixture of brutality and almost casual defiance.
Despite its absurdist style, Pass Over is a political play whose message is indisputable. Young black American men are constantly and illegally being killed by white men and white cops. Nwandu imagines a typical ghetto street scene in which not only race, but class condemn young men to invisibility – until their deaths hit the headlines. She shows how language and physical demeanor can be a conscious performance, a way of survival in a climate of fear. Of terror. Her parodies of white "superiority" – with its patronizing smirk – are intelligent and, maybe because I'm an old white man, extremely uncomfortable. And her sense that some black men live under the shadow of death and despair is deeply depressing. But I'm a liberal so I would say that, wouldn't I?
Although the play has barely the sketch of a story, it is rich in metaphor rather than in practical tips for resistance, and its atmosphere is frankly disturbing. With the playing space reconfigured into a theatre in the round, Indhu Rubasingham's meticulous production – designed by Robert Jones – brings out the poetry of the text and she is well served by two outstanding performances from Paapa Essiedu (Moses) and Gershwyn Eustache Jnr (Kitch), the one an imaginative prophet figure, a leader, the other a more uncertain character, a follower. Their dynamic rapport is a joy. As the two white men, Alexander Eliot (pictured above, with Essiedu) exudes a deliberately fake bonhomie (Mister) and a brute aggression (Ossifer). A hard watch, this is the fiercest account of racism on the London stage.
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