Seattle Public Theater
Through February 23, 2020
Playwright Joshua Harmon is a fearless writer. As
demonstrated in his play, Bad Jews, and again, clearly, in his play, Admissions,
now at Seattle Public Theater, he seems to take a topical subject and aim his
pungent thoughts at just about every aspect of it! And he’s funny and writes
smart dialogue that fill his characters with complicated, human feelings.
Director Annie Lareau pulls out all the complications
imbedded in this story of an “admissions counselor,” Sherri (aptly and
sensitively played by stage veteran Anne Allgood), who has worked
tirelessly over that last 15 years to increase diversity at a very white, very
old New England prep school. She is finally on the verge of gaining the coveted
20% mark for minorities which she and her husband, Bill (a lovely, acerbic Kevin
McKeon), want to celebrate. Bill is also a school administrator.
But then, at the same time, their only child, high school graduating
senior Charlie (Benjamin McCormack, who pulls out all the stops),
receives the news that he has been “deferred” at his dream school, Yale. He
also finds out that best friend, Perry, has been accepted! They dreamed of
going together. Suddenly, Charlie is not so happy about his friend’s acceptance
and wants to chalk it up to Perry’s being “Black” (Perry’s family is “mixed
race”) because Charlie’s high school achievements are better than Perry’s and
he “should” have priority acceptance!
Harmon looks at trying to figure out how inclusion can be win-win
when schools such as Yale and Harvard have finite resources (freshman entrance
spots) and an overabundance of qualified applicants. Studies have shown that
inclusion increases creativity and understanding of people who are “not like
you.” But scarcity means that including more people of color means to decrease
the number of "white” students these universities can admit.
But Harmon goes deeper than that. Through his brilliant
monologues of young Charlie – who goes through an enormous shift through the
arc of the play – Harmon challenges us to think about what we are willing to
sacrifice of our own privilege in favor of a fairer, more creative, more
accepting world. Somehow, he also makes much of the play funny! He helps us
laugh at society and our foibles and even our prejudices.
The production serves the play beautifully. Two additional
cast members, Perry’s mother (Macall Gordon) and a teacher at the school
(Barbara Lindsay) bring in other views that increase the 360 degree exploration.
Every cast member does a great job with their character and dialogue.
The sound design with transition music is so important to
listen to. D.R. Amromin includes subtle song choices that enhance the
subtext. Amber Parker’s lighting design is key, too, as Christopher
Mumaw’s elegant set of the interior of the house turns into a school office
by simply relighting the room and changing a few table items.
This is a terrific show to bring your teenagers to if you are
at all interested in deep conversations about important social concepts with
them! This is a terrific show to see for everyone of every color and background
to crack open a difficult topic where gray areas abound. Harmon doesn’t answer
the questions, but he poses them accurately and rather completely.
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