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Preston Butler III, Treavor Lovell, and Avery Clark in Pass Over (Chris Bennion) |
Pass
Over
ACT
Theatre
Through
June 23, 2019
Moses
(Treavor Lovelle) and Kitch (Preston Butler III) are stuck on
this one block. It’s not clear if they are homeless with nowhere else to go or
stuck because violence ranges all around them and they’re afraid to leave or
stuck because they’ve been told they must stay on this block (the audience
hears commands to stay put). Perhaps it’s all of the above.
In
playwright Antoinette Nwandu’s intense 80-minute play at ACT Theatre, Pass
Over, these two are not waiting, like Didi and Gogo, for Godot to show up,
they’re aching to leave. In frustrated, angry, hopeful, anticipatory, poetic,
‘n’-word-filled friendship-language, they’re waiting to leave.
Nwandu
seems to be writing in a way that needs to penetrate White America. It’s not
very subtle, for the most part. The entire piece is metaphor-heavy, trapping
the two black men into scarcity and despair (there’s nothing to eat, see, read,
do but make up games to pass the time), and sending in a tut-tutting
Colonial-style (read “colonizing”) white man who unbends himself to graciously
feed them and a white police officer to harass them for even thinking about
leaving (both roles played by Avery Clark).