Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title: | Facing our truth : 10-minute plays on Trayvon, race, and privilege
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Other uniform titles: | Contains work: Morisseau, Dominique. Night vision.
Contains work: Pamatmat, A. Rey. Some other kid.
Contains work: Miller, Winter. Colored.
Contains work: O'Brien, Dan (Playwright). Ballad of George Zimmerman.
Contains work: Mansour, Mona. Dressing.
Contains work: Manassah, Tala. Dressing.
Contains work: Gardley, Marcus. No more monsters here.
Flores, Quetzal,
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ISBN: | 0573704260 9780573704260
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Notes: | "Originally presented at the Martin Segal Theatre Center at CUNY Graduate Center in association with The New Black Fest ... in New York City on December 5, 2013"--Page 4. Text in English.
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Summary: | In light of the George Zimmerman verdict, The New Black Fest commissioned six very diverse playwrights to write 10-minute plays on the topic of Trayvon Martin, race and/or privilege. Facing Our Truth's purpose is to incite serious discussion in our collective communities around these urgent issues. Night Vision: Ayanna and Ezra witness a woman getting beaten on the street by a man in a hooded sweatshirt. After they diffuse the situation they return to their apartment to call the police. However, when they discover how their accounts of the attacker differ, both are left questioning the truth of what they saw. Some Other Kid: Three young people weigh both the potentially liberating privileges and the potentially deadly consequences of being just some other kid. Colored: Interactions between passengers on a subway ride escalate dangerously. The Ballad of George Zimmerman: A folk opera recreating the ten minutes leading to the murder of Trayvon Martin, The Ballad of George Zimmerman explores the mind of his killer. Dressing: In Dressing, a short play in three parts, a mother teases her son over his attire just as he gets ready to leave for school. He pushes back playfully; they play this game all the time. Parts two and three follow this mother as she experiences an unimaginable loss, shedding light on the nature of the vulnerability of the physical self. No More Monsters Here: A young white female visits a psychiatrist and gets diagnosed with "Negroidphobia": the fear of African-American people. The psychiatrist tells her that the cure is for her to spend three days literally living in the body of a young African American male who lives in the hood. The end result is a revelation that will make you laugh, shock you and perhaps break your heart!
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