Photo: T. Charles EricksonIn light of August Wilson’s preference for African-American directors, it’s interesting to consider what he might have thought about a white man directing the Lincoln Center Theatre production of
Joe Turner’s Come and Gone currently playing at the Belasco Theatre. I imagine that, if
Wilson were alive to make an exception to his preference, director Bartlett Sher would be that exception. (
Wilson knew Sher in
Seattle, and
Wilson’s widow gave her permission for Sher to direct.) Sher is a brilliant, sensitive director, with an exceptional ability to use theatre space multi-dimensionally. While I frequently feel that I am watching plays from outside, when Sher directs I often feel that I am
there--still watching, yes, but
there. (With
Light in the Piazza, he even managed to make the Vivian Beaumont Theatre feel intimate.) Sher regularly succeeds in bringing a sense of the entire world of a play to life—the surroundings, the culture, the atmosphere, the history. He is a masterful director. (Full disclosure: I briefly knew Sher many years ago in
San Diego.)
Nevertheless, I have questions: Would a black director have brought a deeper level of understanding? How would that have changed the production? What would the superb cast have gained by working with a black director--if anything? Would I have a problem with, say, a Chinese woman directing
Fiddler on the Roof—or this show? No, but I’m not sure that my opinion is relevant. After all,
Wilson also didn’t like “color-blind” casting, and I love it--I even have a dream cast for an all-black
A Little Night Music. But would I think an all-white version of
Joe Turner’s Come and Gone was a good idea? Hell, no. What’s the difference? Oh, just hundreds of years of history. (I wonder what the cast thought of working with Sher. I wonder if any of them would have preferred an African-American director.)
I am inclined to think that the vibrant brilliance of this production answers all questions and doubts, but I’m not 100% sure.
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