Close Menu
Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Jump to Category…
    • All Events
    • Club Dates
    • Comedy
    • Exhibits
    • Film
    • Fundraisers
    • Learning
    • Literati
    • Outings
    • Other
    • Specials
    • Sports
    • Stage
    • Trivia
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Demo
    • CNY Events Calendar
      • Add My Event
      • Advertise On Calendar
    • News
      • News
      • Business
      • Sports
    • Arts
      • Art
      • Stage
      • Music
      • Film
      • Television
    • Lifestyle
      • Food
      • Wellness
      • Fashion
      • Travel
    • Opinion & Blogs
      • Things That Matter (Luke Parsnow)
      • New York Skies (Cheryl Costa)
    • Photos
    • Special Editions
      • 2019 Spring Times
      • 2019 Winter Times Edition
      • 2018 Holiday Times
      • 2018 SALT Awards
      • 2018 Best of Syracuse
      • 2018 Autumn Times
      • 2018 SNT Student Survival Guide
      • The 2018 Arts Issue
      • 2018 Summer Times
    • Family Times Magazine
    • CNY Community Guide
    Syracuse New TimesSyracuse New Times
    Home»Arts»Stage»Back to School for World Premiere of Slashes of Light
    Stage

    Back to School for World Premiere of Slashes of Light

    James MacKillopBy James MacKillopJune 18, 2014Updated:June 18, 2014No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Judy Tate’s Slashes of Light begins by upending a familiar Hollywood template. That’s where the heroic white teacher (think Michelle Pfeiffer or Sandra Bullock) brings discipline and hope to urban black students.

    Not this time. In Slashes, the new white teacher, Mrs. Hedges (Sarah K. Chalmers), might be gutsy enough to walk alone across the south side of Chicago, but she is carrying unseen baggage. Far from being a ghetto war zone, her new middle school is a private academy where the girls wear uniforms and the kids pass copies of C.G. Jung’s Man and His Symbols among themselves. The white teacher is but a catalyst in helping a precocious girl named Sunny (Judi Jackson) find her compass in the turbulent year of 1966.

    An actor and Tisch School graduate, playwright Tate has won four Emmys and a Writers’ Guild of America Award for both stage and television work with such shows as Days of Our Lives and As The World Turns. She and director Melissa Maxwell have been workshopping Slashes since 2010. Its world premiere in Ithaca (running through June 29) is produced jointly by the always innovative Kitchen Theatre Company and the lesser-known Civic Ensemble, dedicated to new works.

    Ravi Rakkulchon’s set presents us with a rather Spartan school: three hard, wooden platforms because the school has only three students. Confronting Sunny is the talkative, angry Kaleb (Jelani Pitcher) and the distant, seemingly morose Stephen (Ryan Hope Travis). Kaleb is a nascent black nationalist, evocative of the younger Stokely Carmichael, contemptuous of integrationists like Dr. Martin Luther King, while Stephen would rather walk away than speak at all.

    At the rear of the set stand the legs of an iron railway bridge, like a second proscenium, behind which railway cars pass in the dark. They are explained by Chicago poet Carl Sandberg’s “Window,” whose three lines Sunny recites and Mrs. Hedges recognizes immediately, “Night from a railroad car window/ Is a great dark, dark, soft thing/ Broken across with slashes of light.” The spectral Conductor (Robert McKay) speaks in a golden baritone with different accents in different scenes. Here we will learn the dreams of the three school kids as well as the recollections that Mrs. Hedges would like to delete from her memory bank.

    Neither Sunny nor the other students at the school are deprived. Her only parent might be her father (baritone Robert McKay again), but he’s an OB-GYN medico. She and the boys include music in their exchanges, starting with a vintage, portable 45 rpm turntable. Sunny speaks her preference for lyrical folksinger Joan Baez and anti-Vietnam War protest songs. Kaleb might be no supporter of the war, but he considers her ignorance of black musical idiom as personified in, say, Sonny Boy Williamson, to be cultural heresy.

    The somewhat older Stephen plays the guitar, which Sunny would like to master. In some of the most amusing, and G-rated erotic scenes, Stephen holds Sunny and the guitar in his arms and guides her fingers over the frets.

    Both boys sass Mrs. Hodges. There is nothing G-rated in Stephen’s sullen remark that she has “nice legs.” More aggressively, Kaleb shouts that black suffering is the only conflict that matters and that Mrs. Hodges could not possibly understand it because she has lived such a sugarcoated life. This leads her to lash out at last, shouting that he knows nothing of what she has suffered.

    Despite moments of bleak outrage and pathos, Slashes of Light is full of good humor and laugh-out-loud funny moments. Playwright Tate has lots of things to talk about, and she does not want to lose your attention or favor.

    As splendid as this production is, with Lisa Boquist’s costumes and Tyler M. Perry’s exquisite lighting, its chief success rests with some extraordinary casting. Judi Jackson, a student at Virginia’s University of Mary Washington, stands about 5-feet-7 but somehow looks age 12 on the stage. She speaks more than half the play’s lines in vibrant emotional colors. Hers is a coruscating and enchanting professional debut. Ryan Hope Travis, the new head of Syracuse’s Paul Robeson Performing Arts Company, also scores big as Stephen, a Mr. Darcy with street smarts.

    StageTab

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    James MacKillop

    Related Posts

    Review | Ditzy and Delightful: Hoof-hearted cheerleader charms in Cortland Repertory’s ‘Legally Blonde’

    June 26, 2019

    Review | CNY Playhouse’s ‘Rumors’ is a labor of love

    June 19, 2019

    Review | Unexpected plot turns fuel Rarely Done’s ‘A New Brain’

    June 19, 2019

    Review | Raunch Dressing: Rousing Restoration-style comedy kicks off Ithaca’s Hangar Theatre summer season

    June 19, 2019

    Passionate Players in Palmyra: Only 2 more summers to see Hill Cumorah Pageant

    June 18, 2019

    Cortland Repertory, Auburn’s Merry-Go-Round Playhouse kick off busy season for summer stages

    June 12, 2019

    Comments are closed.

    • CNY Events Calendar
    • Club Dates
    • Food & Drink
    • Destinations
    • Sports & Outdoors
    • Family Times
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Community Code of Conduct
    • Staff/Contact Us
    • Careers
    • SALT Academy Applications & Awards Process
    • Family Times
    • CNY Tix
    • Spinnaker Custom Products

    Syracuse New Times
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
    © 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.