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Theatre review: White Noise

High praise for this examination of slavery's legacy

October 15, 2021 10:20
12. l-r Helena Wilson (Dawn), Faith Omole (Misha), James Corrigan (Ralph), Ken Nwosu (Leo) Photo by Johan Persson
White Noise by Parks, , WRITER - Suzan-Lori Parks, Director - Polly Findlay, Set Design - Lizzie Clachan, Costume Design - Natalie Pryce, Movement Director - Jade Hackett, Lighting Design - Jackie Shemesh, The Bridge Theatre, London, 2021, Credit{ Johan Persson/
2 min read

This is a week of inherited trauma. It sees the revamped Donmar Warehouse reopen with Cordelia Lynn’s new work about a couple possessed by the violent atrocity experienced by their Polish and Jewish forebears.

But first comes the UK debut of Suzan-Lori Parks’s play. Populated by two mixed-race couples, it is a shocker. Those who know the work of the Pulitzer-winning Park, such as her slave-era epic Father Comes Home from the Wars, will expect a racially charged evening.

But even after it is established early on that insomniac African American artist Leo (a likeable Ken Nwosu) has been been assaulted by the police during one of his nightly walkabouts, it still feels as if the author has opted to write a comedy of manners. That is until Leo reveals his solution to the vulnerability he feels when out on the streets of his city because he is a black man.

The solution to his insecurity is simple. He wants to be the slave of his best friend Ralph (James Corrigan), a white man.

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Theatre