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Opinion

Is it time for a ‘Jews only’ night at the theatre?

Performances just for black people have sparked controversy, but what do we Jews think?

June 1, 2023 13:46
Chaim Hopol
3 min read

So-called “black out nights” are the latest trend in theatre to send waves of controversy rippling through the Twittersphere. The idea, an American import, is that specific nights during a run of a black orientated play are designated for black-only audiences.
Met by criticism and veneration in equal measure, the goal is to foster a safe space where black audiences can freely engage in art ostensibly unique to them. So could a “Jews-only night” at the theatre loom?

On paper it makes some sense. The underlying principle seems applicable to us, as an ethnic minority that doesn’t have an easy history with theatre in this country: a Jewish audience in a Jewish space for a Jewish show where we can freely engage in Jewish themes. The website for Tambo & Bones, the play at the heart of the recent brouhaha, advertises its “black out night” as “free from the white gaze”. Perhaps we could finally be liberated from the goyim’s gaze.

A “Jews-only night” would,of course, be different from all other nights. On a practical level, you would probably know half the audience. But there is something deeper and fundamentally uncomfortable about the prospect. The principle behind it misunderstands art’s emotional and ethical power. It leaves us culturally poorer.

Good art is mystical. It has an uncanny ability to illuminate a perspective other than our own. We can open a window to another time, another culture, another world, and smell the fresh air that wafts through as if we were there experiencing it for ourselves. This vicariousness broadens out horizons in a way nothing else can.

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Culture