Thursday, November 15, 2012

In Red and Brown Water: My Experience At Penn's State's Theater


In Red and Brown Water tells the story of Oya, the fastest runner around her neighborhood. She’s so fast she has the opportunity to move to a collegiate level but gives it up to stay with her sick mother. The play tells Oya’s journey at a second chance at her scholarship and her love life along the way. 
The most important part of Oya’s story is that she is given the chance to leave the projects and find a better life. She gives up on this the first time because she chooses her mother. Her mother is a single parent and Oya’s only true family. She puts family above all. When her second chance comes around, Oya falls short because she has become side-tracked with her love life to focus on running. For a single man, she puts what she loves to the most on hold. Running was Oya’s outlet. It not only gave her opportunities to an outside world but it was an escape from her current place in society. 
The most compelling part of this play was there were three piviotal points that Oya experienced hardship in her life. Each time something had gone wrong, things seemed to pile up and there were consecutive events tearing Oya down. The first point was when she had to give up her scholarship. The second was when she wasn’t her first love, Shango, leaves her to enlist in the army. The third was when Shango impregnates another woman. The three points show a distinct change in Oya’s life. Every time things seemed they were going to be alright, something comes around to keep Oya from rising to her full potential. 
From the first scene, I was confused on the setting of the play. The props, music, dancing, and set made it seem like the actors were in tribal Africa. When they spoke, the actors talked of living in the projects. The projects is usually more urban than the set that was provided for this play. I just began to assume they were in the projects based on the conversations that were going on but because it was vague I couldn’t tell the time period. Also, each character said their stage directions aloud. This makes it a little baffling and hard to follow. It takes a few scenes until you are truly able to follow their commentary on the play as it is going on. The only positive to this was it allowed you to become aware of each character’s presence within a scene. 
This was my first time experiencing a play at Penn State’s theater. I loved the theater itself. It was smaller and cozy which allowed for a more intimate settings. It allowed for a less passive audience because the actors were using the whole theater to their benefit. I wasn’t a fan of the play itself. The storyline wasn’t very interesting to me and I was often confused or lost. I have been to many performances before. They are usually much more large scale and well known plays though. I think I should have went into this play knowing a little more about it like I have for others. 

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