The new playÌęÌęopens by establishing the pro-diversity bona fides of Sherri Rosen-Mason, the admissions director at Hillcrest, âa second tier, on-the-cusp-of-being-a-first-tierâ prep school in New Hampshire. Sherri has summoned her colleague Roberta to scold her about the admissions brochure she has produced. As Sherri explains, she has recruited more non-white students to the school than was the case in the past, increasing its non-white enrolment from 6Ìęper cent to 18Ìęper cent, still âembarrassingly lowâ, but progress.
What has Sherri upset is that sheâs just seen the draft admission brochure, and only three of the 52 people with photos are not white. Sherri calls this an âabsolute failureâ and says that she canât recruit more minority students if prospective students look at a brochure and see only white faces.
Roberta notes that Sherri isnât counting one student, Perry, pictured with some other members of the basketball team, including Sherriâs son. âPerry's black! His father's black!â shouts Roberta, to which Sherri responds that Perryâs father is biracial (and his mother is white). Roberta notes that Sherri counts Perry as black when she boasts about 18Ìęper cent minority enrolment.
Perry is black, Sherri acknowledges, but he looks âwhiterâ than her own (white) son. Perry âdoesnât read black in this photo, that's the issueâ, Sherri says. His photo wonât encourage another black student to enrol.
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The play â which opened last week to strong reviews at the Lincoln Center in New York â then describes how Perry and Charlie, the son of Sherri and Bill (the headmaster), are applying to university. Perryâs mother tried to convince him to apply to Middlebury College, where her sister-in-law was a dean. But both boys had their hearts set on Yale University.
When early admissions decisions come out, Yale admits Perry and defers Charlie. And Charlie thinks he knows exactly why.
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He tells his parents that he knows more about Perry, his long-time friend, than they do. Charlie knows that his grades are better than Perryâs, that he is taking three advanced placement courses and Perry only two. Admissions officers clearly preferred Perry over Charlie because of his race, Charlie says.
The two boys went on college tours together. When Perryâs white mother accompanied them, nothing special happened. But when his biracial father was along, the picture was different.
âAll those admissions officers who all had that same vague phoney bullshit persona suddenly, like, came alive,â Charlie says. âThey looked at him more, made more eye contact, were just a little more interested in every word that came out of his mouth, laughed harder than they needed to at every dumb thing he said, feeling so proud of themselves, so smug, theyâre changing the world on the daily and it was like, I AM STANDING RIGHT. HERE. I AM A HUMAN BEING JUST LIKE HIM AND I AM STANDING RIGHT HERE.â
While the play is in part about Perry and his father â and other non-white people who are mentioned â all the characters who appear onstage are white. And all (with the exception of Charlie) identify as liberals. Charlie, whose middle name is Luther â for Martin Luther King, not the theologian Martin Luther â stuns his parents when his deferral from Yale sets off tirade after tirade.
Of Perryâs mother, he says that she acts as if âitâs this huge achievement that a not totally white baby popped out of her vaginaâ.
He describes a discussion in English class where students are reading Willa Cather, whom Charlie notes wasnât only a woman but was âlike, basically a lesbianâ. A fellow student complains that reading books by white people is âsoul crushingâ, and Charlie recounts telling her that they ârarelyâ read books by white people â âthanks to my parents actuallyâ â but also says, âYouâre white, Joanna. So what are you talking about?â
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Admissions leaders in real life would be quick to point out that getting into Yale isnât about a formula, and that most (real) black people who may receive help in the admissions process lack the money and connections of fictional Perry. Some elements of the play may ring true, including observations about the hierarchy of prestige believed by many white liberal educators. Sherri attempts to console her son by saying, âOh, honey, if youâd applied to Cornell, you would have gotten in, thatâs a no-brainer.â
In many ways the target of the play is not admissions alone, but the attitudes of white, liberal educators who support diversity in admissions but may not be willing to sacrifice their own status.
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The playâs author, Joshua Harmon, is not known for pulling his punches.
He wroteÌę, imagining the presidentâs daughter as the lead in a play modelled on the Greek classicÌęMedea.
And he wroteÌęBad Jews, about cousins gathered to mourn the death of their grandfather â and to bicker. Audience members laughed and winced (sometimes at the same time) about his portrayal of modern American Jewish and not-so-Jewish life.
Audience members may be having a similar reaction toÌęAdmissions.ÌęÌędescribed attendees âroaring and clapping and then seeming to want to retract both responses as Charlie veered into ever more uncomfortable ideasâ.
In an on Lincoln Centerâs blog, Mr Harmon said that the play is about using admissions to make points about white people â and especially certain kinds of white people.
The play is ânot really about applying to collegeâ, Mr Harmon said. âThatâs the container, I suppose, to be able to ask the larger questions with which the play is trying to engage. At its core, this play is an examination of whiteness: white privilege, white power, white anxiety, white guilt, all of it. Conversations on matters of race are happening with greater frequency and intensity all over the nation, which is so necessary, and there are so many ways to have them, and so many different aspects and views to consider and digest. This play is trying to hold up a mirror to white liberalism, while remaining very conscious of the fact that this is just one narrow slice of a much larger conversation.â
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This is an edited version of a story which .
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