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"Notes from the Field," Anna Deavere Smith's Play Asks Us to End the School-to-Prison Pipeline

Screen Shot 2015-07-11 at 3.18.55 PM

An enthusiastic, diverse audience packed the seats at Berkeley Repertory Theater in Berkeley, CA, on July 10 for a rehearsal of Anna Deveare Smith’s new play, “Notes from the Field: Doing Time in Education.” Smith is known for seamlessly impersonating different characters from real life to spin a theme, often one that advocates for social change. This time, she stepped onto the stage – bare except for a few chairs, a sofa, and a podium -- with a lone bassist (Marcus Shelby) playing off to one side. Three overhead screens identified her as Sherrilyn Ifill, president and director-counsel of the NAACP.

 

“In this moment is a space when change can happen,” Ifill said. Ifill went on to trace the history of public education and its loss of funding since racial segregation of public schools was ruled unconstitutional the U.S. Supreme Court in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka in 1954. Many public schools in the South closed rather than integrate their student population.

 

Smith went on to literally fill the shoes (she changed shoes for each character) of judges, professors, former prisoners, a high school principal, a teacher, a therapist, and the friend of Freddie Gray who shot the video of his brutal treatment by police during his arrest. The stories these people told took place mostly in Philadelphia and Baltimore, which is Smith’s home base. About a third of the stories are based on interviews with people in California -- including Stockton, Oakland, Stanford, Los Angeles, and two members of the Yurok tribe -- Taos Proctor and Judge Abby Abinanti -- in Klamath.

 

The most poignant character for me was a novice elementary school teacher in Philadelphia, who realized that many of her students fell into the special ed category because they had special needs. One day, one of her 10-year old students started on a rampage, running down the hallways and tearing everything off the walls. She ran after him as he screamed and ravaged everything in sight. Finally, she caught him and held him so tightly with both arms around him, he couldn’t move. She realized at that moment that her hold was really a hug, and the boy started to sob uncontrollably. That’s when we, the audience, realized the child – and all children – need love, not punishment.

 

A major theme of this unconventional play was that by punishing children and banishing them from school, we feed the school-to-prison pipeline because the children have nowhere else to go. And in fact, prison becomes another home to them; it’s a place that provides shelter, food, and a meeting place for many of their friends. It’s also a dangerous place and one that continues to dehumanize people, who were – as Smith demonstrates by screening the photo of a beautiful child now turned a tattooed prisoner – once innocent children like us all.

 

During the second “act,” the audience was broken down into groups of 25 to 30 people, who met at scattered locations throughout the theater, the lobby, and the outside courtyard. A facilitator handed out notebooks and a pen to everyone and asked us what it means to be human. As we responded, she wrote down our comments on a white tablet: to care, to create, to empathize, to encourage. At the end of the 25-minute sessions, we were asked to write down something each of us would commit to doing to humanize our society.

 

When we returned to the theater, Smith did a final monologue as her original character, Ifill. Once again she exclaimed, “This is it! In this moment is a space when change can happen.

 

“The moment when we move is the moment when we have to confront ourselves.”

 

And this time, we walked out of the theater emotionally driven and committed to the playwright’s call for creating a more humane society for all.

 

The play runs through August 2. 

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Thanks for corrections, Alisa. It was hard to take notes in the dark but I should have been able to tell the difference between a cello and a bass! It would be helpful if the program listed all the characters in the play by name and location as I wanted to look them up afterwards.

 

Great play and again thanks for reading and correcting this post.

 

Sylvia

Hi, Sylvia:
Thanks so much for coming to see the dress rehearsal of “Notes from the Field”! I’m the dramaturg on the project and it’s gratifying to know that the piece moved and inspired you.

 

In addition to thanking you, I’d like to point out a few factual errors in your post and hope that you might be able to correct them. As you noted, Anna Deavere Smith portrays a variety of characters – real people she has interviewed – who relate to particular themes and issues. You mention that the stories related by the characters mostly took place in Philadelphia and Baltimore, but in fact, a third of them are based on interviews with people in California, including Taos Proctor and Judge Abby Abinanti, members of the Yurok tribe. They are not from “a small Native American village in Alaska.” Alaska is never mentioned in the play; Yurok people live in Northern California.  Other characters come from Oakland, Stockton, Stanford, and UCLA.

 

Also, you mention our wonderful musician, who is accompanying Anna Deavere Smith. His name is Marcus Shelby and he is not a cellist; he is playing a bass.

 

Thanks again for coming to the play and sharing your thoughts.

 

In solidarity,
Alisa Solomon

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