Right
off the bat, there’s a lot to like about any play set in a workplace. These are
environments all of us are familiar with, and we know how some of the power
games are played. So in Rasheeda Speaking,
when a doctor asks his loyal secretary to help him find evidence so he can fire
another secretary he doesn’t like, we all nod our heads knowingly. Yes, we are
familiar with dick-heads like that.
But
when the doctor and the favored secretary are white and the targeted secretary
is black, the stakes suddenly become more significant. In this play, the author
Joel Drake Johnson attempts to bring up a raft of touchy racial subjects as
they apply to employment, and many of them resonate quite well. But he loads so
much on this almost-two hour one act that it eventually loses its momentum and
crawls to a conclusion.
The
white employee, Ileen, has been working for the doc (an effectively
passive-aggressive John Busser) for eight years, and she’s just been promoted
to office manager. But the boss in the white coat doesn’t care for Jaclyn, an
African-American woman who had recently been promoted from elsewhere in the
medical facility to this position. As if to prove her unfitness for the job,
the doctor has his stethoscope in a twist because Jaclyn took off five days
because of “toxins in the air” that she and her private doctor claim are
damaging her health.
From
that premise, we watch as Jaclyn and Ileen dance around each other like
scorpions packing file folders, trying to one-up each other. Mary Alice Beck as
Ileen nicely balances her characters sweetness with a definite focus on doing
her boss’s bidding. Meanwhile, Treva Offutt as Jaclyn shows both sides of this
black woman, making it difficult to fully root for anyone in this office
standoff.
Many
issues are brought up, including the difficult home lives of some black
families and the offensive things white people say to each other about blacks
when they think no one is listening. But every time the play tries to open
itself up and depart from the office tug-of-war, it loses energy and starts to
sabotage its own compelling premise.
Indeed,
the playwright trods the same ground one (or two or three) too many times, with
a variety of cutbacks and mind games, some of which are baffling. And then,
unaccountably, he lurches past the perfect ending, when Jaclyn delivers a
drop-the-mic moment referencing the name in the title.
But
director Sarah May coaxes interesting performances out of her cast, which includes
an adorable Rhoda Rosen as an elderly patient who is fought over by Ileen and
Jaclyn like a chew toy. And Ben Needham’s carefully detailed set lends an air
of authenticity to the proceedings.
There’s
a sharp, funny and often startling script laying inside Rasheeda Speaking, but its voice is dimmed by the playwright’s
tendency to overstate things that have already been said.
Rasheeda
Speaking
Through
November 20 at Karamu House, 2355 East 89th Street, 216-795-7070.