The Scotsman

UNDERGROUN­D RAILROAD GAME

- JOYCE MCMILLAN

In this bold and sometimes breathtaki­ng production at the Traverse, Jennifer Kidwell and Scott R Sheppard explore the imagery and legacy of the age of slavery, as a love affair between two teachers – one white, one black – unleashes centuries of racial tension.

Traverse Theatre (Venue 15) JJJJ Recently named by the New York Times as one of the 25 greatest American plays of the last three decades, Undergroun­d Railroad Game bursts on to the stage of the Traverse with all the unruly energy of a badly managed school assembly. On stage are Jennifer Kidwell and Scott R Sheppard, the two cocreators of the show for Ars Nova of New York, crudely acting out a scene in which a fleeing female slave tries to hide from a white farmer in impressive 19th-century side-whiskers; but after a few minutes, they whip off their period costumes and address us, their pupils at Hanover Middle School in Pennsylvan­ia, about the project we are about to conduct on the American Civil War that raged through Hanover in the summer of 1863.

What follows, in Taibi Magar’s bold and sometimes breathtaki­ng production, is not so much a lesson, as a fantasia on the imagery and legacy of the age of slavery, in which the two teachers – he is white, she is black – begin a love affair that unleashes forces of unthinking racism on his side, and centurieso­ld resentment on hers, that make their strong mutual attraction both improbable and unmanageab­le. In dream-like sequences, Kidwell and Sheppard explore the intimate historic relationsh­ip between white men and black women, exploited both sexually and as nursemaids by their white masters; and then play out those tensions in reverse, in fiercely explicit scenes of sado-masochisti­c domination and humiliatio­n.

In the end, we return to the school hall, and to the question of what modern America – and the world – can learn from the story of slavery, and its continuing aftermath.

With the love affair between the teachers over, the mood is subdued, although not entirely desolate; and there’s a sense, in the age of Obama followed by Trump, of a nation just beginning to understand the depth of the psychologi­cal scars left by a system that was supposed to have been abolished by the victory of the Union forces, five generation­s ago.

Until 26 August. Today 4pm.

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