Los Angeles Times

A potent fusion of thorny social issues

Sex, consent, gender and race all come up for discussion in Anna Ziegler’s new play.

- By Margaret Gray

He said, she said. Then he said more, and then she said more. They both kept saying things. But no matter how much they said, it was impossible to determine what had actually happened between the two freshmen in the Princeton University dorm room when they were very drunk. Was it consensual sex or rape?

In a nutshell, that’s Anna Ziegler’s new play “Actually,” having its world premiere at the Geffen Playhouse in a coproducti­on with the Williamsto­wn Theatre Festival.

Tackling an issue as topical and thorny as consent on college campuses suggests a writer who doesn’t fear, or even enjoys, poking a hornet’s nest. David Mamet’s “Oleanna,” which provoked heated discourse about gender politics and student/professor power imbalances in the 1990s, is an obvious precedent. Ziegler’s parties are both students, but Ziegler one-ups Mamet by adding race to the provocatio­ns on offer: The accuser, Amber (Samantha Ressler), is white and Jewish; the defendant, Tom (Jerry MacKinnon), is black.

But unlike Mamet, who fueled fires by making both characters in “Oleanna” behave in unsavory ways, Ziegler sets out to portray Amber and Tom as likable. Because Tom is an accused rapist, she has to work a bit harder on his behalf. Amber may have levied the accusation, but she also pursued Tom avidly into bed and entertains romantic fantasies about him even at the disciplina­ry hearing. Tom may have ignored Amber’s voice at a critical moment, but otherwise he’s an unusually sensitive guy. Both, it’s implied, are really victims here, of a culture that relies on packs of unsupervis­ed, ill-informed, intoxicate­d teenagers to establish its sexual ethics. (The descriptio­ns of campus social life are likely to make parents cancel their tuition checks: “After 7, you have to go out and drink till you’re sick,” Amber explains casually.) You can almost feel Ziegler dealing her cards into scrupulous­ly even piles, careful never to stack the deck too high in either direction.

If ultimately this setup feels a bit rigged, the minuteto-minute game-play in this production, tautly directed by Tyne Rafaeli, is gripping. The action takes place entirely inside a plain wooden box, like a giant diorama (by scenic designer Tim Mackabee), bare except for two chairs, where Tom and Amber are displayed like museum specimens. Sitting side by side, they only occasional­ly speak to or even look at each other; for the most part, each addresses the audience directly, guilelessl­y, like a trusted friend.

Both actors excel at conveying their characters’ doubts and illusions about themselves, so that our sympathy keeps ping-ponging between them as they describe the paths that brought them together. Insecure, lonely Amber insists that she only got into Princeton because she was competing against other mediocre female squash players. Like Zosia Mamet’s character, Shoshanna, on HBO’s “Girls,” she’s a chatterbox prone to “uptalk,” babbling out a continual word salad of incongruou­s references and startling propositio­ns: Jews and blacks are alike, she contends, in both “never wanting to go camping” and “the deep and unending fear that any moment we’ll be rounded up and killed.”

Tom comes from an inner-city school, where a teacher saved his life by introducin­g him to the piano. Talented and good-looking, in his first two months of college he has had his pick of sexual partners and the only reason he asks “mousy” Amber out at all is that he feels sorry for her. But he doesn’t easily warm to her and often finds her irritating, as when she assumes that he got into Princeton because he’s black. “That’s not a microaggre­ssion,” she defends herself. “No, because it’s, like, a macro-aggression,” Tom counters.

The play works so hard to make romance between these two implausibl­e that when they do get together, the machinery starts to rattle. Although the characters are beautifull­y rendered and complex, their behavior on the night in question remains difficult to credit. Also, a quibble: the descriptio­ns of Princeton feel a little generic (In real life Ziegler attended Yale); more specific references might enhance the authentici­ty.

But if “Actually” doesn’t entirely succeed as a story, it’s a beautifull­y acted character study destined to trigger discussion­s about a problem that, despite decades of argument, isn’t getting better.

calendar@latimes.com

 ?? Chris Whitaker ?? SAMANTHA RESSLER and Jerry MacKinnon address the audience as college students confrontin­g the issue of sexual consent in Anna Ziegler’s “Actually.”
Chris Whitaker SAMANTHA RESSLER and Jerry MacKinnon address the audience as college students confrontin­g the issue of sexual consent in Anna Ziegler’s “Actually.”

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