My White Best Friend and Even More Letters Best Left Unsaid
The Bunker
Reviewed – 25th November 2019
β β β β
“a hugely powerful piece of theatre, a hugely important piece of theatre, and one that everyone must see”
On arrival at the Bunker Theatre we are handed wristbands, and enter into a theatre space transformed. There are three pieces of stage, in the corner is a DJ, and milling around are the audience, stood waiting, ready. Posters adorn the walls that highlight the showβs history and echoing the gig-like set up designed by Khadija Raza.
The first letter, by Rachel De-Lahay, the nightβs curator, begins with a request to reshuffle the space, putting black and brown, queer and female bodies, front and centre.
This first letter is to her best friend, her white best friend, and it is read by InΓ¨s de Clercq. It is about the micro-aggressions, as well as the macro, the things people say that they donβt mean, that they donβt even see the problem in, the things that hurt all the more for it. The letter talks about white privilege, about how even a best friend can be part of the problem. βThis is the fight you and your white best friend will never have,β writes De-Lahay, highlighting how much is left unsaid.
The second letter is to a βwhite ex situation-man-shipβ, read by Tom Mothersdale, a white actor, who is reading these words for the first time. It touches upon the white privilege surrounding drug addiction and the way it is talked about. The letter and final letter of the evening starts, βDear so-called allies.β Read by Susan Wokoma, our writer takes us back to Stonewall, to the erasure of a black and brown history and a trans history in the way Stonewall is remembered and celebrated today.
These letters are from different people, to different people, but they share a power. They are funny sometimes, and moving at other times, and generous and unforgiving and brave, spilling over with words that have been left on the tips of tongues too many times to count.
βMy White Best Friend (And Even More Letters Left Unsaid)β is back by popular demand, with new letters and performers each night, and it isnβt hard to see why. The audience audibly responds to what is being read out, to a mis-pronounciation of a black name by a white actors, to things they recognise in their own experience, to things they will leave here with trying harder to recognise in their black and brown friendsβ experiences. It is hard not to respond, like that, in the middle of the space, surrounded by people.
Directed by Milli Bhatia, this is a hugely powerful piece of theatre, a hugely important piece of theatre, and one that everyone must see.
Reviewed by Amelia Brown
My White Best Friend and Even More Letters Best Left Unsaid
The Bunker until 30th November
Previously reviewed at this venue:
My White Best Friend | β β β β β | March 2019
Funeral Flowers | β β β Β½ | April 2019
Fuck You Pay Me | β β β β | May 2019
The Flies | β β β | June 2019
Have I Told You Iβm Writing a Play About my Vagina? | β β β β | July 2019
Jade City | β β β | September 2019
Germ Free Adolescent | β β β β | October 2019
We Anchor In Hope | β β β β | October 2019
Before I Was A Bear | β β β β β | November 2019
I Will Still Be Whole (When You Rip Me In Half) | β β β β | November 2019
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