- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A-A-America! by Edward Bond
- review in SF Weekly by Michael Scott
Moore (April 9, 2003)
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- Two frankly offensive one-acts about
lynching and American racism
British playwright Edward Bond's 1976 play A-A-America! consists of two
frankly offensive one-acts about lynching and American racism. The first,
"Grandma Faust," is a cartoonish Brer Rabbit-style tale about
a Southern yokel named Uncle Sam who makes a Faustian deal with his devilish
grandmother. Grandma Faust promises good luck to Sam if he can auction
the soul of a black man, Paul, but Paul proves too clever for the white
folk and escapes downriver before local ladies can turn him into "nigger
foot pie." This broad, nightmare farce works, barely, because of committed
performances from Algin Ford, as Paul, and Linda Jones as the sinister,
coil-voiced grandmother. The second piece is stronger, though. "The
Swing" shows Paul in a realistic Southern town circa 1911, working
as a mild-mannered family servant in the shabby-genteel home of an actress.
One thing leads to another, and Paul finds himself accused of rape and
sentenced to sit on a swing in a theater while patrons shoot him with revolvers.
(Something similar really happened in a Livermore, Ky., opera house in
1911.) The play -- like the "lynching" itself -- anticipates
Natural Born Killers, with its mixture of mindless entertainment
and live-feed violence as a criticism of American culture. as an overheated
schoolmistress, but the play is still hard to watch, because it offers
up racism and murder as a kind of voyeurism, which after all was the whole
sick point of a lynching
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