The first week or so of performance are being held in a courtroom at Hamline University,* and I'm sorry to say those performances are already sold out. But the show is soon moving back to the Jungle, where it runs through July 2, and I'm sure will be just as riveting, if not quite as immersive. Because when you're sitting in that fully lit courtroom, with actors wearing judges robes, and a bailiff insisting "all rise," it feels like you're watching these proceedings play out in real time. Said proceedings are on the surface relatively simple, but digging deeper, the situation is incredibly complex. Elizabeth Keathley married an American and moved from her native Philippines to live with him in Illinois. Not yet a citizen, she went to apply for a state ID. When she handed the official her Philippines passport and visa, and he asked her a series of questions, including - do you want to register to vote. She innocently said yes, assuming that since he asked her, it was legal. Same thing when her voter registration card arrived in the mail - it must be legal, so she voted. (One wonders why neither she nor her husband knew that only US citizens were allowed to vote, but Civics class was a long time ago for most of us.) Because of this mistake, by law she now faces deportation, which would mean leaving her husband and children.
is this a real legal proceeding? no, it's theater! (photo by Lauren B. Photography) |
Elizabeth (Stephanie Anne Bertumen) examines evidence on the stand (with Megan Kim and Jay Owen Eisenberg) (photo by Lauren B. Photography) |
This is one of those plays (even though it's not really a play) that makes you feel the promise of America, the best that America can be. Which is often in conflict with what we see on the news every day. The laws this family encountered, and that many immigrants encounter, are incredibly complex and confusing. They were put in place with good reason, and it's good to have laws, but we also need to see the humanity of the people involved and understand how and why and where they fit within those laws. Not everything is as black and white as the laws may seem when real people are involved.
I highly recommend checking out a performance of The Courtroom: A Reenactment of One Woman's Deportation Proceedings when it returns to Jungle's Uptown home. It's truly illuminating into the world of immigration and deportation, for those of us who have never experienced it. The complex issues surrounding immigration in this country are given a very human face in the story of this one woman, well told by this cast and creative team.
*The Jungle is not the only theater company staging a site-specific performance at Hamline University. This weekend, Walking Shadow Theatre Company opens the Lucas Hnath play Red Speedo at the Hamline pool.