December 1, 2000 Women in Anaels: Does this amazing play make a statement about women as well as gay men? Joanna Shunk STAFFWIUTER Angels in America finished its run last Saturday. The play more than filled up every one of its six shows, and was passionately em braced by almost all of the students that viewed it. It transcended major sexual boundaries with its humor. The play is far more than a sen timental look at AIDS as it afflicts four gay men directly and indirectly The play delves into homosexuality and AIDS, but, as director Jack Zerbe tells, it is a story about life in New York City, how it (to use New York comedian Lewis Black's word) terror izes everyone that lives in it. The play is about a variety of different reac tions to "the shit hitting the fan" in New York City. "Angels in America" is obvi ously not a one-man play. "Harper (the female lead) is supposed to be just as important as Prior (the male lead)," says theatre major Lis Tyroler, who read Tbny Kushner's play before Guilford produoed it. Zerbe agrees and says furthermore that the play is not making a statement about gen der in its juxtaposition of Harper and Prior. In the initial production, many of the women's parts were played by men and vice versa. The director of that first rendition felt the need to compensate for something. I think that something is a bias toward the gay men that is deeply ingrained in the play. The play, as all plays do, pushes the audience toward certain players more than others. It :■ -v • , ■ ; PUR JVH MK -'- RF * NFL N I I^^HHHHBHHHHH! pushes the audi ence toward four gay men, and in so doing obscures five women. All the women in the play- - f r o m Hannah to the homeless woman to Ethel Rosenberg em to be tass aooniK..w aiid less human than the men. The women could simply be foiling gay male protago nists in a play ex clusively focused on gay men, but in a far reaching play like this, the positive inclina tion toward the men raises ques- tions. The protagonist in this play is ambiguous: it could be Harper, or it could be Prior. This shows that women are not just a supporting ele ment in this film, a stool the men step on in order to elevate themselves to a more glorified position. This would be demeaning, regardless of whether the play intended the statement that women are inferior in sanity and ra tionality, to the men. The women's thrust in this not to repress the men's campaign of sexual free dom. No, the women have missions of their own in this play; they are battling their own monsters in New York City. The structure of the play invites us to compare and contrast the is sues the males and females are deal ing with and how they handle them. Yet this must be done in the light of the fact that the sex of the players is not supposed to be given close atten tion. The meaning of the play is not supposed to be gender-specific. A more extreme instance of in tentional juxtaposition used to con vey a message is propaganda in a war film from the forties. Look at those stinking animal-like Japs; now look at the glorious American boys. Not quite so caustically, the audience is challenged, look at that Harper stuff ing her mouth with pills and listen to that Mormon b*tch Hannah talk ing to her son in a machine-like voice; now look at Joe doing everything he can to be a loving husband, despite the circumstances! And look at Prior arching with primitive passion -- bringing fond memories to all of us - - as an angel infuses him with the divine. If that's not enough to pull you Does "Angels in America" encourage gender bias? The Guilfordian 7 orum to the cause of the gay men, and un fortunately estrange you from the women at the same time, juxtapose the homeless woman and her fran tic declaration, "in the next century, everyone's going to be insane" with Louis' agonizing over the morality of his actions. I think that we should be keenly aware of this portrayal of women. Once aware of the fact that the female players bear much of the negative characterization of New York - the selfishness, the aggres siveness, the neurosis -- we can care fully embrace the gender-blind meaning of the play. This play is nigh perfect; it conveys a humanity and charm on the homosexual man's part. Our society continues to deny the ho mosexual man, especially the homo sexual man with AIDS, these traits. That is a major problem that needs to be fought with all of Guilford's ar tistic might. Congratulations to Jack Zerbe and all of the Guilford Theatre Company. Yet, I believe that I can only appreciate the play to this extent because of my assumption, which Zerbe and Kushner encourage, that the women represent a much larger demographic. Unfortunately, not ev eiyone who saw the play knew this. They are the world's non-homosexu als. The men are not just men in gen eral: they represent homosexuals af flicted with AIDS...a group that hap pens to be predominantly male. Finally, I think it's important to mention that gender, especially in this play, is not to be confused with sex. Rosa Levasseur pointed out to me that "Belize is pretty effeminate." Hats off to Belize. COURTESY OF 808 ELDERKIN Page 9