Playwright. Provocateur. Grad student. A whirlwind day in the life of the author of Slave Play and Daddy.
IN THE WINTER of 2015, the playwright Jeremy O. Harris decided to write Slave Play as a bit of a dare. He was at a holiday party in Prospect Heights, where he got into a heated debate with a group of writers about “erotics, desire, and who gets to own fantasy.” One of them, a straight white guy, said he had recently enjoyed enacting a rape fantasy with a partner. Feeling his Socratic self, Harris decided to troll him. “You could rape anyone, any day,” he said. “You probably have raped someone. What does that mean that you’re owning this?” Then he took it further, asking if the guy would feel the same about rape play if his partner were black. “Everything got really tense for everyone,” Harris recalls. “I was like, Wait. Why is it tense now, but it wasn’t tense before?”
At that moment, the idea for Slave Play sprung from his brain almost fully formed. “First act, second act,” he says during a late-night car ride from New York to New Haven, where he’s a third year student in the playwriting M.F.A. program at Yale. “I’m going to write this.” Slave Play would imagine what rape play would look like for an interracial couple into antebellum costumes. The first act would begin with three interracial couples, gay and straight, enacting various sexual dominance scenarios on an AstroTurf plantation. The second would reveal that the couples are engaging in a cutting edge therapy technique utilizing “race play”—a subset of BDSM—to get the black partner reengaged sexually in the relationship, working out the master slave dialectic onstage through talk and sex. Someone said it sounded “insane,” but Harris’s friend the writer Maxwell Neely-Cohen told him it was so fucked up he would watch it even though he didn’t frequent the theater.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Verily, Are the Kids All Right?
A Romeo and Juliet production that's all (vape) smoke and shimmer.
Masterpieces, Then and Now
The Met reunites Siena Renaissance paintings for the first time in centuries.
Heritage Regained
A fantastical documentary follows the return of 26 plundered artworks to Benin.
Emilia Pérez States Its Case Right Away
The film's impressive opening number drops you into a world of corruption and chaos.
WHEN KYLIE JENNER WRITES A NOVEL
Celebrities occasionally like to try their hand at fiction. But who’s really the author?
Emily Watson Is in Charge
The double Oscar nominee grew up in a cultlike organization. Acting became her way out of it.
RESTAURANT REVIEW: Everyone's Eating at Bridges
Manhattan's hottest restaurant doesn't play it safe.
Upstairs From His Favorite Italian Restaurant
Ryan Lawson designs other people’s places differently from how he did his own Village apartment.
165 MINUTES WITH...Mike and Kiki Tyson
After a near-death experience, the boxer is preparing, his wife by his side, for his big fight against Jake Paul.
Neighborhood News: Attention, Satmar Shoppers
At Williamsburg's W Mall, a milchig food court and refuge for weary mothers.