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The play using university admissions to skewer liberal pieties

Joshua Harmon鈥檚 savage play, Admissions, brings to London its tangled emotions unleashed by diversity policies

Published on
February 28, 2019
Last updated
February 28, 2019
Admissions
Alex Kingston as Sherri and Ben Edelman as Charlie in the London production of Joshua Harmon鈥檚 Admissions

Few issues are more effective at exposing liberal hypocrisies and feelings of entitlement than university admissions.

Such questions were already in the air when聽US playwright Joshua Harmon was growing up in the 1990s, he recalled, and 鈥渨e鈥檙e still trying to figure out how to make a fairer, more equitable world, and people are still trying to figure out how to advance their own children as far as they can possibly go, equality be damned鈥.

鈥淲hen you鈥檙e talking about admissions, you鈥檙e talking about people鈥檚 kids, and nothing is more personal,鈥 Mr Harmon said. 鈥淪o questions around admissions combine what is most personal with the equally intense questions with which America has been grappling since its founding; the political becomes instantly personal, what鈥檚 theoretical becomes immediate and present tense, and so the world of admissions becomes a very exciting container in which to ask some pretty big questions.鈥

Admissions obviously stir up similar tensions well beyond the US. So Mr Harmon鈥檚 award-winning 2018 play聽础诲尘颈蝉蝉颈辞苍蝉听should prove equally relevant in skewering liberal pieties and probing liberal guilt聽

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The events take place at a boarding school in rural New Hampshire where the head of admissions is Sherri Rosen-Mason, a woman Mr Harmon described as 鈥渟omeone who publicly is a terrific advocate for change, and privately doesn鈥檛 want anything to change for her family at all鈥. She is so keen on promoting racial diversity and empowering women that at one point her son Charlie accuses her of hating white men.

The opening scene concerns a dispute over the school brochure. Mr Harmon remembered the 鈥渁wkwardness鈥 of a school photograph where he had to sit with a lot of older pupils 鈥渨ho had never spoken to me before and never spoke to me after鈥 and 鈥減ose together as if we were a group of friends鈥.

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He drew on this in the play, where Sherri is 鈥渢rying to create the perfectly curated photo of a diverse group of students鈥. We see her berating a subordinate for not including enough pupils who not only count as 鈥減eople of colour鈥 for the purpose of her statistics but are also 鈥渞ecognisably minorities. So that another minority student can聽recognisably recognise聽someone who looks like them.鈥 聽

Mr Harmon鈥檚 earlier play聽Bad Jews聽showed a family tearing itself apart over an inheritance. The real drama of聽Admissions聽comes when it turns from schools to universities as Charlie and his mixed-race best friend Perry both apply to Yale.

This leads to a ferocious confrontation with his parents about quotas, entitlement, pulling strings and what it really means to be anti-racist 鈥 which it is safe to assume London audiences will find just as discomforting as those in New York.

matthew.reisz@timeshighereducation.com

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