Reviewed by James Karas
What
comes to your mind when you hear the word raptor? If you think of a bird of prey
that lived around 70 million years ago, you are not likely to enjoy Flex,
Candrice Jones’ play now showing at Crow’s Theatre. If your mind leaps to the
Raptors, Toronto’s basketball team, and you have seen a few games, you are in
luck. Flex is about a girls’ basketball team in Arkansas and
specifically in 1998 when the high school seniors of a small town are competing
against other teams (and each other) for a state championship.
They
have won the regional championship and are preparing for the big one, the state
competition where the scouts are and a chance for the players to be given a
scholarship. It is a ticket out of the dusty hellhole in Arkansas that all of
them want to get out of. It is the driving force that impels them to work as a
team to win but personal ambitions intervene and those ambitions supersede the all-important
team effort, the esprit de corps that
will compel them to victory.
The
first part of the play is set in half a basketball court where the girls are
practicing and talking. It is a fast-paced scene where they talk fast as they
practice shooting. Their individual characters start emerging. They have
attended the same school and known each other for most of their lives. Starra (Shauna
Thompson) considers herself the leader and she is considered as such by the
rest of the girls. Cherise (Trinity Lloyd) is deeply religious and wants the
other girls to be baptized. Sidney (Jasmine Case) is the new girl from California. The coach has made it clear that she does not want
pregnant players and April (Jewell Bowry) is pregnant. What is to be done about
her?
The
religious Cherise is also gay and kisses Donna (Asha James) on the lips. She
has issues with her feelings and is baptized more than once to cleanse herself
of her sin.
Starra plays dirty and her character develops around her ambition and ruthlessness. She even tried to get Sidney (Jasmine Case) pregnant. She found condoms in Sidney’s locker and pricked holes in them! Cherise tells Starra that she knows about the holes in the condoms. Sidney is the golden girl from California and Starra is from the dirt courts of Arkansas.
Flex
is a beautifully written play that dramatizes the plight of young girls in the
American south. The only way for these
young people to get out of that rathole is by excelling in basketball and
getting a scholarship. There is jealousy, treachery and decency. The actors who
make up the team and Coach Francine (a superb Sophia Walker) make not only an outstanding
basketball team but also a magnificent acting ensemble. Give the actors a
standing ovation. The Creative Team lists a Basketball Captain (Jasmine Case),
and a Basketball Coach (Alex Johnson). Between them they produced a highly
credible team of basketball players.
Dialect
Coach Peter N. Bailey trained the actors to speak in an accent, which may represent
the patois of rural Arkansas, but at the speed at which they spoke combined with
their abuse of the rules of grammar and nuanced pronunciation, I admit that I could
not always follow what they were saying.
The
set by Ken Mackenzie shows an impressive half of a basketball court and the scenes
that do not take place there are done with a minimal number of props. The emphasis
on the court is appropriate and impressive.
Director
Mumbi Tindyebwa Out seems to have her work cut out for her. With an extensive Creative
Team and a tough play, she was able to keep her eye on the ball (pardon the metaphor)
and bring forth a stunning production. The only prescription is for you to go
and see it and applaud loudly.
And
the Raptors can use the discipline and esprit de corps of the girls from
Arkansas without worrying about one of them getting pregnant. And seeing a play about basketball and much, much more may prove far more uplifting and civilized than the game itself.
____________________
Flex by
Candrice Jones, in a Crow’s Theatre and Obsidian Theatre co-production, will run
until May 18, 2025, at the Guloien Theatre, Crow’s Theatre, 345 Carlaw Avenue,
Toronto, Ontario. http://crowstheatre.com/
James Karas is the Senior Editor, Culture of The Greek Press