Bina Sharif has presence -- even under a burqa. (And this one is not the Afghan light blue but a dramatic combination of aqua, purple and orange silk with iridescent eye slot.) In her new solo show, Afghan Woman, Sharif gives voice to what unfortunately must be an average mother's plight in Afghanistan. Hemmed in by war, poverty and a medieval regime, her character, Narges Hazrat, can moan over her dead children with the security that no person can change this fate of hers. Were it not for the window that the world's attention has briefly offered, we wouldn't even be hearing her. U.S. media has kept us at comfortable remove from the reality of Afghan life since the reprisal bombings and invasion began last fall.
Above all, Afghan Woman is a meditation on silence. "My destiny is of silence. My silence is silent." And so Afghanistan.
To the Theater for the New City audience, Sharif brings immediacy, the kind that live theater is best equipped to provide. She also gives us the right vocabulary -- "subservient" nicely summarizes Narges's choiceless world. Sharif's script is less angry than a combination of accusatory and ironic, the latter releasing laughter from time to time to interrupt the mostly tragic tone. As the show unfolds, we realize that Narges has died along with her children when a stray U.S. bomb came to liberate them from the infinite sadness of their existence.
Opened:
January 10, 2002
Ended:
January 27, 2002
Country:
USA
State:
New York
City:
New York
Company/Producers:
Theater for the New City
Theater Type:
off-off-Broadway
Theater:
Theater for the New City
Theater Address:
155 First Avenue
Phone:
212-254-1109
Running Time:
75 min
Genre:
Solo
Director:
Bina Sharif
Review:
Cast:
Bina Sharif (Narges Hazrat)
Technical:
Lights: Alex Bartenieff; Set: Bina Sharif; Paintings: Babu; Tech: Kevin Mitchell Martin.
Critic:
David Lipfert
Date Reviewed:
January 2002