
For a show that stresses the importance of the word (and of its associated actions "made flesh"), The Word Begins ends up not only being too general with them, but downright lazy. (This is not to say that the actors are lazy, although an energetic minstrel show is still just a minstrel show.) Yes, there are white people who act black, and there are well-spoken black men who are castigated for acting white, and there are redneck preachers and bitch-hatin' rappers and nut-bustin' playas, but it's not enough to simply show us these stereotypes. That's straw-man theater, in which because a black man holds a gun to a white man's head not out of hatred but out of a need to provide for his family, this world is obviously fucked up.
No, what's fucked up is a spoken-word play that is all talk. Without characters to develop, or plot to guide things, even the zingers lose their effect: "Babies are born dead from wombs like coffins" or "If people who kill in the name of God go to heaven, then who goes to hell? Gandhi?" Robert Egan's direction tries to generate some sense of consistency between segments, but it's not enough and actually just makes the show seem stagier. (Given the lack of a set, it's actually a poor choice.) Perhaps the greatest gripe with The Word Begins is that it is content to simply be a beginning.
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