UCLA football played its annual spring game at Drake Stadium on Saturday.
Theater review: ‘The Niceties’ examines emotional fallout and complexity in conversations about race
Ever have an intense conversation with a professor during office hours?
Politely asking for a grade change or feigning interest in their research for a recommendation letter might yield awkward encounters, but it surely can’t top “The Niceties.”
The play, which will run at the Geffen Playhouse until May 12, follows university student Zoe Wood’s (Jordan Boatman) conversation with her history professor Janine Bosko (Lisa Banes) during her office hours. Their initially innocuous discussion regarding an essay assignment on the American Revolution slowly but steadily derails into a heated debate regarding racism and privilege in America.
[RELATED: Academic discussion turns intense in play’s portrayal of contemporary race relations]
Both Boatman and Banes impeccably portray their characters’ archetypes. Boatman gives an impassioned portrayal of Zoe, a black millennial student who is an outspoken supporter of causes that affect people of color. Boatman convincingly delivers Zoe’s quibbles and objections to Janine’s criticism as a righteous student who must remain composed in her professor’s presence. Her costume, consisting of distressed jeans and a stylish white sweatshirt, further emphasizes her role as a student with a bold, if not idealistic, vision for the world.
Meanwhile, Banes is a perfect fit for Janine, an esteemed white university professor who is confident in her past experience and expertise. Banes boasts the elevated voice of an inspired historian, walking the fine line between sounding intellectually stimulating and unintentionally condescending. She conjures an intensity without yelling, while her costume’s grey palette topped with a long flowing cardigan authentically imitates a university professor’s clothing. Though both Zoe and Janine are meant to be representative of broad demographics, Boatman and Banes’ nuanced performances keep them from verging into stereotype.
Though audiences will inevitably find themselves siding with either Zoe or Janine, the script forces viewers to confront the pair’s equally valid ideas, which writer Eleanor Burgess cleverly introduces through the natural progression of Zoe and Janine’s debate. The script expertly ties together humor with historical facts that could be fodder for political debate to instead create genuine dialogue. Zoe and Janine’s age, race, gender and culture are artfully woven into an overarching debate regarding history. For instance, Janine’s upbringing in a family of Polish immigrants seeking asylum from Hitler’s regime raises questions about the idea that privilege can simply be boiled down to race.
Director Kimberly Senior makes particularly good use of the simple stage set: Janine’s office. With numerous portraits of historical figures – such as George Washington – framed on the walls and shelves filled to the brim with history books, the room exudes comfort for Janine while simultaneously serving as unknown territory for Zoe. The seating emphasizes the unbalanced atmosphere, with a folding chair and austere bench for Zoe and an ergonomic rolling chair for Janine. Even their movements within the space indicate their delicate relationship, with Janine remaining behind her desk and Zoe lingering near the exit door and occasionally approaching Janine.
Zoe and Janine’s escalating conversation keeps the audiences engaged, as the debate repeatedly edges close to personal and offensive territory. Their highly tense academic dispute eventually erupts into a fierce argument, providing a thrilling conclusion to the first act.
As Zoe reveals she will be protesting Sandra Day O’Connor’s appearance on campus, Zoe and Janine restrain themselves by logically appealing to the retired Supreme Court justice’s political record. Despite their attempts to be open-minded, they appear visibly astonished, if not outright offended, by each other’s positions. It’s one of many scenes that do an excellent job demonstrating the complexities of racism, with two like-minded women in fierce disagreement over who merits admiration in American history.
[RELATED: Theater review: Webber’s ‘Cats’ displays visual excellence mired in plot confusion]
The second and final act, which takes place three weeks after the first, opens with a slightly heavy-handed attempt to create a resolution between Zoe and Janine. Additional information is revealed about their backgrounds to make them appear more or less relatable, but feels contrived in comparison to the nuance of the first act. Perhaps it was an intentional decision to make Zoe and Janine’s apologies feel forced, as the apparent facade of mutual empathy quickly erodes and their debate escalates once again. But the play swiftly picks up from where it left off, becoming increasingly spiteful while still providing incisive commentary.
Despite the second act’s rocky start, Boatman and Banes continue to shine in their subtle displays of their argument’s emotional toll. Janine is initially cautious, yet quickly becomes frustrated with Zoe, taking more personal jabs at her. Zoe, on the other hand, begins the act humbled by privileges she had not previously acknowledged, such as her middle class upbringing and the opportunity to attend an elite university. The pain Zoe and Janine share from their first argument invokes sympathy about how destructive such conversations can be.
Though the repeated escalation of their argument admittedly feels reminiscent of the first act, the debate manages to explore more perspectives on the issue. For instance, a major source of conflict in the second act is determining how diversity can be realistically attained in academia.
The diverse range of perspectives Zoe and Janine explore are effective in highlighting contemporary race relations in America, where discussions can quickly become emotionally charged. Such issues regarding race and privilege are obviously complex, which the play openly accepts. But rather than displaying an unrealistic resolution to the characters’ underlying debate, “The Niceties” instead invites conversation, while refusing to shy away from the painful aspects of discussing race.
While “The Niceties” is not perfect in organically introducing various perspectives on such issues, it sparks a conversation desperately needed in America today.
New ideas, changes see light in UCLA football’s second spring game under Chip Kelly
Chip Kelly tried something new in his second spring game with the Bruins.
Team blue defeated team white 3-0 in UCLA football’s annual spring game Saturday. Kelly decided to set up an offense versus defense approach to the game since the Bruins were short on offensive linemen. The game lasted 60 minutes without any clock stoppages – like it did last year – but this time, nobody could find the end zone.
Rising sophomore quarterback Dorian Thompson-Robinson got the most reps under center, going 12-of-16 with 110 yards and a late red-zone interception. Rising redshirt sophomore Austin Burton – who led UCLA’s passing attack in 2018’s spring game – was 10-of-17 with 122 yards, while newcomer Chase Griffin was 6-of-9 with 55 yards.
The three signal callers also combined for 60 rushing yards on a combined 16 carries while also taking four sacks.
“We don’t want him to stand back there like a store mannequin and just take the sack, so they’ve got to try to keep plays alive and that’s one thing that all three of those guys can do – they can extend plays with their feet,” Kelly said. “It’s a matter of the D-line doing a really good job and you’ve got to give them credit for it, but it’s also the quarterbacks learning how to manipulate and work in a pocket and when the pocket breaks down.”
Burton took three shots deep down the sideline in the game, with the first going to rising redshirt junior Demetric Felton. The 5-foot-9 wideout reeled it in in the end zone but took a step out of bounds and the pass was ruled incomplete.
The next deep ball by Burton was sent toward rising senior wide receiver Theo Howard, but the ball was swatted away by rising sophomore cornerback Patrick Jolly.
“In terms of DBs, those guys can cover,” Thompson-Robinson said. “I’m glad I have those guys on the other side to push me, so come Saturdays, I don’t have to go against them.”
Burton finally connected with incoming freshman wide receiver Jaylen Erwin on a 50-yard bomb on the final drive of the game.
“I knew I needed to complete one,” Burton said. “So (Erwin) ran a great route, stacked the receiver, and I just gave him a chance. … Ever since he’s gotten here, you notice his speed, he’s extremely fast.”
That play got the offense inside the 10, but back-to-back pass breakups by Jolly with time expiring kept the blue team from putting up a touchdown.
While all three quarterbacks were given time to shine, the position battle thinned out a bit over the spring.
Rising redshirt junior Matt Lynch moved from quarterback to tight end at the start of practices in March, and rising redshirt freshman Josiah Norwood made the switch from quarterback to wide receiver in April.
“Last year we had (quarterback Wilton Speight) who was like, 50,” Burton said. “Now I’m the oldest one.”
Thompson-Robinson said he has really enjoyed having Lynch as a target and blocker, saying he was one of his favorite tight ends on the team.
The three quarterbacks still making throws also had another big change this offseason – a new chess instructor named Seth Makowsky who Kelly brought in specifically for the signal-callers.
“(Makowsky)’s worked with a couple professionals like Dwayne Haskins and a couple guys going into the (NFL) Draft and we’ve had about six or seven sessions with him,” Burton said. “Each piece or each move, you’ve got to calculate it because you’ve got to see where you’re being attacked and where you’re attacking someone. So when I’m on the field, it’s kind of the same thing.”
But when rising junior cornerback Darnay Holmes saw Thompson-Robinson with Makowsky, he couldn’t stay away.
“I’m like, ‘I know for a fact that (Thompson-Robinson) don’t know nothing about chess,’” Holmes said. “So I go over there, and I ask, ‘Can I … see that and set up a meeting with you one day?’ And then from there, we started playing chess.”
From chess coaches to position swapping to unique offense versus defense scrimmages, Kelly made a lot of changes this spring. Rising senior linebacker Krys Barnes said that was always the goal, and that the changes and improvements from March and April will help the Bruins take strides come August.
“Each and every day … we battle each other and battle with offense and grow with one another,” Barnes said. “It’s been good in going through (the) spring game. We had a really good knowledge of how we’re going to go out today and how we’re going to excel today, and I feel like it showed in every which way and form.”
Baseball loses eight-game streak to California in 4-1 upset
A pitching gem put an end to the Bruins’ win streak.
No. 1 UCLA baseball (29-7, 10-4 Pac-12) fell to California (20-13, 8-6) 4-1 on Friday night to lose its first game in two weeks. Right-hander Jared Horn started the game for the Golden Bears and threw 8 1/3 innings, striking out nine.
The Bruins’ one run and three hits were both season lows.
“You’ve got to give Horn a lot of credit,” said coach John Savage. “He threw multiple pitches for strikes, and at the end of the day he was really the difference in the game.”
UCLA went hitless through the first three innings, but scored the first run of the game in the bottom of the third. Sophomore shortstop Kevin Kendall drew a walk to lead off the inning, and moved to second on a pickoff throw that went to the right field wall. A bunt from junior catcher Will McInerny moved Kendall to third, and a sacrifice fly from sophomore right fielder Garrett Mitchell brought him home.
Cal responded in the top of the fourth after catcher Korey Lee ripped a double into the left-center gap and right fielder Max Flower followed with a single into left field that put runners at the corners. Second baseman Darren Baker loaded the bases on a bunt to the right side that junior right-hander Ryan Garcia could not transfer to first in time, and a sacrifice fly from shortstop Sam Wezniak tied the game.
Garcia issued a walk to load the bases again, but limited the damage to one run when he forced a groundout to end the inning.
The run was all Garcia allowed in his six innings of work, striking out nine.
“They took advantage of some of my mistakes early on in the third inning,” Garcia said. “One run scored, but I was able to keep them at one – it could’ve been worse.”
Junior left fielder Jack Stronach got the first hit of the game for UCLA in the bottom of the fourth with a single up the middle, taking two free bases when the ball slipped past the center fielder’s glove. However, junior first baseman Michael Toglia struck out swinging and redshirt sophomore designated hitter Jarron Silva flew out to strand Stronach at third.
After freshman center fielder Matt McLain’s infield single in the fifth, the Bruins went hitless for the next three innings.
“I think we maybe came out too relaxed,” Stronach said. “I think we needed more edge tonight than we had. We’ve got to stick to our approach more.”
The game remained tied until the top of the seventh, when the Golden Bears broke through with three runs against redshirt senior right-hander Nathan Hadley.
Center fielder Cameron Eden stepped to the plate with one on and launched the first pitch over the left field wall – just the second home run Hadley has allowed this season. Hadley gave up another later in the inning on the first pitch to first baseman Andrew Vaughn, who sent it to same location as Eden.
“Cal is a very offensive team,” Savage said. “They’ve got a ton of experience throughout their lineup. (Hadley) made a couple of mistakes and they made him pay for it. (Hadley’s) been our seventh inning guy all season and he’s been fantastic, so it’s bound to happen.”
With UCLA still trailing by three runs in the bottom of the ninth, Stronach walked and Toglia singled to force Cal to tap into its bullpen. However, senior pinch hitter Jake Pries struck out swinging and McLain struck out looking against left-hander Arman Sabouri.
According to Stronach, the Bruins’ lineup will have a different showing in the series finale at 2 p.m. on Saturday.
“It’s just one game,” Stronach said. “There’s no reason to panic or anything. I know we’re going to come out tomorrow with some edge, so it’s going to be a good game for sure.”
Gallery: Take A Drag 2019
The third annual “Take A Drag” show featured performances from Taste the Rainbow and The Vixen, who appeared on season 10 of “RuPaul’s Drag Race.”
Week three: Admissions scandal further fraught, USAC candidate pool depleted, gymnasts enter NCAAs
This Week in the News serves as The Quad’s space for reflection on current events at and around UCLA. Every week, Daily Bruin staffers will analyze some of the most significant stories to keep readers up to speed.
As the third week of the quarter comes to a close, midterm season isn’t the only thing that’s beginning to pick up. From athletic admissions scandals to chemical explosions, here are some of the most momentous campus happenings from the past week.
UCLA investigated athletic admissions violations in 2014, prior to recent scandal
UCLA, as it turns out, is no stranger to college admissions scandals.
In 2014, UCLA looked into two student admissions that had violated UC Regents policies, which prohibit admission decisions influenced by financial and political actions that may benefit the university.
The 2014 investigation uncovered the admission of a track and field student-athlete who would not have qualified for the Division I team at UCLA, but was nonetheless accepted upon her parents’ $100,000 donation to the athletics program. Another student was also granted provisional acceptance on the basis of her participation in the women’s polo team, but was ultimately denied acceptance into the university.
The 2014 cases were uncovered in the wake of the recent college admissions scandal uncovered by federal investigators in March. UCLA men’s soccer coach Jorge Salcedo was indicted for allegedly accepting $200,000 in bribes in exchange for the admission of two students as student-athletes. Neither of the two students would go on to play their respective sports at the university.
UCLA announces revised policy for animal restrictions on campus
On Tuesday, UCLA sent out a revision of Policy 135, which regulates animal presence on campus. The policy further restricts which animals, based on their status as assistance animals, pets or service animals, will be allowed into campus buildings.
In addition to the categorization of animals, the animal owners’ responsibilities were also further clarified. All owners must make sure their animals do not act inappropriately or pose dangers to the places they occupy.
The UCLA Office of Environment, Health and Safety will be hearing comments and concerns regarding the policy through May 16.
Several uncontested and unrepresented positions in USAC elections this year
The Undergraduate Students Association Council is facing an unprecedented shortage in candidates for the 2019-2020 term.
Of 15 available positions, there are only 17 candidates. Three positions – financial supports commission and two general representative offices – remain empty. The shortage is in stark contrast to the 2018-2019 election, which saw 39 candidates run for 14 available positions.
Current council chairs and members believe the candidacy shortage has a lot to do with internal issues that USAC has faced in the past year. Election Board Chair Kyana Shajari attributes the shortage to the lack of advertising for the election.
To fill up the spots for which no candidate is running, Shajari anticipates USAC will hold a special election in fall quarter.
Fresh Off the Grill: After record-breaking, viral season, gymnastics enters NCAA title defense
This weekend, UCLA gymnastics will compete in the NCAA championships to defend their title.
It shouldn’t be too hard: UCLA gymnastics has churned out record-breaking victory after record-breaking victory since the start of the season. Senior Katelyn Ohashi’s floor routine in the Collegiate Challenge scored a perfect 10, and went on to amass 117 million views on social media.
The record breaking doesn’t end there.
The average attendance of gymnastics meets in Pauley Pavillion in the 2018-2019 season are at an all-time high, averaging at 10,242 – significantly higher than that of men’s basketball.
From stars such as Ohashi to jam-packed stadiums, UCLA gymnastics proves to be a force to be reckoned with as it takes on the NCAA championships.
Chemical explosion occurs in lab in Molecular Sciences Building
A chemical explosion that occurred Tuesday night in the Molecular Sciences Building left a student with minor injuries. The Los Angeles Fire Department responded immediately to the incident and took the student to a nearby hospital.
LAFD later turned the scene over to UCLA officials once Hazmat officials had deemed the explosion stable. UCLA officials then proceeded to conduct routine cleanups and investigations.
‘Game of Thrones’ season 8 recap — Episode 1: ‘Winterfell’
After a two yearlong hiatus, “Game of Thrones“ is back for its eighth and final season – and the hype was unreal.
Keeping in line with the themes of fantasy and drama that fans have come to love, the episode follows clashing familial relations and political unrest amid threats of the White Walkers, an ice zombie army.
The overall reception of the long-awaited return of the HBO series was positive. Fans such as third-year cognitive science student Laura Green thought the premiere was a strong opening that set the stage for an unforgettable finale. Others such as third-year nursing student Julia Wenzel thought the premiere episode was fast-paced, but necessary to advance the plotline.
Live at Coachella 2019
Daily Bruin staffers are hitting the desert to cover 2019’s Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival. Stay tuned for stories about your favorite artists and Bruins’ experiences.