Your Mother's Copy of the Kama Sutra
There’s nothing like a provocative title to titillate the senses, and Your Mother’s Copy of the Kama Sutra certainly provokes a reaction. The play itself, however, didn’t provoke in me a palpably strong reaction, making the experience not as good for me as it was for playwright Kirk Lynn.
The two-act play opens with a couple, Reggie (Chris Stack)
and Carla (Zoe Sophia Garcia), in the midst of foreplay: Reggie is blindfolded
and Carla is teasing him, directing him around the room, commanding him to
remove different articles of clothing. Reggie becomes impatient, rips off the blindfold and asks Carla
to marry him. She agrees, but on one condition: in the year leading up to their
wedding, they will not only tell each other about every sexual encounter they
have had but also reenact them.
Prudes needn’t worry. There’s little sexual simulation on
stage. The play, set both in the mid-1990s and early 2010s, is ultimately about
trust within relationships, and what role complete self-disclosure plays.
(Interesting side note: The day I saw the play, I stayed for the post-show
discussion, and coincidentally, there was a couples sex therapist in the
audience. I believe “self-disclosure” was the term she used for this kind of
total baring of the soul and more.)
Lynn’s play, directed by Anne Kauffman (Detroit, Maple and Vine)
shifts in tone, pace and time, but not in theme, in the second act, weaving
together the adults and kids we saw only separately in the first act. (There’s
nothing Lolita-ish happening. Don’t worry.) It plays out more like a well-made
play, adhering (mostly) to the conventions of time and space, and in doing so,
develops an emotional core. (The tonal shift was a little jarring at first, but
upon reflection, it seems it had to be that way—we had to go through act one
in order have an act two with any heft.)
While I didn’t have a strong visceral reaction to the play
in production, I cannot stop thinking about its theme and the questions it
raises. Reggie and Carla seem to equate sexual honesty with emotional
intimacy. Carla says they need to go through this exercise, traumatic as it
might be, so that the two can be woven together as one. But is that necessary?
I can understand disclosing all the information—you want
to learn where the land mines are before you move there, so to speak—and
being able to tell these most-private happenings to someone can connect you and
foster emotional intimacy. What I am having difficulty understanding is why
they needed to act out their histories.
One could make the argument that if you’re willing to enact
all your sexual encounters—good, bad, scarring—with your partner then you
can trust that person with anything and in any situation. But what does it say
about your partner and how much you can trust the person if s/he makes you
reenact, and not just talk about, a traumatic experience? Furthermore, is that
the only way to have an open and honest, trust-filled relationship with
someone? Certainly not.
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