Signature Stories VOL10 | Page 11

Signature: What are children taught in school about the history of Hutu-Tutsi relations? so if the curtain blows and I’m talking to my Auntie, she’s KH: They’re taught the narrative of “The Belgians came in past.” If you grow up in a world where the dead walk with and created this class system that favored Tutsis because you and curtains flutter and fly, it bleeds into your work. So they seemed ‘more like Belgians’”—Tutsis were considered I’m constantly pushing my directors to realize, visually, that taller, smarter, prettier. All of this hatred fomented over reality. I have really enjoyed the conversations surrounding years, over generations, until 1994 happened and Hutu how we’re going to pull off effects I haven’t seen before extremists decided to use a political moment, the assas- onstage. In movies you can do it with CGI, but onstage is sination of President Habyarimana, as the jumping off point a hell of a challenge. If we do pull it off, then you’ll have to the slaughter of Tutsi people. There have been pops of to believe, and this is a play about belief. You need to violence against the Tutsi people for many years—in 1959, step into that reality in order to go on the roller coaster in the ‘60s, in 1973, but this was the biggest. A million ride of the play. like “Oh, that’s my dead husband Walter, he just walkin’ people were killed, in a hundred days. Signature: Talk me through some of the research you’ve done. Signature: Why did you want Kibeho to be the second play of your residency with us? KH: My top three sources are Philip Gourevitch’s book We KH: You know, I love epic plays. I love lots of people on Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will be Killed With stage. To be given the opportunity—as a woman, as a Our Families, Machete Season by Jean Hatzfeld, and then a black playwright—to see such a grandiose vision on the documentary called My Neighbor, My Killer by Anne Aghion. biggest stage at Signature, is such a blessing. I thank Machete Season in particular brings home how the killers Jim [Houghton] for giving us this opportunity because enjoyed it. It just makes you realize how close humanity is plays like this don’t happen in New York. It’s also very to the nastiness within. We’re capable of such good, and of different from what people know of my work. Even though such, such evil. I got to meet perpetrators in Rwanda and Hurt Village has an epic nature to it too, the style is totally they looked like my dad. They were joking and laughing… different. I think Kibeho probably has some overlap with it was really chilling. You know how some people are afraid The Mountaintop in terms of dealing with spirituality and to go into graveyards? Well it’s not dead people we need to magical realism on stage, but it’s another level. I think these be scared of. It’s the people who look just like you and are huge, multi-character, layered plays are what I do best. capable of killing you. That’s what I want to see on stage! n In the documentary, you learn about the process of forgiveness in Rwanda. In my opinion, there has been a huge act of performing forgiveness, and I think it’s taking a lot of time for it to actually resonate with people and for forgiveness to actually happen. I think that can be applied to a lot of moments in history when it comes to atrocities—from Bosnia to the Holocaust. Signature: How do you feel about “illusion” or magic onstage? KH: I am a huge, huge fan of illusion. Being African American and growing up in the South, there is an acceptance of spirituality that I d