New Jersey Stage October 2014 | Page 18

It’s been 60 years since Brown v. Board of Ed. How far have we really come? The play revolves around a mother from Newark who is trying to prevent her daughter from repeating the same steps she did as a child. While she was a successful student, she believed that the high grades earned at her Newark school failed to prepare her as well as the kids from richer school districts. “She wasn’t able to go and have the life she had bragged to everyone that she would have,” explained Salter. “Her late realization of that broke her spirit a bit. Now she finds herself with a daughter and living in a similar community to the one she grew up in. The idea that her daughter would face the same fate bothers her immensely.” She does what she thinks is best for her child. She lies. She com- New Jersey Stage mits school residency fraud by using a fake address in Millburn so her daughter can go to school there. All is well with her plan until the school launches an enrollment audit. “When I write plays, I always start from a place of fire,” explained Salter. “A place where I have a distinct opinion or something I want to say. Usually, if I’m doing it right, by the time I’ve come up with the characters and the situations there’s something that gives me problems. And it gives me problems because I haven’t extended my empathy to it. But the moment I try to figure out what’s really driving it and assume that what’s driving him or her is also in me somewhere is the moment I start to understand where it’s coming from. October 2014 pg 18