53 pages 1 hour read

Djanet Sears

Harlem Duet

Fiction | Play | Adult | Published in 1997

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Act II, Scenes 6-10

Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Act II, Scene 6 Summary

In Harlem 1928, the loop from the previous two scenes plays, although the sounds are now distorted. He and She are in their dressing room. He is wiping his face with a towel as She extends the white handkerchief to him. Again, She lets it fall at his feet, but He ignores it. He is too busy reciting lines from Othello: “‘If virtue no delighted beauty lack, Your son-in-law is far more fair than black.’ Far more fair than black. I wan […] need to do thi […] or my soul. I am an actor” (99). She reminds Him that He is a minstrel. He voices His desire to play the classic roles, such as Hamlet or the Scottish king, noting that Mona, their director, has cast him in Pericles, Prince of Tyre.

He tells Her that Mona has breathed life back into his dream and begins to describe her in language that echoes Othello’s description of Desdemona: “Skin as smooth as monumental alabaste […] s warm as snow velvet” (100). She responds in language She believes will please Him, calling him “My onyx princ […] y tourmaline kin […] y raven knigh […] y umber squire” (100).