Retropost, 2014:
That's one of the big questions playwright Jennifer Haley ''05 MFA poses in The Nether,
a half sci-fi, half police-procedural drama that debuted at Kirk
Douglas Theatre in Los Angeles in 2013. It won the 2012 Susan Smith
Blackburn Prize, and the Los Angeles Times described it as a
"daring new drama" that "should have everyone squirming in their
seats." Following on the heels of Haley's play Neighbourhood 3: Requisition of Doom, in which a violent video game becomes real-life for a quiet suburban town, The Nether continues Haley's exploration of the real-world damage that results when we unleash our darkest desires in cyberspace.
Haley says the inspiration for The Nether came from playwright
Paula Vogel, who was on the Brown faculty while Haley was earning and
MFA: write what your hate, Vogel advised. Haley hated TV police
procedurals such as Law & Order and CSI. She also hated pederasts. "I thought, what's the worst thing someone can do? It was all an academic exercise."
In The Nether, a female detective faces off against the
businessman who runs the virtual pedophilic playground called The
Hideaway. During the interrogation at the police Station, the two
debate the risks this new form of online entertainment poses. "You're
telling them their desires are not only acceptable, but commendable!"
exclaims the detective. "And in an entertainment that can scarcely be
differentiated from real life!"
"As long as they don't do it in real life, who cares?" Sims, the
businessman, fires back. "I've read the studies. No one has been able
to draw a conclusive correlation between virtual behavior and
behavior-in-world." Haley says she's agnostic on whether the web is
changing us for the worse or the better. "I can's speak to whether one
becomes a fundamentally different person or whether one's personality
changes," she says. By The Nether's end great damage has been done, but the reasons and the blame are ambiguous.
After its summer run in London, The Nether will be produced next February in New York City at the off-Broadway MCC Theater. Haley wrote for the Netflix TV series Hemlock Grove
last winter and hopes to continue. Meanwhile, she's at work on another
play based on online identities—a woman spots her ex-lover in a video
game and goes in search of him.
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