Testimonies: Four Plays by Emily Mann is a collection of docudramas written from first-person testimonials, court documents, interviews, and news footage. Plot isn't necessarily relevant to these plays principally because Mann builds each play around a series of elongated dramatic monologues. On the whole, the premise for each play is intriguing, but prior knowledge seems essential. For example, Execution of Justice is a stunning, pathos-riddled play about the trial of Dan White, the former San Francisco politician responsible for the murders of City Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone. I am familiar with Milk's life and death, so this play resonates in ways that Greensboro: A Requim, a play about the shooting of several protestors by the Ku Klux Klan, does not. I suspect the power of each play is the way in which they activate prior knowledge while offering alternative narratives for stories of abuse and corruption.
It's hard to say if the plays collected in Testimonies: Four Plays offer anything new or merely reaffirm what I already know. I enjoy her approach to each subject, but I also wonder how relevant each play remains the farther we get from the events she dramatizes.