The purple flowers known as Speedwell are at once soft and spiky. Given full sun and loamy soil, they attract butterflies and birds in fields, gardens, and along roadsides across the hemispheres. Known by some to be medicinal, they can speed wellness, or perhaps bring about a kind of healing speed: live faster.

Conventional theatrical narratives can hold our queer, non-binary, non-monogamous, non-reproductive intimacies in only the weakest of embraces. Our speeds and intensities don’t distill well to two-hours traffic; instead we layer our bodies and futures together compost-like across the drying grasses and flowers left behind last season and the season before. All at once. Already. Again.

So are you two still together? she asks, they ask, grandma asks. Will our love stories ever resolve, they wonder, will they come to a head at some point like a mountain peak or a vast plateau or will they stubbornly revolve in spinning sequences of not-quite-endings, hapless or half-hearted attempts to cut cords left over from the last vow-less beginning?

In Pryor’s imagined theatre, queer time slips by, evading the more orderly registers of graduate education, publisher deadlines, and the production calendars of experimental performance. In this place, queer and transgender subjects grow sideways through settler-colonial modernities, trying on crisp new suits and new love languages, living through both inherited traumas and the ones we create fresh in the spaces between us. Is any human trauma ever actually new? Pryor’s characters sense that it is good for soft and spiky life forms to “sit close and look out” towards the dystopic or hopeful futures offered up by live performance’s disappearing promise of alternative belonging. As Pryor’s narrator experiences time slipping, energy being redirected and reabsorbed, the audience apprehends, wave-like, the rising urgency of abject or subaltern subjectivity being co-created through vibrant systems of people and their cultivated plants and places.

This piece invites the reader into greater speed, speed not rushed but layered and simultaneous, speed realized in a good way: speedwell. Despite theatre’s familiar conventions, time does not obey Aristotle’s unities or trace the angles of Freytag’s pyramid. Future Perfect offers the contradictory proposal that, though time is not linear, we are still running out of it. Better hurry.


About the Author

Joy Brooke Fairfield is an Assistant Professor of Theatre and Performance Studies at Rhodes College in Memphis Tennessee. She is a director/devisor of new plays, opera, and site-specific performance. Her scholarship focuses on queer intimacy and consent onstage and in other forms of cultural production. She is an alumni of the Drama League Director’s Project and her 2016 dissertation at Stanford University won the Charles R. Lyons Memorial Prize.