Museum Piece

Khalid Walker, Director of Visitor Services at “The BEAN,” prepares for the museum’s biggest attendance day of the year, struggling to ensure the museum honors its new Director’s bold promise of inclusion for the young and diverse audiences of Boston. But everywhere he turns he finds that mission challenged – by bitter long-time members, alienated locals, lost tourists, and the probing press. For every step...
Khalid Walker, Director of Visitor Services at “The BEAN,” prepares for the museum’s biggest attendance day of the year, struggling to ensure the museum honors its new Director’s bold promise of inclusion for the young and diverse audiences of Boston. But everywhere he turns he finds that mission challenged – by bitter long-time members, alienated locals, lost tourists, and the probing press. For every step Khalid takes forward, the BEAN’s history or – worse yet – his own boss, pulls him two steps back. Can Khalid make the BEAN live up to this bold vision of a cultural sanctuary for ALL of Boston’s populace, or will the museum trip over its own feet as it walks towards the future?

Originally commissioned and developed through the SpeakEasy Stage Company Boston Project.
  • Recommend
  • Download
  • Save to Reading List

Museum Piece

Recommended by

  • Nick Malakhow:
    29 Mar. 2021
    A hilarious and briskly moving satire that skewers virtue signaling, superficial DEI efforts, and white privilege while also exploration the complex socio-cultural dynamics that are characteristic of the greater Boston area. King captures a wonderful sense of place. The heightened, farcical setup has shades of classic pieces like "The Government Inspector," but content-wise it is pitched so perfectly at the current individual and institutional roadblocks to change, progress, justice, and equity. King also tosses in an apt critique of various kinds of art--relics, responsive art, and art of unclear authorship and intent.
  • Joslyn Housley:
    2 Mar. 2021
    I highly recommend John King’s Museum Piece. The dialogue is crisp and funny. The pacing is tight. I enjoyed following this family of co-workers navigate their way to becoming “woke”. The play is very timely and will surely resonate with audiences.

Development History

  • Reading
    ,
    SpeakEasy Stage Company
    ,
    2020
  • Commission
    ,
    SpeakEasy Stage Company
    ,
    2019
  • Reading
    ,
    SpeakEasy Stage Company
    ,
    2019