How Chalia La Tour of ‘Slave Play’ Feels About Her Controversial Role

‘Slave Play’ is the most talked-about show on Broadway. Here’s how one of its stars stays level headed.

Brittani Samuel
ZORA

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Chalia La Tour. Photo courtesy of the author.

This article contains spoilers for the Broadway production of Slave Play and has been edited and condensed for clarity.

InIn Sister, Outsider Audre Lorde wrote, “It is not our differences that divide us. It is our inability to recognize, accept, and celebrate those differences.” Chalia La Tour knows this — it’s why she became an actress.

La Tour grew up in Stockton, California performing in churches and community theaters. Inspired by her mother’s career as a dancer and her siblings’ natural inclination towards music, La Tour felt it was important to forge her own artistic path. She started out participating in youth theater programs, eventually got accepted into the Yale School of Drama and is now making her Broadway debut in one of the most buzzed about shows in recent theater history, Slave Play.

The highly successful and intensely polarizing new play, penned by Broadway’s youngest Black male playwright Jeremy O’Harris, has got audiences more than just talking. They are think-piecing, tweeting, and boycotting, too. The show follows three interracial couples who have volunteered…

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Brittani Samuel
ZORA

Art addict. Bylines at VICE, American Theatre, OkayAfrica, IAM&Co and a few other places on the Internet. Mktg at Signature Theatre. NYC | @brittaniidiannee