We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Confederates
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
-
28 April 2026

Dominique Morisseau’s most radical play yet follows two Black women living more than a century apart as they struggle to define freedom for themselves.
Confederates tells the story of two women in what at first appear to be radically different circumstances. Sara is an enslaved rebel ferrying information from the plantation to Union soldiers. Sandra is a political science professor fighting the patriarchy at a predominantly white university. As the play progresses, the line between the past and present blurs, raising questions about how far we have come since 1865—and how far we still have to go.
In Morisseau’s words, "I don’t believe in the inhumanity of the enslaved." This play delves into serious themes with a satirical tone, juxtaposing humor and sexuality alongside pain and struggle. Confederates is an ambitious work by one of America’s most exciting playwrights.
"Beautiful language that’s wedded to tales of adversity—the play is full of such paradoxes, another one being that Confederates is a work about racism that is truly funny."
—New York Times
"Because Morisseau is best known as the accomplished author of straightforward social dramas like Pipeline and Skeleton Crew, the audacious shifts of timeframe and tone in Confederates come as a bit of a surprise. She pulls it off with power and finesse."
—Time Out New York
"Morisseau’s voice gets fiercer and richer the farther she gets from naturalism."
—Vulture
"With Confederates, Morisseau leaves the confines of realism that she has negotiated so well to this point in her career and offers a challenging new paradigm, here as a way to examine the familiar and evolving trials of Black women and their successes in America."
—Exeunt NYC
GeniusGrant.