In 1950, two teenage girls—one Black, one white—form a perilous friendship inside the walls of a racially segregated women's penitentiary. In 1959, they are out of prison and living together, attempting to make good on the plans that they formed in their youth. And I And Silence, by Naomi Wallace, ricochets back and forth between the years, painting a picture of two women who are fighting for their relationship, their independence, and their very survival in a world designed to crush them. Directed by thesis candidate Zoe Rosenfeld ’16. Tickets: $3–5.