As a true highlight of the London International Festival of Theatre (LIFT), The Shipment has truly global credentials. Written by acclaimed Korean-American playwright Young Jean Lee, the play is a bold and uncomfortable exploration of African-American identity politics.
Whilst it would seem that Lee can only approach this subject from an ‘outsider’ position, The Shipment was developed in close collaboration with its all-black cast, thereby offering both internal and an external perspectives on its racial politics. Lee also deploys razor-sharp comedy in her dissection of clichéd cultural images of black America, making use of the cartoonish comedy with which she has previously skewered Christian and Asian-American foibles. Lee certainly loves a challenge.
This new piece is surreal and eclectic in the way that it challenges racial stereotypes and prejudices, mashing up a range of different genres and styles. The show includes everything from a song and dance number to a naturalistic cocktail party comedy, peppered with skits, stand-up sequences and countless cultural caricatures. The variety alludes to the tradition of the minstrel show but, like Kander and Ebb’s acclaimed musical The Scottsboro Boys , it turns this genre on its head.
The Shipment premiered in New York to rave reviews and its selection as part of the 2014 LIFT programme is also a reliable stamp of its quality. Other performances to watch out for in the LIFT line-up include new offerings from Belarus Free Theatre and Germany’s She She Pop , as well as the opportunity to sit on the main stage of the Barbican in Dmitry Krymov ’s Opus No.7 .
What | Young Jean Lee: The Shipment, Barbican |
Where | Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London, EC2Y 8DS | MAP |
Nearest tube | Barbican (underground) |
When |
10 Jun 14 – 14 Jun 14, 7.45pm |
Price | £18 |
Website | Click here to book via the Barbican |