Appropriate, Donmar Warehouse review ★★★★

Playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins returns to London with Appropriate, another subversive examination of America's relationship with race

Appropriate, Donmar Warehouse (photo credit: Marc Brenner)
American playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins stunned London audiences last year with his 2014 play An Octoroon. Now he returns to London with Appropriate, another subversive examination of America's relationship both with race and its history steeped in the slave trade. Appropriate has already impressed Off-Broadway, where in 2014 it won an Obie Award. In the hands of up-and-coming director Ola Ince, the play comes to the West End’s Donmar Warehouse as part of artistic director Michael Longhust's inaugural season.

The story follows the three grown-up siblings of the Lafayette family, who have returned to their former family home on a plantation in Arkansas – now in near-derelict condition – to sort through their dead father’s belongings and put the house up for sale.


Monica Dolan as Toni (photo credit: Marc Brenner)

Lawyer, single mum and bitter eldest child Toni (an impassioned Monica Dolan) has come with her troubled teenage son Rhys (Charles Furness). Middle child Bo (a convincing Steven Mackintosh), now a high-flying business and family man, has brought his whole brood down from New York – his neurotic wife Rachael (Jaimi Barbakoff) seeing it as an opportunity to teach their two children a carefully curated and heavily diluted version of southern history.

Estranged youngest son Frank (a captivating Edward Hogg) has also turned up with his vegan, hippie girlfriend River (Tafline Steen). Frank’s a former drug addict, but that’s not the darkest skeleton in his closet.

The family get to work sifting through the dusty furniture of their hoarder father’s home. But when a photo album containing pictures of lynched black people is unearthed, they’re forced to confront the role their family history as slave owners as well as who their father really was, and tensions between the siblings begin to boil over.


Tafline Steen as River (photo credit: Marc Brenner)

Appropriate is as much a play about inheritance – literal and figurative – as it is about race. It sees a family picking through their history, weighing up which possessions they have a right to claim, while staying wary of how much emotional baggage they can bear on top. It’s a meaty story told through a group of three-dimensional characters, all of whom are flawed. Between its compelling narrative and subtextual commentary on wider, socio-political matters, Appropriate is a family drama fit to join the ranks of those by Chekov, Miller and Williams.
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What Appropriate, Donmar Warehouse review
Where Donmar Warehouse, 41 Earlham Street, Seven Dials, WC2H 9LX | MAP
Nearest tube Covent Garden (underground)
When 16 Aug 19 – 05 Oct 19, 7:30 PM – 12:00 AM
Price £10-£40
Website Click here to book via Donmar Warehouse




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