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Intimate Apparel review: ‘Beautifully performed revival’ ★★★

The suppressed passion between black seamstress Esther and immigrant Jew Mr Marks makes this plot feel freshly hatched

June 30, 2025 16:03
Samira Wiley and Nicola Hughes in INTIMATE APPAREL - Donmar Warehouse - photo by Helen Murray.jpg
Samira Wiley and Nicola Hughes in Intimate Apparel (Photo: Helen Murray)
2 min read

In the midst of Lynn Nottage’s 2003 play which reveals female African- American experience at the turn of the last century, is an Orthodox Romanian Jew called Mr Marks. From his modest shop on New York’s Lower East Side he sells fabric to seamstress Esther played in a beautifully nuanced performance by Emmy-winning The Handmaid Tale star Samira Wiley.

The Jew (Alex Waldmann) and Wiley’s illiterate Esther form the unlikely romantic heart of this lively play which is set in 1905. Only 40 years after the American Civil War it reveals black aspiration being thwarted even in the most progressive part of America: New York.

Alex Waldmann as Mr Marks in Intimate Apparel
(Photo: Helen Murray)Alex Waldmann as Mr Marks in Intimate Apparel (Photo: Helen Murray)[Missing Credit]

Still, Esther’s hope is very much alive. During the 18 years and “thousands of stitches” that Esther and her pedal-powered sewing machine have stayed in the boarding house for black women run by matriarchal widow Mrs Dickson (Nicola Hughes), the 35-year-old seamstress has hidden hundreds of dollars into her patchwork eiderdown, and all from making basques for wealthy white women. The savings are to turn Esther’s dream of owning a beauty parlour into a reality.

Despite her age, she even hopes to marry. Certainly the increasingly ardent exchange of letters with George (Kadiff Kirwan), a Barbados-born labourer working on the Panama canal seems to be heading that way.

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Theatre