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Theatre

Theatre review: An Octoroon

This is a play that talks about race in the past and present

June 22, 2018 11:00
Ken Nwosu in An Octoroon at the National Theatre (Photo: Helen Murray)
2 min read

What do you get when you cross a 19th-century playwright impresario with a ferociously talented 21st-century, New York dramatist?

If the former is the fantastically successful Irishman, Dion Boucicault, a producer and writer of “sensation dramas”, who had hits in London and New York, and the latter is Branden Joseph-Jenkins, a ferociously talented Pulitzer-nominated playwright who has become a master of writing the unexpected, the answer is this astonishingly inventive unravelling of America’s knottiest issue, racism.

Those who saw Joseph-Jenkins’s office play Gloria at the Hampstead last year will know just how unexpectedly and brutally the first act ended. In this earlier play, first seen in the UK at the Orange Tree in Richmond, he audaciously places himself at the centre of the drama.

BJJ, as the cast list in the programme calls him, is superbly played here by Ken Nwosu. He may be black, BJJ tells us, and he may be a playwright, but he hates being called a black playwright.