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Theatre

Theatre review: Caroline, or Change

John Nathan loved the latest production of Tony Kushner's autobiographical musical about a black maid and the Jewish family she works for

March 22, 2018 09:02
Carole Stennett (Radio 3), T'Shan Williams (Radio 1), Sharon Rose (Radio 2) in Caroline, or Change at Hampstead Theatre by Marc Brenner
2 min read

It’s not as though he needs the extra work, but the Pulitzer-winning playwright Tony Kushner now also Steven Spielberg’s go-to screenplay writer has a part-time job as a prophet.

Kushner’s first play, A Bright Room Called Day, made the “deliberately irresponsible” comparison between Reagan and the Nazis, and then the day after it opened in 1984 the American president was photographed naively placing a wreath on the graves of SS soldiers in Germany. Then Kushner’s later work Homebody/Kabul, which was in rehearsals when 9/11 happened, contains the line “the Taliban are coming to New York,” and opened just a few blocks away from Ground Zero.

Meanwhile, Caroline or Change, a strongly autobiographical musical, for which Kushner wrote both lyrics and book, resonates with events that are contemporary both to the New York original production, which arrived at the National Theatre in 2006, and this even better new version directed by Michael Longhurst and first seen at Chichester. But more of that later.

The work is set in 1963 in Lake Charles, Louisiana, where the New York-born Kushner was raised. The eponymous Caroline (Sharon D. Clarke) is an African American maid to the Jewish Gellman family. Their only child, Noah, played on press night by the sweet-voiced Aaron Gelkoff, is both doted on and half-heartedly disciplined by his well-meaning stepmother Rose. Her difficult job is to try and replace Noah’s mother who died of cancer, and make her marriage work with Noah’s father who plays klezmer on his clarinet and does little else.