Appropriate review – Sarah Paulson wows in blazing tragicomic drama

Helen Hayes Theater, New York

The star is astonishing in Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’s funny yet moving Broadway debut about a complicated family reunion

If you grew up with it, there’s something inherently nostalgic about the sound of cicadas. The incessant chorus, once every 17 years, conjures something primordial, unsettling, country, past. Appropriate, the excellent production of Branden Jacobs-Jenkins’s play at the Helen Hayes Theater, plunges its audience into that portal at the show’s onset – all darkness and trilling racket. The sound design, lush and unnerving, is controlled by Bray Poor and Will Pickens.

We emerge into one of the most cluttered, almost cozy, stage set-ups I’ve seen – a cluster of lamp stands, a pile of old TVs, a defunct crockpot, buckets of board games, mountains of books on the stairs, the old mansion living room of a hoarder. Santiago Orjuela-Laverde, Andrew Moerdyk and Kimie Nishikawa, known as the multidisciplinary collective dots, did the fascinatingly detailed scenic design. And into the vortex of dysfunction that is the Lafayette family reunion on the eve of an estate sale at their late patriarch’s decaying plantation home in Arkansas, summer 2011, when Jacobs-Jenkins first began writing the play.

Appropriate, directed by Lila Neugebauer, plays as part family sitcom, part sibling death match, part sociopolitical commentary. The playwright’s first original work on Broadway after a half-dozen New York productions, this play, staged off-Broadway in 2014, remains a nimble, deft and highly entertaining work, one that twists the nostalgia of homecoming – the instinct to protect a legacy, however fraught; to gloss over the past, however painful; to bend a collective past into whatever story works best – to successful tragicomic ends.

The youngest son, Franz (Michael Esper), has been away so long he forgot about the cicadas; his eldest sibling, Toni (Sarah Paulson, the top reason among many to see this play), barely recognizes him. She lives in Atlanta with her angsty teenage son Rhys (Graham Campbell) and is licking her wounds as primary caretaker of their long-ailing father. Toni is a particularly resonant creation, the type of woman whose font of effort has curdled into resentment. Part of the play’s delight is relishing Paulson’s delivery of some truly scathing burns, particularly to Franz and his much-younger girlfriend River (Elle Fanning, echoing her archly comedic turn in The Great), an aspiring hippie with hair feathers – or as Toni, ever sharp and unforgiving, calls her, a “walking rape fantasy”. Credit to costume designer Dede Ayite – River does seem like a 2011-ish hostel creature.

It being a family reunion, everyone has competing motivations, compelling cases to make and grievances to lodge. Toni wants credit, obedience, control and also maybe to turn back the clock. Franz, a long-lost addict with a sordid past, wants forgiveness. Middle child Bo (Corey Stoll), now a wealthy New Yorker, wants to wash his hands of the business (also, money). His wife Rachael (Natalie Gold, known for playing the long-suffering, underused Rava Roy on Succession) wants to give a contrived family/southern history lesson to her two sheltered children, 13-year-old Cassidy (Alyssa Emily Marvin) and eight-year-old Ainsley (Lincoln Cohen and Everett Sobers). Cassidy, experiencing her first crush, wants to be treated like an adult. Rhys, a self-described “fuck up”, wants to be left alone.

All of this is succinctly and deftly rendered, the material for an enjoyable slugfest of slights and fights; the first act of what amounts to a 2hr 40min show (including intermission) whizzes by, a thrill of discomfort, laughs or both. And it is deeply complicated by the discovery of some dark family secrets – Confederates in the attic, horrifying relics of Jim Crow and especially an album of damning photos which pass among the family like a hot potato, wreaking havoc in its wake. Toni is particularly indignant in the face of evidence that her father, a DC circuit judge bred in the Jim Crow south, was racist, or that it was his fault. Paulson makes this not only believable (of course – we know this response) but understandable, human, even funny. What could be, in another actor’s hands, too withering and wearying becomes, with Paulson’s blend of straitened anger and disappointment, fascinating. Toni is frequently wrong, often deluded, a black hole of short-sighted suffering, but she is never dismissible, never fully a joke.

The same could be said for the rest of the family, who each have the capacity for cruelty, inflicted or tolerated, as well as kindness, none of whom ever fully reckon with the revelations. They find their escape from it. From the minute the photos are found, the Lafayettes circle the drain of misunderstandings, resentment and denial, in ways I do not in any way want to spoil and which drew consistent, mostly earned laughs until a somewhat bald resolution, of sorts, and a haunting coda. “Do you believe there’s a danger in knowing too much?” says Cassidy, tossing away the horror of the photos for connection with her cousin. For this family’s well-rendered self-conception, absolutely, in ways that are scathing, moving and funny at once.

Contributor

Adrian Horton

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
American Son review – excruciatingly relevant race drama
Kerry Washington plays a mother whose son goes missing in a tough, timely play about the dangers of being young and black in America

Alexis Soloski

05, Nov, 2018 @3:00 AM

Article image
The Waverly Gallery review – Elaine May dazzles in devastating dementia drama
Kenneth Lonergan’s personal play about a gallery owner losing her memory is a beautifully acted, quietly crushing tragedy

Alexis Soloski

26, Oct, 2018 @2:00 AM

Article image
Days of Wine and Roses review – 60s marital drama becomes Broadway musical winner
Song-heavy adaptation of the bruising 1962 Blake Edwards drama about a couple grappling with addiction makes for a surprising success

Lauren Mechling

29, Jan, 2024 @2:38 PM

Article image
Mother Play review – Jessica Lange anchors often aimless Broadway drama
The Tony winner is as captivating as ever as a troubled matriarch but Paula Vogel’s emotionally underpowered play often struggles to meet her level

Benjamin Lee

26, Apr, 2024 @1:50 AM

Article image
An Enemy of the People review – Jeremy Strong impresses in timely Ibsen drama
The Succession star delivers a bravura central turn in a rousing adaptation of a story that carries a discomforting contemporary relevance

Adrian Horton

19, Mar, 2024 @2:00 AM

Article image
Ain't Too Proud review – thrilling music but shallow drama in Temptations musical
Broadway’s latest jukebox music is electrified by fantastic singing and dancing but let down by some inert storytelling

Alexis Soloski

22, Mar, 2019 @1:00 AM

Article image
Hillary and Clinton review – Laurie Metcalf on winning form in solid drama
The Tony award winner dominates as the politician in a 2008-set work of speculative stage drama with John Lithgow as her supportive husband

Alexis Soloski

19, Apr, 2019 @1:07 PM

Article image
The Great Lillian Hall review – Jessica Lange captivates in Broadway-set drama
The actor gives an astonishing, awards-worthy performance as a stage star with dementia in a slight yet powerful TV movie

Benjamin Lee

31, May, 2024 @6:35 PM

Article image
Plaza Suite review – Sarah Jessica Parker sells Neil Simon’s marriage comedy
The Sex and the City star plays well opposite her husband Matthew Broderick in an overlong triptych of bitter relationship tales

Alexis Soloski

29, Mar, 2022 @1:00 AM

Article image
Chicken and Biscuits review – under-baked Broadway comedy
A funeral at a Black church promises chaotic and culturally specific comedy but the end-product feels more like a broad, lukewarm sitcom

Gloria Oladipo

11, Oct, 2021 @5:34 PM