Subtitle: 
A Play with Cartoons
Total Rating: 
****
Previews: 
August 19, 2010
Opened: 
August 28, 2010
Ended: 
November 7, 2010
Country: 
USA
State: 
California
City: 
Los Angeles
Company/Producers: 
Matrix Theater Company
Theater Type: 
Regional
Theater: 
Matrix Theater
Theater Address: 
7657 Melrose Avenue
Phone: 
323-960-7774
Website: 
plays411.com/neighbors
Running Time: 
3 hrs
Genre: 
Drama
Author: 
Branden Jacobs-Jenkins
Director: 
Nataki Garrett
Choreographer: 
Ayana Cahrr
Review: 

 The young African-American playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins lights a theatrical firecracker with Neighbors, now in its explosive West Coast premiere at the Matrix. Rude, funny, ballsy and pugnacious, the play dissects race and color in America in a highly original, un-politically correct way, slicing and dicing every taboo it encounters.

Richard Patterson (Derek Webster) is an assimilated and uptight African-American college teacher married to Jean (Julia Campbell), a white woman who is a frustrated poet. They have a snotty, screechy 15-year-old daughter, Melody (Rachae Thomas). Richard, whose hold on the American Dream is tenuous, is appalled when The Crows move in across the way. Tricked out in blackface and buffoonish costumes, they are a family of minstrels with stereotypical names like Mammy (Baadja-Lyne), Zip (Leith Burke), Sambo (Keith Arthur Bolden), Jim (James Edward Shippy) and Topsy (Daniele Watts).

When The Crows begin to rehearse their coon show -- racial jokes and songs delivered in the caricatured fashion much admired by white America--Richard has a fit. These "niggers" (his word) are a disgrace, a threat to his way of life.

Worse things happen when Melody and Jean begin to find themselves sexually attracted to Jim and Zip, respectively. Richard's resulting emotional meltdown is hastened by The Crows' ribald riffs on the touchy subjects of watermelon and black genitalia. The Crows also merrily satirize such contemporary minstrels as Michael Jackson and Diana Ross. Just about every aspect of race and color is investigated by the playwright, whose fierce intelligence matches his savage sense of humor.

Jenkins also benefits greatly from the help his actors and director have given him. The eight-person cast delivers superb performances, and Garrett has found the right style to match Jenkins' singular voice.

Cast: 
Derek Webster, Julia Campbell, Rachae Thomas, Baadja-Lyne, Leith Burke, Keith Arthur Bolden, James Edward Shippy, Daniele Watts.
Technical: 
Set: John Iacovelli; Sound: John Zalewski; Costumes: Naila Alladin Sanders; Lighting: J. Kent Inasy; Special Effects: Sandy Huse
Critic: 
Willard Manus
Date Reviewed: 
October 2010