Signature Stories Vol 8 | Page 21

Residency Five playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins has never shied away from tackling thorny issues head on. His first play Neighbors features actors in blackface, engaging in a series of shocking, yet archetypal, minstrel show acts, and in An Octoroon, his re-imagining of Dion Boucicault’s 1859 melodrama, Jacobs-Jenkins exposes and explodes traditional representations of slavery in the American South. In his newest play Appropriate, having its New York premiere at Signature this February, Jacobs-Jenkins continues his investigation of how contemporary America deals with its histories– familial and otherwise. Taking cues from some iconic American dramas– A Streetcar Named Desire, Buried Child, and All My Sons, to name a few– Jacobs-Jenkins quietly imbues the topics of history, belonging, ownership, and appropriation with even greater power. Before diving into rehearsals for the play, Jacobs-Jenkins spent some time with Literary Director Christie Evangelisto re-living his earlier work, unpacking his obsessions, and thinking about the great plays that have come before. Signature: Let’s start with your origin story. ran at The Studio Theatre in DC (where I grew up) sometime Branden Jacobs-Jenkins: Um, what if I think I’m in the 90s. In fact, I have this weird feeling my high school still originating? director was thinking about this production when we did it, because it had been a kind of local controversy. Two black Signature: Well then, how did you get your start in the theatre? actors had been cast in the lead roles and they– along with BJJ: I “acted” mostly. “Acted” with scare quotes. In high this bizarre way, slightly tweaking some of his language with school. I wasn’t very good. I played Philostrate in dialect and adding a certain... I don’t know what... to the the director– had managed to sort of “racialize” Beckett in an interview with Branden Jacobs-Jenkins A Midsummer Night’s Dream, which is the absolute worst physical “bits.” All sorts of people freaked out, in as much as part in the play, because you’re basically someone’s personal you can freak out about the theatre, and I think my father assistant, you’re only in the first and last scene, and you