AGAINST THE CURRENT
The New Yorker|November 25, 2024
"Give Me Carmelita Tropicana!," at Soho Rep, and "Gatz," at the Public.
HELEN SHAW
AGAINST THE CURRENT

It may be bright and getting brighter on Broadway these days, but Off Broadway the shadows are lengthening. Desperation-level real-estate pressures are pushing established theatre companies out of spaces that have long been part of the city’s fabric—I keep going to shows and realizing that I’ll never be inside a certain venue again. It’s particularly gutting that the scrappy Soho Rep is leaving Walkerspace, a tiny storefront conversion in Tribeca, its home since 1991. Several of the most important shows of the past decades premièred in the sixty-five-seat shoebox, including Jackie Sibblies Drury ’s Pulitzer Prize-winning “Fairview” and Anne Washburn’s “10 Out of 12.”

To bid the cramped, magical old space farewell, the playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins and the Cubanborn performance artist Alina Troyano have co-written the elegiac farce “Give Me Carmelita Tropicana!” It’s a bantering conversation between two longtime friends—Jacobs-Jenkins, a Tony Award-winning playwright, was Troyano’s student in 2007, at N.Y.U.— and a kind of anarchic catalogue raisonné, in which Troyano’s most famous stage alter ego, Carmelita Tropicana, summons a living inventory of three and a half decades of radical (and radically queer) performance work. For Jacobs-Jenkins, the show is a homecoming; his gleefully deconstructed melodrama “An Octoroon,” produced at Soho Rep in 2014, made his reputation. Both he and Troyano are now on the theatre’s board.

Troyano plays herself, a pugnacious bantam with short hair dyed tennisball green, while the mischievous Ugo Chukwu is cast as Branden, snug in a checkered cardigan and an air of wry self-regard. (Greg Corbino designed the costumes.) A secondary character describes him as “a handsome African American millennial homosexual— with attitude,” and we sense the real Jacobs-Jenkins somewhere peeking at us, to see how we take it.

This story is from the November 25, 2024 edition of The New Yorker.

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This story is from the November 25, 2024 edition of The New Yorker.

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