Her Portmanteau
Mfoniso Udofia
Eunice Woods & Kimberly Scott |
“In God’s time, my Iniabasi, hello.”
First translating her daughter’s Nigerian name into English
before saying the name in its native language, Abasiama welcomes a daughter
whom she has not seen in over two decades to the New York apartment of another
daughter, Adiaha, half-sister to the arrival.
But the stone-faced, statuesque Abasiama – tightly clutching her small,
red suitcase and her purse against her yellow slicker – is not ready to be welcomed
into a world and a family she still clearly sees as foreign. “In God’s time,” that may change in the
course of Mfoniso Udofia’s ninety-minute play, Her Portmanteau; but first much has to be unpacked and sorted out between
mother and daughters/sisters – items that have been tucked away where questions
could not be asked and answers could not be given for many years.
American Conservatory Theatre presents the fourth of Mfoniso
Udofia’s planned nine-play journey of this Nigerian family, two of the first
three, Sojourners and runboyrun, produced
in 2016 by Magic Theatre. Three
performers – stunning in every respect – ensure an evening tense and gripping,
poignant and emotionally charged from beginning to end.
Eunice Woods |
Things are maddening, confusing, and even frightening for
Iniabasi from the moment she steps off the plane at JFK. Not the least is because she thought she was
going to be arriving in Boston and because her mother told her she would be
there to meet her, which she was not.
When a young woman finally arrives calling her name as Iniabasi is
trying to make calls at an outdoor public phone bank, Iniabasi is more
frightened than ever. She in no way recognizes
the thirty-year-old sister she has not seen since the girl was eight (and who
looks much fatter than the more recent-pictures she has of her).
Eunice Woods & Aneisa Hicks |
Once the two arrive at Adiaha’s cozy, Manhattan apartment,
Iniabasi refuses to do much more than barely enter -- remaining silent, sullen,
and in a state of apparent shock. Until
her mother finally also arrives, the younger sister does all she can to be
cheerful in non-stop, increasingly frantic attempts to be a welcoming host
while Iniabasi refuses to look at her and barely responds. When she also refuses to eat the afang soup
and fufu that Adiaha has made especially for her, Iniabasi asks (in a
paraphrased version), ‘I came all the way here to New York to eat what I could
have eaten at home?’ As the guest does
begin to make comments about her sister’s surroundings (none too
complimentary), she also makes requests and asks questions of her arrived
mother that go awkwardly unanswered, with telling looks between the mother and
younger daughter.
The air of tension and unease continues with occasional
outbursts of frustration and even anger erupting from each and all of the
three. Questions by Iniabasi emerge that
point to hurts long festering. Inquiries
about a son whom a grandmother has never met at first lead to blank-faced dead
ends. Two husbands and two different
fathers come into the conversation from time to time, with no one ready to peel
off the onionskin to discuss the real issues about both that are causing
invisible yet impenetrable walls to remain in place in the room.
Until the red portmanteau that Iniabasi has brought is
inadvertently opened – a red, leather luggage that opens into two halves – the
room is largely at a standstill. Just as
the word “portmanteau” also means ‘a word blending the sounds and combining the
meanings of two other words,’ inside this portmanteau lies a way for for two
cultures – American and Nigerian – and two halves of a family – one with a
father named Ufot and one with a father named Disciple – to find a way of
possible reconciliation, forgiveness, and maybe even blending.
Each of the three actors in this family drama brings her own
trunk load of incredible acting skills and sensitivities to her role. As the younger sister and host, Adiaha, Aneisa
Hicks nervously tries to attend to a visitor who shows no signs of wanting to
be there and a mother who is clearly worried but only wants to act like all is
normal. Her Adiaha does have her own
limits of patience and also has her own, unspoken trials and tribulations (like
a recent relationship break-up and a father who is mentally insane). But Adiaha has a spark in her to find ways to
overcome, including a propensity for breaking glass.
Eunice Woods |
As Iniabasi, Eunice Woods is stunning in her ability to
control reactions and emotions outwardly while all the time laying bear for all
to see the internal fears and furies she is feeling through her staring eyes,
her taut mouth, and a posture so tight she looks as if she might suddenly break
into a million pieces. When she does
begin to open up, the wide range of pent-up and genuine emotions expressed are
shown in ways as varied as subtle, quick smiles she probably hopes no one
notices to outbursts of tears that rip apart one’s own insides to watch.
Likewise, Kimberly Scott’s Abasiama’s own eventual,
emotional reckoning with her past is so powerful that one almost wants to look
away, hoping to give her the privacy she needs and deserves in order to come to
grips with all that is going on inside for her.
Before that climatic moment, we see a mother who has love for two
daughters that are still worlds apart and who also has many questions and
doubts if and how she and they can really become one family. But there is always a hope and a
determination in this mother’s singular presence, particularly because she
knows the day of her returning daughter’s arrival is a Sunday. As she says, “Sundays are our best day; best
days don’t just come; you make them.”
As director, Victor Malana Maog takes a masterful script and
a to-die-for cast and adds touches that make the story and all its many
emotional components so much more tangible and impactful. Particularly powerful is his use of silence
-- moments when we can take in the aftermath of a difficult confrontation or a
surprise revelation or we can anticipate the inevitable next eruption that is clearly
bubbling to the surface.
All occurs in an apartment that is so present, we feel we
are sitting there with the family.
Indeed, David Israel Reynoso’s designed apartment along with Jacquelyn
Scott’s myriad of props gives us a home as real as any we can imagine, with the
smells of scented candles and cooked soup wafting our way and everything from
art pieces to a variety of colorful cushions to crockery on shelves that beg us
to pause and notice. Yael Lubetzky’s
lighting design illuminates and shadows the home in natural ways while the
sound design of Jake Rodriguez blends the strong-beat drums and brass music of
Nigeria with the daily sounds of a New York apartment to present his own
“portmanteau” statement. Finally, Sarita
Fellows choice of costumes also remind us of the stark differences in climate
between these two countries, reflecting the pervading divides in climate within
the family itself.
Mfoniso Udofia’s “Ufot Family Cycle,” of which Her Portmanteau
is yet another chapter, in an intergenerational exploration
of two cultures and two nationalities that the playwright has been quoted as
saying, “I am Nigerian; I am American; I will not choose.” American Conservatory Theatre’s production is
one more slice of a story where the next generation – a grandson – becomes a
key to a choice not having to be made between the two cultures. Its beautiful and engaging telling only makes
us as an audience all the more anticipatory for the next chapter to arrive in
the form of Mfoniso Udofia’s In Old Age,
showing at Magic Theatre, March 27 – April 21.
Rating: 5 E
Her Portmanteau
continues through March 31, 2019 at American Conservatory Theater’s Strand
Theater, 1127 Market Street. Tickets are
available in person at the Geary Theatre Box Office, 405 Geary Street Monday –
Friday 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. and 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday or at the
Strand Box Office Monday – Friday 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. (or curtain). Tickets are also available at 415-749-2228
and online at www.act-sf.org.
Photos by Kevin Berne
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