"An American Family Takes a Lover" by Amina Henry is a dark, dark comedy that peeks into the household comprised of an upscale American couple, Richard David and Lady Anne, and their "other person," a young Black woman named Justine who is their slave. The arrival of a handyman to fix a hole in the wall sets off a series of developments that tear this cockeyed family apart in an absurd parable that explores The Stockholm Syndrome through a sexual and racial lens. Theater for the New City, 155 First Ave., will present The Cell Theatre Company's production of the play November 7 to 17. It's a premiere run, directed by Kira Simring, Artistic Director of The Cell Theatre Company (founding Artistic Director Nancy Manocherian), where the piece was originally incubated.
This play could be a love child of Eugene Ionesco and Adrienne Kennedy, with its absurd situation and its surreal race consciousness. It bemusedly paints the role of Black women in white society through the metaphor of captivity bonding. This would be a metaphor fit for the Marx Brothers if it didn't have such a disturbing ring of truth. The term refers to the psychological phenomenon of hostage situations in which the captive identifies with and actually defends the captor. These seemingly irrational feelings, widely known as The Stockholm Syndrome, are widely seen when one person intermittently beats or abuses another.Photo by Jonathan Slaff
Videos