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Jaja's African Hair Braiding

Jaja's African Hair Braiding
Written byJocelyn Bioh
Date premiered2023
Place premieredManhattan Theatre Club
Original languageEnglish
GenreComedy
SettingHarlem, Present Day

Jaja's African Hair Braiding is a 2023 comedic play written by American playwright Jocelyn Bioh. The play premiered on Broadway as part of the Manhattan Theatre Club's 2023–2024 season.[1][2]

Synopsis

Jaja’s African Hair Braiding in Harlem is a salon full of funny, whip-smart, talented women ready to make you look and feel nice-nice. Every day, a lively and eclectic group of West African immigrant hair braiders are creating masterpieces on the heads of neighborhood women. On this particularly muggy summer day, Jaja’s rule-following daughter Marie is running the shop while her mother prepares for her courthouse, green-card wedding—to a man no one seems to particularly like. Just like her mother, Dreamer Marie is trying to secure her future; she’s just graduated high school and all she wants to do is go to college. While Marie deals with the customers’ and stylists’ laugh-out-loud drama, news pierces the hearts of the women of the salon, galvanizing their connections and strengthening the community they have longed to make in the United States. The uncertainty of their circumstances simmers below the surface of their lives and when it boils over, it forces this tight-knit community to confront what it means to be an outsider on the edge of the place they call home.[2][3]

Original cast and characters

Character Broadway (2023)[4]
Jaja Somi Kakoma
Miriam Brittany Adebumola
Jennifer Rachel Christopher
Ndidi Maechi Aharanwa
Aminata Nana Mensah
Marie Dominique Thorne
Bea Zenzi Williams
Chrissy/Michelle/LaNiece Kalyne Coleman
Vanessa/Radia/Sheila Lakisha May
James/Sock Man/DVD Man/Jewelry Man Michael Oloyede

Production history

The play premiered on Broadway at the Samuel J. Friedman Theatre on October 3, 2023, with previews starting September 12. The play closed on November 19, 2023, after a limited-run of 56 performances. The show extended twice from its original end date and offered live streams of the show for the final week of performances.[5] The play was directed by Whitney White and was commissioned by the Williamstown Theatre Festival in 2018. Among the producers of the show are LaChanze and Taraji P. Henson.[6]

Following the Broadway production, the show launched a tour beginning in September 2024 at Arena Stage in Washington D.C., Berkeley Repertory Theatre in November 2024, and Chicago Shakespeare Theater in January 2025.[7] It will also make its New England premiere at SpeakEasy Stage Company in Boston in May 2025. [8]

Critical reception

The play has received critical acclaim. Aramide Tinubu wrote in Variety, "The beauty of “Jaja’s African Hair Braiding” is the play’s ability to bring life to a seemingly mundane space. (...) The play moves beyond the intricate hairstyles to highlight the women at the heart of these shops. These are women boasting bold laughs and heavy hearts, who twist and manipulate hair until their fingers swell from the effort. Director Whitney White presents the ecosystem of the braiding shop without extensive explanation. It’s either a place you know intimately or have never encountered. In presenting this intimate space, without frill or excessive polish, she exposes the full scope of Black womanhood with its joys, delights, pains and sorrows as we experience them daily."[9]

Whilst theatre critic Jesse Green wrote in The New York Times, "The first 80 minutes of the 90-minute play are a buffet of delights. (...) Jaja’s is full of such treasurable moments, when the drama feels tightly woven with the comedy. And if the weave frays a bit at the end, what doesn’t?"[10]

Charles Isherwood in The Wall Street Journal wrote, "Bioh draws her characters with sharp skill and provides them with colorfully contrasted personalities. And as the day wears on and we catch glimpses of the difficulties, minor and major, of their experience, the playwright subtly underscores how their lives are all circumscribed by their uncertain status."[11]

Awards and nominations

Broadway

Year Award Category Nominee Result Ref.
2024
Tony Awards Best Play Jocelyn Bioh Nominated [12]
Best Direction of a Play Whitney White Nominated
Best Scenic Design of a Play David Zinn Nominated
Best Costume Design of a Play Dede Ayite Won
Best Sound Design of a Play Stefania Bulbarella and Justin Ellington Nominated
Special Tony Award Nikiya Mathis (Hair and Wig Design) Won
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Play Jocelyn Bioh Nominated [13]
Outstanding Featured Performance in a Play Brittany Adebumola Nominated
Outstanding Wig and Hair Design Nikiya Mathis Won
Drama League Awards Outstanding Production of a Play Jocelyn Bioh Nominated [12]
Outstanding Direction of a Play Whitney White Nominated
Distinguished Performance Zenzi Williams Nominated
Outer Critics Circle Awards Outstanding New Broadway Play Jocelyn Bioh Nominated [12]
Outstanding Costume Design Dede Ayite Nominated

References

  1. ^ Aramide Tinubu (4 October 2023). "'JaJa's African Hair Braiding' Review: Broadway Show On Black Spaces". variety.com. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  2. ^ a b "Dramatists Play Service: Jaja's African Hair Braiding". dramatists.com. Retrieved 24 March 2024.
  3. ^ Phillips, Maya (13 November 2023). "2023/11/13/theater/jajas-african-hair-braiding-black-women". The New York Times. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  4. ^ Playbill 2023 Bio Cast List accessed 2024-03-23.
  5. ^ "How to watch 'Jaja's African Hair Braiding' at home: live stream details for final week of shows". Mashable. 10 November 2023. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  6. ^ Greg Evans (25 July 2023). "LaChanze, Taraji P. Henson Join 'Jaja's African Hair Braiding' Broadway Producing Team". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  7. ^ "Broadway's Jaja's African Hair Braiding Is Going on Tour". Playbill.com. 9 April 2024.
  8. ^ https://speakeasystage.com/shows/2025/05/jajas-african-hair-braiding/
  9. ^ Tinubu, Aramide (3 October 2023). "'Jaja's African Hair Braiding' Review: Broadway Production Celebrates a Sacred Space for Black Women". Variety. Retrieved 27 January 2025.
  10. ^ Green, Jesse (3 October 2023). "Review: At 'Jaja's,' Where Everybody Knows Your Mane". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 January 2025.
  11. ^ Isherwood, Charles (5 October 2023). "'Jaja's African Hair Braiding' Review: Knives Out at the Salon". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 27 January 2025.
  12. ^ a b c "Playbill: Jaja's African Hair Braiding". Playbill.com. Retrieved 30 July 2024.
  13. ^ Culwell-Block, Logan (10 June 2024). "Stereophonic Leads 2024 Drama Desk Awards With 7 Wins Including Outstanding Play". Playbill.com. Retrieved 11 June 2024.
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