NEW YORK, NY.- Jordan E. Coopers new Broadway play starts with the kind of roof-raising scene most writers would have stashed away for a big bang of a finale. Pastor Freeman (Marchánt Davis) is standing by a coffin, about to give the eulogy for Brother Righttocomplain, a stalwart member of the African American community who embodied protest and grievances. Righttocomplains purpose has just ended, though, hence the funeral: It is Nov. 4, 2008, and Barack Obama has been elected president, ushering in a promising new era for Black Americans.
Aint no mo shot down dreams with its blood soaking the concrete outside room 306, Freeman declares. Aint no mo riots. The list goes on as he revs up, whipping his congregation and the audience into a frenzy. By the time he asks Can I get a Chaka Khan?, its impossible not to answer back. Were the show a traditional musical, the scene would have been the 11 oclock number.
Instead, it is the first exclamation point in an evening of many.
Starting on such an expansive note is a bold move for Cooper, a 27-year-old writer making his Broadway debut, but Aint No Mo, which opened Thursday at the Belasco Theater, bursts with confidence. It is confident in its voice, in its beliefs, in its artistry, in its wicked humor and angry pain or pain-laden anger. It is also confident that Stevie Walker-Webbs production and the cast, both of which are largely unchanged from the plays premiere at the Public Theater, in 2019, can handle it all.
As the funeral concludes, we are abruptly transported to an airport, where a gate agent named Peaches (Cooper in high drag, a feather stuck in a hat jauntily pointing up) is on a Bluetooth call, trying to get stragglers to hurry up to Gate 1619: Just as that number refers to the arrival year of the first enslaved Africans in America, the U.S. government is now offering a one-way flight to Africa to those slaves descendants and its about to depart.
Peaches, with whom we check back at regular intervals, acts as a link between the vignettes that make up Aint No Mo, a structure borrowed from George C. Wolfes epochal 1986 satire The Colored Museum. (Cooper is also the showrunner of the BET+ sitcom The Ms. Pat Show, which he created with Patricia Williams; coincidently, a flight attendant in The Colored Museum is called Miss Pat.)
While the segments are self-contained, that flight looms over them all, a statement of simultaneous hope and despair. Cooper deftly shuffles moods and emotions throughout the brisk one-act show, often within the same scene. He is playing with the idea of discomfort, and tries to not let the audience become too settled in either laughter or pathos, but the balance is not always as precise as it needs to be. Aint No Mo has an immediate impact, but its biting commentary on race doesnt leave a bruise: Although I loved it at the Public, I havent found myself thinking about it since, whereas I frequently flash back to, for example, An Octoroon, another sharp comedy about race.
The most unabashedly parodic of the sections is Real Baby Mamas of the South Side, which takes place during the taping of a reality-TV show and features a quartet of guests hosted by the unctuous Tony (Davis, who handles all of the male-presenting characters). The most provocative panelist is the transracial Rachonda (played by new cast member Shannon Matesky), whose real name is Rachel and who is actually white; she, too, is in drag, in this case Black drag, to establish the identity she craves.
All of the women in this scene are pretending watch them toggle out of exaggerated Black vernacular when the cameras arent rolling but Rachel/Rachonda is usurping. Finally, Tracy (Ebony Marshall-Oliver, last seen on Broadway giving a comedy master class in last seasons Chicken & Biscuits) just cant take the posturing anymore and says that Blackness is not something you can just decide to put on, while Rachonda replies that shes living her truth.
The argument eventually ends with fisticuffs because Cooper doesnt seem sure how to exit out of the premise any other way. This happens with a couple of other scenes including the key final one which start off strong and peter out.
The dramatic counterweight to Baby Mamas is Circle of Life, which takes place in a waiting room Scott Pasks versatile set quickly adapts to a variety of locations. Trisha (Fedna Jacquet) is waiting for her number to be called for an abortion, although it may take awhile because the electronic counter is currently at 73,543, which sounds bad enough until you learn its out of millions. Trisha is at a community center rather than a clinic, and one of the tweaks made to the script for the Broadway production explains that its because women cant get abortions anymore. (Other updates include a mention in a news montage of the racist attack in a Buffalo, New York, supermarket, and Vice President Kamala Harris now being the co-pilot on the flight to Africa: Be nice yall, she has already made a promise that if you got weed on board, she will look the other way, Peaches says, so keep it cute.)
Although Trisha is set on terminating her pregnancy, the father, Damien, is begging her to change her mind. Its not long before we realize why he is so adamant, a wrenching revelation that Cooper cant quite steer to port.
The scene is a formidable opportunity for the actors, led by Cooper himself, and the play as a whole is a terrific showcase for them. They make a strong case for a Tony rewarding ensembles as they switch roles with striking ease with help from Emilio Sosas costumes and Mia M. Neals wigs and take charge when the script comes up a little short.
Crystal Lucas-Perry, for instance, shines in two segments with tricky tonal shifts. In Green, she plays Black, who has spent 40 years locked in the basement of the home of a wealthy family who snicker at the Africa exodus. (Weve worked way too hard to end up sitting on a flight with the same destination as a Latoya.) Black is the embodiment of something they have worked hard to purge, the portrait of Dorian Gray kept hidden away. And now its out, and its very angry you might wonder what Jordan Peele would have made of this.
Lucas-Perry also nails the evenings most poignant moment as an inmate being released, and realizing that some items are missing from her belongings. In a few seconds, we understand the cost of incarceration, the realization of what was lost. The protective armor of wisecracks has been pulled, and only the ache remains.
Aint No MoThrough Feb. 26 at the Belasco Theater, Manhattan; aintnomobway.com. Running time: 1 hour, 45 minutes.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.