Images: 
Total Rating: 
****
Previews: 
May 12, 2022
Opened: 
May 26, 2022
Ended: 
July 31, 2022
Other Dates: 
Moved to Broadway's American Airlines Theater, April 2023
Country: 
USA
State: 
New York
City: 
New York
Company/Producers: 
National Black Theater & Public Theater
Theater Type: 
off-Broadway
Theater: 
Public Theater
Theater Address: 
425 Lafayette Street
Website: 
publictheater.org
Running Time: 
90 min
Genre: 
Comedy
Author: 
James Ijames
Director: 
Saheem Ali
Review: 

The premise sounds like a SNL sketch: Hamlet updated and set at a contentious African-American family’s barbecue. But James Ijames’s scintillating rift on Shakespeare’s greatest play doesn’t settle for easy laughs and obvious spoof. Fat Ham used the template of the Melancholy Dane’s tragedy as a jumping-off place for a bizarre, inventive, and complex portrait of parental expectations, youthful angst, toxic masculinity, the legacy of violence, and the quest for true identity. It’s easy to see why this meaty repast of a play won the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for Drama after a streamed production from the Wilma Theater in Philadelphia where Ijames is co-artistic director. It’s now enjoying a live Off-Broadway premiere at the Public Theater in a co-production with the National Black Theatre, and man, is it live!

Directed with zest by Saheem Ali and performed by a vital company of seven, Fat Ham sizzles on the grill like a rich roast of ideas. The Hamlet figure is Juicy, a black, queer, plus-sized loner, desperate to find his place after the death of his abusive father Pap and the marriage of his equally nasty uncle Rev to his explosive but loving mother Tedra. Instead of the castle in Elsinore, the kingdom is a barbecue restaurant. Rather than an education at Wittenberg, Juicy is studying for his degree in Human Resources online from Phoenix University. The play-within-a-play where the king’s treachery is revealed is replaced by a game of charades.  

As you can guess, there are additional parallels to the original, but Ijames doesn’t follow the Bard slavishly. Ophelia is now Opal, a teenage lesbian straining against her mother’s ideas of what a woman should be. Laertes is Larry, a Marine secretly in love with Juicy who sheds his uniform in spectacular fashion. Instead of a father figure like Polonius, we have Rabby, the mother of Opal and Larry, a religious and proper woman with a scarlet past. Horatio becomes Tio, a seemingly air headed dope smoker and porn addict with surprising sage advice for all.

 Ijames goes far beyond parody, shattering the fourth wall and brining the entire audience into this meta-world where class and sexuality merge and melt. Ali’s staging simultaneously acknowledges the play as a theatrical metaphor (Maruti Evans’s clever set reinforces this double vision of reality and two-dimensional illusion) and creates a believable family conflict. Juicy, Larry, Opal, and Tio are rebelling against their elders’ idea of who they should be, even reaching out the audience for answers.  

The stellar cast also plays this dual perspective, existing in a theatrical construct and relating to each other truthfully. Marcel Spears captures Juicy’s roiling inner turmoil, balancing his need to be “soft” with his rage at the injustice dealt him. He’s also very funny, hitting Ijames’s jibes sharply and keeping melancholy from overwhelming the character. In the dual roles of Rev and Pap, Billy Eugene Jones is a double dynamo of evil. Nikki Crawford’s Tedra is irresistibly sexy and needy. Chris Herbie Holland’s Tio at first seems like a stereotypical goof-off but gathers strength in a weird monologue about finding ecstasy in a surrealistic video game.

Benja Kay Thomas is a delightfully buoyant Rabby, bringing out the spice behind her strictness. Adrianna Mitchell provides Opal with a steely backbone and a hilariously deadpan sarcasm. As Larry, Calvin Leon Smith soulfully embodies Larry’s struggle between his hard military shell and the delicate butterfly within. 

Without revealing too much of director Ali’s stunning finale, Evans’ set, Dominique Fawn Hill’s costumes, Stacey Derosier’s lighting, and Mikaal Sulaiman’s sound all come together for a spectacular celebration of theater and acceptance.

Parental: 
adult themes
Technical: 
Set: Maruti Evans
Miscellaneous: 
This review was first published in Theaterlife.com and Culturaldaily.com, 6/2022.
Critic: 
David Sheward
Date Reviewed: 
June 2022