The Inheritance (play)

The Inheritance is a play by Matthew López that is inspired by the 1910 novel Howards End by E. M. Forster. The play premiered in London at the Young Vic in March 2018, before transferring to Broadway in November 2019.

The Inheritance
Cover to the ebook script, based on the original poster for the Young Vic production
Written byMatthew López
Based onInspired by Howards End
by E. M. Forster
Directed byStephen Daldry
Date premieredMarch 28, 2018 (2018-03-28)
Place premieredYoung Vic, London
Original languageEnglish
SubjectEarly AIDS Crisis, generational trauma, queer culture
Setting

Productions

Off-West End (2018)

The play was commissioned by Hartford Stage in Hartford, Connecticut.[1] The play was produced in London at the Young Vic Theatre under the direction of Stephen Daldry in March 2018. The play was staged in two parts of over three hours each, intended to be viewed sequentially and reimagines E. M. Forster's Howards End as "a lovingly wry portrait of New York’s gay community",[2] "with gay men from different generations standing in for Forster’s straight people from different classes".[2] Lopez found parallels between his own life and Forster's closeted existence before the partial-decriminalisation of homosexuality, telling The New Yorker: "We’re so far apart, and yet when I read his diaries—that’s me. That’s me, a hundred years ago, as a closeted white man in England". Lopez has described that the greatest theatrical influence, despite comparisons with Tony Kushner's Angels in America[2] as being Gatz, Elevator Repair Service's 2-part, 8-hour adaptation of The Great Gatsby, inspiring his use of "self-narration".[2]

The Inheritance examines love between gay men in contemporary New York a generation after the Early AIDS Crisis.[3] It asks what the current generation owes to its forebears[4] with Rebecca Read writing in The New Yorker that lead character Eric Glass, "as the grandson of Holocaust survivors, has a personal connection to generational catastrophe, and is therefore better primed to comprehend the history of the gay community’s devastation".[2]

West End (2018)

The production transferred to the Noël Coward Theatre in London's West End on 21 September 2018 and was produced by Tom Kirdahy, Sonia Friedman, and Hunter Arnold.[5]

The Inheritance won Best Play at the London Evening Standard Theatre Award 2018.[6] The Inheritance also won Best New Play, Best Director for Stephen Daldry and Best Actor for Kyle Soller at both the 2019 Critics' Circle Theatre Awards and the 2019 Laurence Olivier Awards, also winning an Olivier for Best Lighting for Jon Clark.[7]

Broadway (2019-2020)

The play premiered on Broadway at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre on 27 September 2019 in previews, with the official opening on 17 November.[8] The production features Lois Smith as Margaret, with Kyle Soller and John Benjamin Hickey, among others, reprising their roles from the London production.[9]

In December 2019, it was announced that Tony Goldwyn would replace Hickey for a four-month stint beginning in January 2020, while Hickey was set to direct a revival of Plaza Suite.[10] However, in February 2020, it was announced that The Inheritance would close on March 15, after 46 previews and 138 regular performances.[11][12] On March 12, the final four performances were cancelled when all Broadway theatres closed to combat the COVID-19 pandemic.[13]

Other notable productions

A German language production of The Inheritance titled Das Vermächtnis, directed by Philip Stölzl, premiered at Munich's Residenztheater on January 30, 2022.[14][15] The production was invited to the Berliner Theatertreffen as one of ten "noteworthy" productions of 2022.[16] Das Vermächtnis also premiered in Hanover on 22 April 2022, as well as at the Theater Münster on 3 December 2022 and most recently at the E.T.A.-Hoffmann-Theater in Bamberg on 6 October 2023.[17] Part one of the Bamberg production was invited to the Bayerische Theatertage in 2024.[18]

A West Coast premiere production directed by Mike Donahue opened at Geffen Playhouse on September 13, 2022, and had an extended run until November 27, 2022.[19] The play was cited as "better in Los Angeles than on Broadway"[20] by Los Angeles Times theater critic Charles McNulty. An audio adaptation[21] was later released by Audible Theater in March 2023.

Brazilian Portuguese language production of The Inheritance, called A Herança, premiered at Teatro Vivo, São Paulo, on March 9, 2023, and ran until April 30, 2023. Due to its success, a new season, this time placed at Teatro Raul Cortez, São Paulo, premiered on June 1, 2023, and ran until July 30, 2023.

The play was translated into Portuguese by Zé Henrique de Paula, who also directs and produces it. Bruno Fagundes, the other local producer, performs the role of Eric Glass in the Brazilian version.

A Danish language production of The Inheritance named Arven premiered at the Royal Danish Playhouse March 25, 2023 and ran until May 13 the same year. The production was staged by Thomas Bendixen.[22] The production won the 2023 Reumert Award for Best Performance[23] and will run again starting August 24, 2024 as part of the Royal Danish Theatre's 2024/2025 season.[24]

In April 2023 Canadian Stage announced that, as part of its 23/24 season, it would stage a production in Toronto.The production was directed by Brendan Healy, Canadian Stage's artistic director, and ran at the Bluma Appel Theatre, Front Street East, Toronto in March and April 2024.

Cast and characters

RoleOff-West EndWest EndBroadwayLos Angeles
201820192022
Eric GlassKyle SollerAdam Kantor
Toby DarlingAndrew BurnapJuan Castano
Adam / LeoSamuel H. LevineNicholas L. Ashe
Walter/ MorganPaul HiltonBill Brochtrup
Henry WilcoxJohn Benjamin HickeyTuc Watkins
JasperHugo BoltonKyle HarrisKasey Mahaffy
Toby's AgentRobert BoulterJonathan BurkeEddie Lopez
Young HenryHubert BurtonCarson McCalleyAugust Gray Gall
TristanSyrus LoweJordan BarbourJay Donnell
Jason 1Michael MarcusDarryl Gene Daughtry Jr.Israel Erron Ford
Young WalterLuke ThallonJack RiddifordDylan FrederickMiguel Pinzon
Jason 2Michael WaltersArturo Luís SoriaAvi Roque
MargaretVanessa RedgraveLois SmithTantoo Cardinal

Notable replacements

Broadway (2019-2020)

Critical response

The reviewer for The Daily Telegraph called the play “perhaps the most important American play of this century.” [25]

The Variety reviewer wrote the play is a "vast, imperfect and unwieldy masterpiece that unpicks queer politics and neoliberal economics anew. In addressing the debt gay men owe to their forebears, it dares to ask whether the past hasn’t also sold the present up short."[3]

Michael Billington, The Guardian reviewer, wrote: "While Lopez’s play has a literary framework, it teems with life and incident...Lopez is also unafraid to periodically stop the plot and clear the stage for an impassioned debate: one of the most intense is about the status of gay culture which, having fought so long against oppression, now finds itself in danger of being co-opted."[26] In a later article, Billington also praised Paul Hilton's performance in the Young Vic Theatre production in a list by The Guardian writers of the 50 greatest theatre shows since 2000, in which The Inheritance placed 15th.[27]

The show received mostly mixed reviews on Broadway. As Ben Brantley wrote in The New York Times: "Its breadth doesn't always translate into depth." He praised the acting of many in the large cast and noted the continued experiential relevance of the AIDS crises, stating "That effort to conjure a nightmare era in danger of being forgotten by many young people today captures what’s best in 'The Inheritance'.”[28]

Writing in The New Yorker, Rebecca Mead drew comparisons to Angels in America, the two-part epic play by Tony Kushner, also examining the Early AIDS Crisis in New York, describing The Inheritance as "less intellectually demanding" and "strik[ing] an upper-middlebrow tone" and also comparing the play with Hanya Yanagihara's 2015 "gay-trauma" novel A Little Life.[2]

Terrence McNally, author of the 1994 play Love! Valour! Compassion!, which addressed the AIDS Crisis contemporarily, said that "as an 80-year-old survivor, observer, and participant of the many years covered in the play" he had never had such a strong response,[2] referring to the experience of watching a play about the Early AIDS Crisis amid an audience of gay men of both the survivors' generation and the subsequent generation, that of the protagonists.[2]

Awards and nominations

Original London production

YearAwardCategoryNomineeResult
2018Evening Standard Theatre Award[29][6]Best PlayMatthew LopezWon
Best ActorKyle SollerNominated
Best DirectorStephen DaldryNominated
Critics' Circle Theatre Award[7]Best New PlayMatthew LopezWon
Best ActorKyle SollerWon
Best DirectorStephen DaldryWon
2019Laurence Olivier Award[30]Best New PlayWon
Best ActorKyle SollerWon
Best Actress in a Supporting RoleVanessa RedgraveNominated
Best DirectorStephen DaldryWon
Best Set DesignBob CrowleyNominated
Best Lighting DesignJon ClarkWon
Best Sound DesignPaul Arditti and Christopher ReidNominated
Outstanding Achievement in MusicPaul EnglishbyNominated
South Bank Sky Arts Award[31]TheatreWon

Original Broadway production

YearAwardCategoryNomineeResult
2020Tony Award[32]Best PlayWon
Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a PlayAndrew BurnapWon
Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a PlayJohn Benjamin HickeyNominated
Paul HiltonNominated
Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a PlayLois SmithWon
Best Direction of a PlayStephen DaldryWon
Best Original ScorePaul EnglishbyNominated
Best Scenic Design of a PlayBob CrowleyNominated
Best Costume Design of a PlayNominated
Best Lighting Design of a PlayJon ClarkNominated
Best Sound Design in a PlayPaul Arditti and Christopher ReidNominated
Drama Desk Award[33]Outstanding PlayWon
Outstanding Actor in a PlayKyle SollerNominated
Outstanding Featured Actor in a PlayPaul HiltonWon
Outstanding Featured Actress in a PlayLois SmithWon
Outstanding Director of a PlayStephen DaldryWon
Outstanding Sound Design of a PlayPaul Arditti and Christopher ReidWon
Drama League Award[34][35]Outstanding Production of a PlayWon
Distinguished PerformancePaul HiltonNominated
New York Drama Critics' Circle Award[36]Best PlayMatthew LopezFinalist
Outer Critics Circle Award[37]Outstanding New Broadway PlayHonoree
Outstanding Director of a PlayStephen DaldryHonoree
Outstanding Featured Actor in a PlayJohn Benjamin HickeyHonoree
Paul HiltonHonoree
Samuel H. LevineHonoree
Outstanding Featured Actress in a PlayLois SmithHonoree
GLAAD Media Award[38]Outstanding Broadway ProductionWon

References

External links