Asha
Basha Duniani (left) plays the role of Moxie and Abigail C. Onwunali
plays Abasiama in “Sojourners,” the first of nine plays in Mfoniso
Udofia’s “Ufot Family Cycle.”Playwright Mfoniso Udofia has been telling the stories of her characters in the Ufot family since 2009. Now, for the first time, her Ufot Family Cycle of nine plays will be performed consecutively at The Huntington over the course of two years. This all-encompassing art experience begins this month with “Sojourners.”
The epic saga, which eventually will have a total of 10 plays — Udofia is currently finishing the 10th — follows a Nigerian family that has immigrated to the United States. Told through the matrilineal succession and primarily through female characters and stories, the cycle examines themes of culture, lineage and legacy through generations.
“I was asking myself at the time of writing it, what and if or how the Nigerian dream could operate while in America,” says Udofia. “What happens to that kind of dreaming when you actually taste America for the first time?”
The first play, “Sojourners,” at The Huntington Oct. 31-Dec. 1, opens this multi-generational story. Directed by Dawn M. Simmons, this play shows the origin story of the family matriarch, Abasiama, as she and her spouse land in Houston in 1978 hoping to earn their degrees in the United States and then bring the fruits of that education back to Nigeria.
Though
this is the first play in the cycle, it wasn’t written first. Going
back to the beginning of the story after charting its course allowed
Udofia to plant the seeds of what’s to come for the Ufot family in the
next several decades. It also gave her a better understanding of her
matriarch character.
“I
am fascinated by the role of women’s work within the building of
lineage and legacy,” says Udofia. “You don’t see too many cycles
that are matriarchal in the theater world. So you will keep coming back
to what it is for a woman to be building lineage.”
It’s
important to Udofia and The Huntington team to reach audiences who can
relate to the Ufot story. In order to do so, they’re staging free pop-up
performances of “Sojourners” outside the city and in Boston
neighborhoods like Roxbury, Hyde Park and East Boston where high
percentages of immigrant populations reside. On Nov. 25, the show will
pop up at Roxbury Community College for free. Seats can be reserved on
The Huntington’s website.
Though
“Sojourners” and the Ufot Family Cycle deal with complicated themes of
identity, origin and community, there is also much joy to be found in
the performances. They’re not comedies, but they embody the natural
comedy of the human experience, a necessary tool to cut the tension and
stress of new experiences.
Udofia
hopes audiences will feel connected to their own histories while
watching the show and that they’ll remember how powerful a tool empathy
can be, particularly on the eve of a divisive election in the United
States.
“I hope that
they remember that sometime in their history of landing here in this
country, there was a build that had to have happened,” says Udofia. “And
I hope that remembrance just builds a little sight, scope, empathy and
warmth for whomever they meet.”
ON THE WEB
Learn more at huntingtontheatre.org/whats-on/sojourners