ANYONE WHO PLANS TO see “The Inheritance” on Broadway would do well to read “Howards End,” the 1910 novel by E.M. Forster, or at least — although this would horrify one of the play’s characters — see the 1992 Merchant Ivory film. Anyone who plans to see the new Broadway production of “A Christmas Carol,” starring Campbell Scott, probably already knows its whole story, based on Charles Dickens’s 1843 novella.
In the first, a heartless rich man refuses to honor his loved one’s dying wish — to leave a treasured country house to a deserving friend. But the world works in mysterious ways.
In the second, a heartless rich man is transformed after an overnight intervention with three Christmas ghosts.
‘THE INHERITANCE’ IN PHOTOS
AUTHOR, AUTHOR! That’s Matthew Lopez (center, hand over heart), the playwright, surrounded by the cast of “The Inheritance” during the Broadway opening-night curtain call in November. The two-part play (about six and a half hours total), which focuses on a group of gay men in 21st-century New York City, was inspired by the events in Forster’s novel. The London production, which opened in the West End last fall, won four Olivier Awards, including best new play.
OTHER AUTHOR, OTHER AUTHOR! E.M. Forster (Paul Hilton) — or presumably his ghost (Forster died in 1970, at the age of 91) — visits the New Yorkers when one is struggling with the way to tell his story and that of his friends. Kyle Soller, seated left, plays Eric Glass, who lives in a $575-a-month rent-stabilized Manhattan apartment that once belonged to his grandmother. He may be evicted soon. John Benjamin Hickey, seated right, plays Henry Wilcox, who has money and a fabulous house.
BAREFOOT IN THE DARK From left, Samuel H. Levine, Soller and Andrew Burnap. Burnap plays Toby Darling, who falls in love with Eric and moves in with him. Toby’s defining line of dialogue: “Some of us had to work our asses off to become the mediocrities we are.” But that’s before his play becomes a huge success.
THE HOUSE ITSELF Walter Poole (also played by Hilton) has money and power, but he and his lover, Henry Wilcox, are also part of an older generation of gay men who lived through the peak years of the AIDS epidemic. He tries to explain what those times were like, with friends falling dead right and left. They reacted by buying a house in the country and moved there full time — just to get away from all the death. (I had friends who did something similar. They moved to Nashville in 1988. They’re not together anymore, but they’re still there, leading separate lives.) Eventually, Henry became sole owner of the house and let a dying friend stay there in his last days. Then another. And another.
CRIES AND WHISPERS ”The Inheritance” is not exactly a history of gay life in America, but its high-low points include reflections on the disco years, one young character’s fateful night in a Prague bathhouse, the instant diagnostic powers developed in the ‘80s (“He had the look”), Election Night 2016, the advent of Truvada and a description of New York as “a Darwinian experiment writ large.” Stephen Daldry directed both the London and Broadway productions.
INTERCONNECTION Margaret (Lois Smith) doesn’t appear until Part 2 of “The Inheritance.” Her character, shown with Levine, tends a private cemetery in upstate New York, filled with the bodies and spirits of gay men who died of AIDS in the house nearby. (Yes, there are ghosts in this show too.) In the London production, the role was played by Vanessa Redgrave, who in the “Howards End” film played the dying upper-class character with a country house to bequeath.
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