Character Breakdown: JAJA'S AFRICAN HAIR BRAIDING Cast Unpacks Their Roles
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May 17, 2024
In this video, watch as the cast of Jocelyn Bioh's Jaja's African Hair Braiding unpacks their roles ahead of opening night on Broadway!
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0:00
🎵 Music Playing ðŸŽ
0:23
Well I play Sister B or B. She is a very opinionated woman who gives her opinion whether people want it or not
0:32
And she is just full, full of life. So much life. Yeah
0:39
Ha ha ha. So much life. Ha ha ha. Yeah. Yeah. And so I play three characters
0:45
I play Vanessa, I play Radia, and I play Sheila. And so Vanessa is a feisty woman who's coming to get her hair braided before her vacation
0:55
She works in a hospital. And Radia is a young woman who's about to go on her internship, fashion internship to Milan
1:03
And then Sheila is a businesswoman and she's coming to get a sew-in
1:07
And she's powerful. Yeah. Yeah. My character's name is Aminata. She is described as an African snack
1:16
Ha ha ha. You know, she's got some marital problems. She's got a slight gambling addiction
1:26
Ha ha ha. She's a little bit of a mess. And I think one of the things that drew me to that was the fact that the other roles that I played, you know, in like film and television, have been women who are very composed
1:40
And I love the idea of stepping into somebody who does not have it totally together
1:44
So that is the appeal for me. For you? I get to play four characters in this play
1:50
Like James, the sock man, the DVD man, the jewelry man, the husband to this beautiful woman
1:56
And I think of people that I admire like Eddie Murphy, you know
2:01
And I'm like, oh, how does he do it? And I'm learning that and I'm enjoying that
2:05
It's so much fun. And it's such a fun challenge to be able to embody these men who I know, who I grew up with, who I see every day
2:13
So I'm enjoying that. So my character's name is Miriam. And she is one of the hair braiders in the salon
2:19
And I love that she does not get into the mix because there's a lot of drama in the salon
2:28
She kind of minds her business. But when she does decide to open up to Rachel's character, you just see how fierce and courageous she is and what's underneath, you know, all of that
2:44
Who do you play and what do you love about her? So I play one of the customers, one of the clients in the salon
2:50
I am there all day. So I see everything that happens over the course of the day
2:57
And I also form a really important connection with my braider. And I learn about her
3:05
And I think I'm very inspired, not just by her story, but her like just hunger and tenacity and ambition for life
3:15
And I think that that is like Jennifer gets, she gets more than just her hair braided that day
3:21
And it's a beautiful thing to experience every day. So I play three different clients who come to the shop
3:30
They all have their own personalities. They all have their own history and legacy
3:35
And I think what I love about that is that Jocelyn has done such a good job of writing complicated, full apart relationships and characters that you just want to watch, right
3:46
Both for the funny and for the drama of it, okay? Because there's all of it in there
3:52
I love that in this short play, you get to witness my character like a full life, you know
4:01
Like you have an idea of who she is and what she might, when she walks out of the shop doors, what she might try to go do
4:10
I play Ndidi. She is a spitfire with big dreams. And she happens to be the fastest hair braider and most money making hair braider in the salon
4:22
This is just, it's a room full of rich, real, truthful perspectives, you know
4:29
We're really digging into the black female perspective, black woman experience, the black immigrant experience
4:36
And it really is an intimate and sort of sacred space to do that discovery in, you know
4:42
A hair braiding salon. And so, yeah, the women that we play, we're grateful enough to get to play these women that sort of usher you into that room
4:52
Yeah, I would also say I love this idea of sacred space
4:56
This intimacy that we're able to craft, knowing how we know ourselves in those spaces, really feels like just such a gift
5:04
Because there's the humor, there's the open heartedness, there's the sadness that happens, the struggle, right
5:12
So, the characters are all leading us into that nuance, that intimacy, that depth, and that humanity that I think is not seen enough
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