Blood Knot Show Poster

Blood Knot Tickets

Blood Knot is the story of two biracial South African brothers: the light-skinned Morris and the dark-skinned Zach. While Morris is able to pass for white, Zach feels imprisoned by his job at a park for whites only. Together, the pair struggles with poverty, isolation and the blood knot between them.

This show is closed.

Performances ended on Mar. 11, 2012.

News & Features
About
Video & Photos
Venue
Story
Reviews
Cast & Creative

About Blood Knot on Broadway

Previews: Jan 31, 2012 • Opening: Feb 16, 2012 • Closing: Mar 11, 2012
Off-Broadway Plays Drama
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Video & Photos

Venue

Griffin Jewel Box Theatre at the Signature Center
480 West 42nd Street
New York, NY 10019
Hearing Assistance
Assisted listening devices for each theater per ADA requirements. Devices can be found in the central lobby prior to every performance.
Wheelchair Access
Fully wheelchair accessible.
More Theater Information

Story

What is the Story of Blood Knot?
Set in Korsten, South Africa, in 1961, Blood Knot centers around Morris and Zachariah, two half-brothers who live in a shack in the ghetto. Both brothers share the same black mother, but Morris has fair skin and Zach has darker skin. Morris, who has passed for white in the past, keeps house, while Zach supports them both at his job in a whites-only park. To stave off isolation, Zach becomes pen pals with a young white girl, pretending he is a well-to-do white man with a car. But when the girl wants to meet Zach in person, both brothers agree that white-looking Morris should go in his place. After discovering that the young girl won’t be coming to town after all, the brothers play a bizarre role-playing game that exposes the deep tension lying beneath the surface of their tender, codependent relationship.

Reviews

A collection of our favorite reviews from professional news sources.

"[Fugard] does a fine job creating an increasingly oppressive atmosphere, and wrings intense, sometimes grimly funny performances from Shepherd and Domingo."

New York Post

Elisabeth Vincentelli

"Vivid performances by Domingo ('The Scottsboro Boys') and Shepherd ('Gatz') keep the story pulsing and hold the audience tight as a tourniquet."

New York Daily News

Joe Dziemianowicz

"Mr. Fugard’s play brings to life the thankfully distant brutalities of apartheid with the piercing humanity that distinguishes all his finest work."

The New York Times

Charles Isherwood

Cast & Creative

Cast

Colman Domingo
Zach
Scott Shepherd
Morris

Creative

Written and Directed by
Athol Fugard
Set Designer
Christopher Barreca
Costume Designer
Susan Hilferty
Lighting Designer
Stephen Strawbridge
Sound Designer
Brett Jarvis
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