Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Trending Now
Confusion spreads as Ottawa defends orders to surrender citizenship certificates

Confusion spreads as Ottawa defends orders to surrender citizenship certificates

Handwritten Collection Surpasses 50 Hotels, Adds Over 50 More to Pipeline

Handwritten Collection Surpasses 50 Hotels, Adds Over 50 More to Pipeline

Jim Carrey officially returning for How the Grinch Stole Christmas 2

Jim Carrey officially returning for How the Grinch Stole Christmas 2

1982 Pop-Rock Anthem Behind Iconic L.A. Scene Named One of the Greatest Music-Movie Moments

Key Bridge collapse probe: Cargo ship engineer admits to federal safety violation

Key Bridge collapse probe: Cargo ship engineer admits to federal safety violation

Carney says it’s ‘no secret’ Trump doesn’t like CUSMA trade pact

Carney says it’s ‘no secret’ Trump doesn’t like CUSMA trade pact

Mondrian Cancun to Open as Brand’s First All-Inclusive Resort

Mondrian Cancun to Open as Brand’s First All-Inclusive Resort

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Newsletter
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
You are at:Home » Power, Politics, and Personal Fractures in Roundabout’s “Chinese Republicans” – front mezz junkies, Theater News
Power, Politics, and Personal Fractures in Roundabout’s “Chinese Republicans” – front mezz junkies, Theater News
Reviews

Power, Politics, and Personal Fractures in Roundabout’s “Chinese Republicans” – front mezz junkies, Theater News

7 April 20266 Mins Read
Jodi Long, Jennifer Ikeda, Anna Zavelson, and Jully Lee in Roundabout’s Chinese Republicans Off-Broadway. Photo by Joan Marcus.

The Off-Broadway Theatre Review: Roundabout’s Chinese Republicans

By Ross

“She’s late, the girl.” The line lands like a flared warning before anything else has the chance to settle. It is tossed out with precision, edged with judgment, and it tells us immediately that this is not a room built around comfort. It is a room built on scrutiny, expectation, and the complicated idea of support that comes with conditions. That first moment sets the tone for Chinese Republicans at the Roundabout Theatre Company’s Laura Pels Theatre, a play that begins as sharp satire and steadily reveals something more fractured beneath it.

Written by Alex Lin (Loudun, 1632), the production places us inside an affinity group of high-powered Chinese American women navigating the upper tiers of the financial world. The idea suggests solidarity. What unfolds instead is something far more layered and complex. These women, as directed by Chay Yew (Public’s Mojada), offer each other guidance and support. Yet, it is often laced with competition, generational divide, and deeply ingrained ideas about success and survival. The room is both a refuge and a battleground.

Jodi Long, Jennifer Ikeda, and Jully Lee in Roundabout’s Chinese Republicans Off-Broadway. Photo by Joan Marcus.

At the centre is Ellen, originally known as Ailin, played with steady determination by Jennifer Ikeda (Broadway’s Top Girls). She moves through this world trying to understand not only how to succeed, but what that success requires her to give up. Around her, the group exerts its influence, shaping and challenging her in ways that feel both protective and problematic. The play’s strongest tension lies in that push and pull, the desire to belong set against the cost of that belonging.

That disruption arrives through Katie, played in this performance by Sasha Diamond (Public’s Teenage Dick), stepping in for Anna Zavelson. Diamond handles the role with clarity and presence, stepping confidently into a part that carries significant narrative weight. Katie begins as an eager participant, grateful for the space she has been invited into, before shifting into something far more defiant. Her perspective challenges the group’s unspoken agreements, and it is her refusal to fall in line that pushes the room toward open conflict. However, as written, Katie functions more as a catalyst than a fully developed character, her transformation driving the action forward without always allowing us to fully understand the depth behind it.

Jennifer Ikeda and Anna Zavelson in Roundabout’s Chinese Republicans Off-Broadway. Photo by Joan Marcus.

The performances ground the production, particularly in the contrasting performances of Jodi Long (Netflix’s “Dash & Lily“) as Phyllis and Jully Lee (Broadway’s KPOP) as Iris. Long’s Phyllis is brash, unapologetic, and unsettlingly direct, a woman who has carved out her place by refusing to soften her edges. Her question, “I can’t use my own slur?” lands with a kind of defiance that ripples through the room, exposing fault lines that no one can easily repair. Lee’s Iris offers a different kind of volatility, shifting between camaraderie and confrontation with a precision that makes her scenes some of the most compelling in the play.

The dialogue is consistently sharp, often very funny, and rooted in a keen understanding of how language and engagement can both connect and divide. The play moves quickly, propelled by conversations that feel lived in and immediate, even when they veer into exaggeration. Early on, the production leans into that energy, presenting the corporate world as a place of absurd rituals and coded behaviour. Yet, as the play progresses, that tone darkens, revealing the emotional cost beneath the surface and the high price of compliance.

Jennifer Ikeda and Jodi Long in Roundabout’s Chinese Republicans Off-Broadway. Photo by Joan Marcus.

That shift is where the production finds both its power and its difficulty. Lin’s script takes on a wide range of themes, including workplace toxicity, assimilation, intergenerational conflict, anti-Asian violence, and the pressures of navigating a system that was not built to accommodate them. Each of these ideas is compelling on its own. Taken together, they sometimes compete for space, creating a narrative that at times feels scattered rather than fully integrated. The play moves from comedy to confrontation with a speed that can feel jarring, and not every thread is given the time it needs to fully land.

The staging reflects this energy. The rotating, red-walled restaurant set by Wilson Chin (Broadway’s Cost of Living) keeps the action in motion, allowing scenes to shift quickly and fluidly. Early on, the production introduces a more stylized element, a nightmarish Mandarin game show sequence, that pushes the theatricality a bit too far. That moment is inventive, thanks to impressive lighting by Jeanette Oi-Suk Yew (Broadway’s Kimberly Akimbo) and costumes by Anita Yavich (Broadway’s Floyd Collins). However, it feels at odds with the more grounded scenes that surround it, especially since it is a unique moment that never returns.

Even within that unevenness, the production never really loses its grip on the audience’s attention, largely because of the strength of the performances and the intelligence of the writing at the line level. There is a constant sense that something important is being examined beneath the surface, even when the play itself is still searching for its clearest path through that material.

Jennifer Ikeda and Jully Lee in Roundabout’s Chinese Republicans Off-Broadway. Photo by Joan Marcus.

What makes Chinese Republicans stand out is its willingness to sit inside contradiction. These are characters who have been overlooked, dismissed, and passed over, and yet they also perpetuate the very systems that have limited them. They speak with clarity about their own struggles while casting judgment on others in ways that are uncomfortable to witness. That tension is never resolved, and perhaps it should not be.

By the time the play reaches its final moments, we are left in a space that feels deliberately uncertain. The questions raised linger without easy answers, much like Ellen’s own journey through a world that offers opportunity alongside compromise. And that opening line echoes back in a different way. “She’s late, the girl.” It no longer feels like a simple critique of timing, but a reflection of how difficult it is to arrive, fully and on your own terms, in a place that keeps shifting beneath your feet.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email

Related Articles

Jobs (Camrose): Theatre Technician, Audio & Lighting – Jeanne & Peter Lougheed Performing Arts Centre, Theater News

Jobs (Camrose): Theatre Technician, Audio & Lighting – Jeanne & Peter Lougheed Performing Arts Centre, Theater News

Reviews 18 June 2026
Auditions (Edmonton): If We Were Bird – UofA Department of Drama, BLT, Theater News

Auditions (Edmonton): If We Were Bird – UofA Department of Drama, BLT, Theater News

Reviews 18 June 2026
Coal Mine Theatre’s Biggest Season Yet Explores What Divides Us and What Holds Us Together – front mezz junkies, Theater News

Coal Mine Theatre’s Biggest Season Yet Explores What Divides Us and What Holds Us Together – front mezz junkies, Theater News

Reviews 18 June 2026
At the 2026 Toronto Fringe, Caribbean artists stage collisions of identity, power, and desire, Theater News

At the 2026 Toronto Fringe, Caribbean artists stage collisions of identity, power, and desire, Theater News

Reviews 17 June 2026
Back to the Stratford Festival for Another Dose of ‘Rough Magic’ – front mezz junkies, Theater News

Back to the Stratford Festival for Another Dose of ‘Rough Magic’ – front mezz junkies, Theater News

Reviews 17 June 2026
Julia Louis-Dreyfus Heads to Broadway in Star-Studded Revival of Other Desert Cities – front mezz junkies, Theater News

Julia Louis-Dreyfus Heads to Broadway in Star-Studded Revival of Other Desert Cities – front mezz junkies, Theater News

Reviews 16 June 2026
Top Articles
Grace Gummer, Meryl Streep’s Daughter, Owns the Red Carpet After Haunting Portrayal of Caroline Kennedy

Grace Gummer, Meryl Streep’s Daughter, Owns the Red Carpet After Haunting Portrayal of Caroline Kennedy

15 April 2026240 Views
Canadians aren’t taking their paid vacation days. Can burnout be far behind? | Canada Voices

Canadians aren’t taking their paid vacation days. Can burnout be far behind? | Canada Voices

2 June 2026158 Views
Canada’s ‘most beautiful’ university campuses were revealed and so many are by water

Canada’s ‘most beautiful’ university campuses were revealed and so many are by water

15 April 2026109 Views
Does alcohol make you sleep better or worse? | Canada Voices

Does alcohol make you sleep better or worse? | Canada Voices

25 May 2026108 Views
Demo
Don't Miss
Carney says it’s ‘no secret’ Trump doesn’t like CUSMA trade pact
Lifestyle 18 June 2026

Carney says it’s ‘no secret’ Trump doesn’t like CUSMA trade pact

Prime Minister Mark Carney appears untroubled by U.S. President Donald Trump’s recent claim that the…

Mondrian Cancun to Open as Brand’s First All-Inclusive Resort

Mondrian Cancun to Open as Brand’s First All-Inclusive Resort

007 First Light didn’t need to be so violent

007 First Light didn’t need to be so violent

Oliver Tree's Mom Shares Emotional Tribute to Late Son

About Us
About Us

Canadian Reviews is your one-stop website for the latest Canadian trends and things to do, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks
Confusion spreads as Ottawa defends orders to surrender citizenship certificates

Confusion spreads as Ottawa defends orders to surrender citizenship certificates

Handwritten Collection Surpasses 50 Hotels, Adds Over 50 More to Pipeline

Handwritten Collection Surpasses 50 Hotels, Adds Over 50 More to Pipeline

Jim Carrey officially returning for How the Grinch Stole Christmas 2

Jim Carrey officially returning for How the Grinch Stole Christmas 2

Most Popular
Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

28 April 202433 Views
OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024371 Views
LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202493 Views
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.