Written by and starring Ins Choi as Appa, the store owner and patriarch, Kim’s Convenience arrives in London after a Toronto revival, and a five-season run on Netflix.
Light-heartedly touching on the immigrant - and second generation - experience of a family of Korean-Canadian store-owners, it has a dedicated fanbase – many of whom, along with the Canadian Ambassador, were at Park Theatre for press night.
Choi wrote the play in 2011 in response to his decades-long struggle as an east Asian actor to land roles. A hit on the Toronto Fringe, it toured Canada for years before inspiring the TV comedy, which gives voice to the often-anonymous people who run our convenience stores: working ludicrously long hours to keep the neighbourhood supplied.
On Mona Camile's lovingly recreated Asian corner store set, a sleepy Appa, gently singing to himself, opens up, turns on the lights, loads the cash register, brings-in the newspapers and makes his first coffee – all to the gentle thrum of the fridge.
Across the street, a site has been sold for a large apartment-development which will change the neighbourhood. He is approached by the slick developer Mr Lee “My black American friend with the Korean last name," who makes a generous, life-changing offer for the store. Appa refuses – “My community want me.”
The offer prompts an examination of his thirty years behind the counter, his hopes for his family, and questions about the future.
Ably directed by Esther Jun, the first half of the play is hugely enjoyable with hilarious dialogue (watch out for Appa's views on how to spot a shoplifter).
Between the jokes there are strong dramatic themes about family, belonging, faith and culture; the sacrifices Appa and Umma have made, and the gap between them and their second generation children.
But the second act seems to lose its way, conversations meander, and slap-stick creeps in. At 80 minutes, Kim’s Convenience packs a lot in, it's charming and beautifully acted with likeable characters. But, with an edit, it might feel less like a TV pilot and more like a rounded work.
Kim's Convenience runs at Park Theatre, Finsbury Park until February 10.
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