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Philly theaters unite to stage 3 plays by Pulitzer-winning playwright James Ijames

Philly theaters unite to stage 3 plays by Pulitzer-winning playwright James Ijames

  • Philadelphia’s Citywide James Ijames Pass offers tickets to three plays by Pulitzer-winning playwright James Ijames at three theaters, including “Good Bones”, “The Most Spectacularly Lamentable Trial of Miz Martha Washington”, and “Wilderness Generation”.
  • The pass costs $130 for the full package or $90 without “Good Bones” and includes a mustard-colored beanie as a signature accessory.
  • James Ijames, 46, is a multi-hyphenate artist who has written plays like “Fat Ham”, “White”, and “Reverie”, which explore themes of identity, community, and social justice.
  • The Citywide James Ijames Pass represents a new model for theater subscriptions, highlighting the collaboration between local theaters in Philadelphia and promoting audience building over competition.
  • James Ijames’ work challenges traditional representations of Black people on stage by depicting conflicts between Black characters and other elements, such as society, identity, and faith.

James Ijames won the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for drama for his play 'Fat Ham.' Here he's shown at the Obie Awards in New York City in February 2023.
Jenny Anderson/Getty Images for American Theatre Wing

Most theater subscriptions offer a patron access to a single theater’s season. But Philadelphia’s new Citywide James Ijames Pass provides tickets to three James Ijames – pronounced EYE-ms, rhymes with “chimes” – plays at three theaters in Philadelphia. Subscribers will also get one mustard-colored beanie, one of Ijames’ signature accessories.

The full pass, which costs US$130, includes tickets for the Arden Theatre’s “Good Bones,” which premiered Jan. 22 and runs through March 22, the Wilma Theater’s “The Most Spectacularly Lamentable Trial of Miz Martha Washington,” which runs March 17 to April 5, and the Philadelphia Theatre Company’s “Wilderness Generation,” a world premiere that runs April 10 to May 3. There is also a two-show pass for $90 without “Good Bones.”

I’m a theater theorist, historian and practitioner who has written about Ijames’ work before and after his 2022 Pulitzer Prize. I believe this landmark collaboration between three important Philadelphia theaters is a fitting celebration of a multi-hyphenate theater artist who continues to champion his longtime artistic home.

Actor, playwright, director

Ijames, 46, was born in North Carolina and attended Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia. He earned his Master of Fine Arts degree at Temple University and stayed in Philadelphia after graduating.

Notably, this playwright’s MFA is in the study of acting. Ijames is also a talented director, and he performed and directed at multiple theaters around Philadelphia before starting to work as a playwright. He was also a tenured professor of theater at Villanova University, where I had the privilege to work with him and watch his creative process before he moved to New York City in 2025 to run the playwriting concentration at Columbia University.

Ijames was already a local celebrity in Philly before winning the Pulitzer Prize for drama for “Fat Ham,” his Hamlet adaptation centered on a queer Black Hamlet named Juicy and the legacy of his father’s barbecue joint. The New York theater scene took notice of him when the National Black Theatre staged “Kill Move Paradise” in 2017. This haunting piece is set in limbo, where unarmed Black men who have been killed by police examine how they have come to this place and how society continues to enable this pattern.

Other Ijames plays include “White,” a satire of the art world that tells the story of a gay white male artist who hires a Black woman actor to pretend to have done his work to see if that makes a difference in how his art is viewed. “TJ Loves Sally 4Ever” sets Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings’ relationship on a college campus where “TJ” is a dean and Sally is a student. And “Reverie” is a chamber play, which is an intimate meditation with an earnest and somber tone. In it, the father of a recently deceased Black gay man comes to meet the man he believed was his son’s partner.

Most recently, in 2025, Ijames partnered with the Australian pop singer Sia on a musical called “Saturday Church.” It is a story about reconciling queer community and Christian faith, and relying on the support of family, both biological and chosen.

A large crowd of people onstage with a sign behind them that reads 'See What I See'

The cast and crew of ‘Fat Ham’ during the opening night curtain call at the Roundabout American Airlines Theatre on Broadway on April 12, 2023.
Bruce Glikas/WireImage via Getty Images

Charting new dramatic territory

Although his theatrical styles and genres vary, at his core, Ijames writes nuanced, character-driven works that revolve around interpersonal relationships. His plays are playgrounds for performers, particularly due to his ability to write complex queer Black characters.

Influential American playwright Suzan-Lori Parks notes in her 1994 essay “Elements of Style” that the conflict between Black people and white people is the default trope of how Black people have been represented onstage – by almost exclusively white playwrights – for most of U.S. theater history. Parks posits that a way to avoid this centering of white conflict in Black lives comes from new dramatic territory that depicts conflicts between Black people and anything else.

Ijames never sets his Black characters in opposition to white society alone. He also refuses to take up the tropes of LGBTQ identity as incompatible with religion, or the idea that characters can be only gay or straight. Instead, Ijames creates narratives with queer religious people and pansexual men whose identities are not sources of conflict.

The citywide pass

The plays in the citywide pass offer an exciting cross section of what makes Ijames’s work so vibrant.

“Good Bones” is the story of a now-affluent Black woman, Aisha, who moves back to her blue-collar hometown. Aisha might be from this working-class neighborhood, but her elaborate renovations and white-collar sensibilities make her return seem more like gentrification than homecoming, at least as far as her local contractor can see.

“Miz Martha” follows the titular Martha Washington through a fever-dream-inspired trial in her final moments, as enslaved people care for her while knowing her death means their freedom.

And “Wilderness Generation” follows five cousins reunited in the U.S. South after many years apart, ready to talk about the secrets from their pasts.

With theater’s ever-changing and unstable financial landscape, I believe the Citywide James Ijames Pass is an exciting new subscriber model. The collaboration highlights Philadelphia’s theatrical talent and banks on local theaters working together to build audiences instead of treating each other as competition – a new development that could change how regional theater scenes operate.

The Conversation

James and I worked at Villanova University together for 6 years. I am still in touch with him.

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Q. Who is James Ijames and what is his connection to Philadelphia?
A. James Ijames is a Pulitzer-winning playwright, actor, director, and professor who was born in North Carolina and attended Morehouse College and Temple University before staying in Philadelphia.

Q. What is the Citywide James Ijames Pass, and how does it work?
A. The Citywide James Ijames Pass is a new subscription model that provides tickets to three of James Ijames’ plays at three different theaters in Philadelphia: Arden Theatre’s “Good Bones”, Wilma Theater’s “The Most Spectacularly Lamentable Trial of Miz Martha Washington”, and the Philadelphia Theatre Company’s “Wilderness Generation”.

Q. What is the cost of the Citywide James Ijames Pass?
A. The full pass costs US$130, while a two-show pass without “Good Bones” costs $90.

Q. How did James Ijames win the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 2022?
A. James Ijames won the Pulitzer Prize for drama for his play “Fat Ham”, which is an adaptation of Shakespeare’s Hamlet set on a barbecue joint and exploring themes of identity, family, and legacy.

Q. What are some of James Ijames’ notable plays besides “Fat Ham”?
A. Some of James Ijames’ notable plays include “White”, a satire of the art world; “TJ Loves Sally 4Ever”, which explores the relationship between Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings; and “Reverie”, a chamber play that is an intimate meditation on identity, faith, and family.

Q. How does James Ijames approach representation in his plays?
A. James Ijames creates nuanced, character-driven works that revolve around interpersonal relationships, particularly focusing on conflicts between Black people and other entities, rather than centering white conflict in Black lives.

Q. What is the significance of the Citywide James Ijames Pass in terms of regional theater scenes?
A. The Citywide James Ijames Pass highlights Philadelphia’s theatrical talent and banks on local theaters working together to build audiences instead of treating each other as competition, which could change how regional theater scenes operate.

Q. Who has collaborated with James Ijames on a musical called “Saturday Church”?
A. James Ijames partnered with Australian pop singer Sia on the musical “Saturday Church”, which is a story about reconciling queer community and Christian faith.

Q. What is the main theme of James Ijames’ play “Good Bones”?
A. The main theme of “Good Bones” is the story of Aisha, a now-affluent Black woman who moves back to her blue-collar hometown, exploring themes of gentrification, identity, and class.

Q. How has James Ijames’ work been recognized by influential American playwright Suzan-Lori Parks?
A. Suzan-Lori Parks notes in her 1994 essay “Elements of Style” that James Ijames’ plays offer a way to avoid the centering of white conflict in Black lives, instead depicting conflicts between Black people and other entities.