New York Edge News

English by Sanaz Toossi—A Poignant Meditation on Language, Identity, and Belonging

image

Sanaz Toossi’s “English” Delivers an Intimate Exploration of Language and Identity Revati Iyengar for New York Edge News

Photo Credit: Maria Baranova Sanaz Toossi’s English, now on Broadway for a limited run, is a masterfully crafted exploration of language as both a bridge and a barrier—a means of survival and a source of alienation. Set in 2008 in a classroom in Karaj, Iran, the play follows four adult students preparing for the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language) exam, each confronting the cost of fluency. Through a brilliantly simple yet deeply effective theatrical device—thick Iranian accents when the characters speak English, unaccented English when they switch to their native Farsi—Toossi makes tangible the dissonance of existing between two linguistic worlds. At the heart of the play is Elham (Tala Ashe), whose fierce intellect is often at odds with her frustration over mastering English. She has already aced the MCAT and secured a spot in an Australian medical school, yet her struggle with English threatens to derail her future. She frequently clashes with the nearly fluent Omid (Hadi Tabbal), whose motivation for passing the TOEFL is not academic but bureaucratic—his green card application hinges on it. Roya (Pooya Mohseni) studies for love, desperate to reunite with her son in Canada, who insists she speak only English around his daughter. Goli (Ava Lalezarzadeh), the youngest and most eager of the group, approaches the language with optimism, still unsure of where it will take her. Presiding over them is their teacher, Marjan (Marjan Neshat), who returned to Iran after nearly a decade in Manchester. Marjan’s shifting accent betrays her internal conflict—she both resents and reveres English, trapped between her Iranian identity and the Western world’s standards of legitimacy.

Photo Credit: Michaelah Reynolds  Cast of English: Tala Ashe, Ava Lalezarzadeh, Pooya Mohseni, Marjan Neshat, Hadi Tabbal But English is more than a play about language—it is a meditation on assimilation and the emotional toll of leaving parts of oneself behind. For Elham, fluency is not just a skill but a requirement for her ambitions. Yet Toossi makes clear that even mastery does not guarantee acceptance. The characters not only risk losing pieces of their identity while speaking English, but may also have to anglicize their names to belong. Marjan recalls calling herself “Mary” to fit in while living in England, a choice the other students critique. Roya resents that her son named his daughter Claire, a name she struggles to pronounce. These moments echo the broader immigrant experience, where English proficiency is often treated as a prerequisite for belonging—yet never a guarantee of full inclusion. This tension extends beyond immigrant communities to anyone forced to assimilate at the expense of their own identity—compliance as a survival strategy. Nowhere is this more evident than in figures like Usha Vance and Melania Trump, both of whom have navigated spaces where fitting in demanded erasure. Usha, an Indian American lawyer and daughter of immigrants, stands beside a husband whose policies marginalize the very communities from which she comes. Similarly, Melania, an immigrant and non-native English speaker, has supported her husband’s hardline immigration policies, policies that contradict her own journey to American citizenship. Like Marjan, who alters her accent depending on her audience, both women have learned that assimilation often requires silence, erasure, and adaptation in ways that are not always voluntary. Toossi does not offer easy answers. Instead, English captures the contradictions of assimilation—the longing for acceptance, the resentment of its compromises, and the aching question of whether fluency in another language expands or erases who we are. The play is especially resonant in a city like New York, where linguistic and cultural identity remain central to the immigrant experience. It forces us to ask: Does the ability to communicate across cultures outweigh the cost of losing a piece of ourselves? How much of our identity is entrenched in our mother tongue? And perhaps, as Elham wryly suggests, the world would be a little better if everyone spoke Farsi. This is a limited engagement for 66 performances only through Sunday, March 2, 2025.Tickets for Englishare currently available by calling 212.719.1300, online at roundabouttheatre.org, or in person at the Todd Haimes Theatre (227 West 42nd Street). For groups of 10 or more please call 212-719-9393 x 365 or email groupsales@roundabouttheatre.org. #SanazToossi #TheaterReview #LanguageAndIdentity 

Author

Manipulation, Power, and Survival Collide in Confederates—Dominique Morisseau’s Masterful Contrast of Oppression Across Eras

By New York Edge News | 09/17/2025 | Comments Off on Manipulation, Power, and Survival Collide in Confederates—Dominique Morisseau’s Masterful Contrast of Oppression Across Eras
image

Dominique Morisseau’s “Confederates” unveils the timeless dynamics of power and survival through a unique historical lens. Dominique Morisseau’s Confederates goes

Why Most Billionaires Are Self-Made: How Wealth Creation Is Changing in the 21st Century

By New York Edge News | 09/16/2025 | Comments Off on Why Most Billionaires Are Self-Made: How Wealth Creation Is Changing in the 21st Century
image

The majority of the world’s billionaires didn’t inherit their fortunes—they built them. According to the 2024 UBS Billionaire Ambitions Report,

Thanksgiving Night in Brooklyn: Unforgettable Show Supports Youth Through Music and Technology

By New York Edge News | 09/16/2025 | Comments Off on Thanksgiving Night in Brooklyn: Unforgettable Show Supports Youth Through Music and Technology
image

NEW YORK — Thanksgiving night in Brooklyn promises more than turkey and football as Freshly Pressed and Import/Export team up

Why the World Wants Trump: Global Leaders at FII8 Confirmed Support for U.S. President

By New York Edge News | 09/15/2025 | Comments Off on Why the World Wants Trump: Global Leaders at FII8 Confirmed Support for U.S. President
image

Photographer Credit: Saud Abushaiqa RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — As former President Donald Trump emerged as the projected winner of the

Prison Reform Takes Center Stage: Russell Craig’s Passionate New Art Works Debut at ‘The Prisoner Ball’ -Moses Sumney Elevates the Evening with Soul

By New York Edge News | 09/15/2025 | Comments Off on Prison Reform Takes Center Stage: Russell Craig’s Passionate New Art Works Debut at ‘The Prisoner Ball’ -Moses Sumney Elevates the Evening with Soul
image

Photo credit: David Benthal/BFA.com On a crisp October evening in Manhattan, The Prisoner Ball took over Chambers Hall in a

Canecun 2024: When Business Met Culture—How Raising Cane’s CEOs and Snoop Dogg Turned a Conference into a Instagramable Moment

By New York Edge News | 09/12/2025 | Comments Off on Canecun 2024: When Business Met Culture—How Raising Cane’s CEOs and Snoop Dogg Turned a Conference into a Instagramable Moment
image1

Against the stunning backdrop of Mexico’s beaches, Raising Cane’s CEO Todd Graves and Co-CEO AJ Kumaran hosted an unforgettable ‘Canecun’

The Case: A Revolution in Bag Design for Visionaries on the Move

By New York Edge News | 09/12/2025 | Comments Off on The Case: A Revolution in Bag Design for Visionaries on the Move
1 (48)

Blending cutting-edge engineering with high fashion, Charcoal has redefined what a modern work bag can be. Introducing The Case, the

When KidSuper Met Mercedes-Benz: The Art Car That Stole Paris Fashion Week

By New York Edge News | 09/12/2025 | Comments Off on When KidSuper Met Mercedes-Benz: The Art Car That Stole Paris Fashion Week
The Art Car That Stole Paris Fashion Week

As fall fashion week begins, it is impossible not to remember one of the defining cultural crossovers of the summer:

Havoc at Drake’s OVO Store: Hammer, Spray Paint, and a Shout of “My Designs”

By Kianga J Moore | 09/07/2025 | Comments Off on Havoc at Drake’s OVO Store: Hammer, Spray Paint, and a Shout of “My Designs”

By Kianga J. Moore | New York Edge News A late afternoon scene in SoHo turned chaotic when a woman

Revival of a classic:  Ceremonies in Dark Old Men

By New York Edge News | 08/18/2025 | Comments Off on Revival of a classic:  Ceremonies in Dark Old Men
downtown

In the barbershop with lighthearted  banter and be, pals Parker and Jenkins play checkers before the drama of this story

Share

CATEGORIES

Need More Help

New York Edge News

Subscribe

Please enter a valid email address.
Something went wrong. Please check your entries and try again.