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What is Leave Taking about?

Two hands holding on to each other.
Image caption,
Connection and family are important in 'Leave Taking'
  • Leave Taking by Winsome Pinnock is a play that follows the lives of the Matthews family, their friend Brod and a local called Mai.

  • It is set in London in the 1980s.

  • In the play, Enid Matthews is worried about her daughters Del and Viv, for very different reasons. She seeks guidance from Mai and Brod, who share Enid’s Jamaican heritage.

  • What follows is an exploration of identity, culture and family through the ways in which each character develops.

Two hands holding on to each other.
Image caption,
Connection and family are important in 'Leave Taking'
Remember

Remember

Remember, even though the characters and events are similar to parts of Winsome Pinnock’s own life, this play is still a fictional narrative.

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Leave Taking plot overview

Timeline

Follow the timeline to revise 10 key moments from the play.

A plot timeline showing the key moments from Winsome Pinnock’s play, ‘Leave Taking’. There are ten images, joined together in a wavy line by a chain featuring small stars and moons. The first image shows a Black woman’s hands, wearing rings, pointing towards another B lack woman’s palm as though reading her fortune. The caption says ‘Enid asks for readings for her daughters’. The second image shows a Black woman, Enid, pointing her fi nger at a younger Black woman, Del. Del is wearing a red, stripy uniform and hat. In the background, a Black man wearing glasses, Brod, sits in an armchair. The captain reads ‘Enid argues with Brod and Del’. The third image shows an old - fashioned home tel ephone. There is a Jamaican flag in the background. The caption reads ‘The family learn that Enid’s mother has died in Jamaica’. The fourth image shows a table, covered in a red checked tablecloth, laden with food. There is a plate of roast breadfruit, a m ug of chocolate tea and a bowl of callaloo. The caption reads ‘Enid tells Viv about her life in Jamaica’. The fifth image shows Del, wearing a cream - coloured top and orange trousers. She is sat on a bed. She is looking behind her at a poster of a yellow sp orts car and a poster of a guitar player. The caption reads ‘Del moves in with Mai’. The sixth image shows an exam hall. There is a large blackboard at the front and six chairs with desks. Students sit in five of the chairs. One chair is empty. The caption reads ‘Viv walks out of her English Literature exam’. The seventh image shows Enid sat at a table opposite another Black woman, Mai, who is wearing a long, yellow dress and headscarf. Mai is reading Enid’s palm. The caption reads ‘Enid visits Mai’s flat f or a reading’. The eighth image shows Enid as a younger woman, with Del and Viv as young girls. Enid is holding a large suitcase and they are walking past a row of terraced houses. The caption reads ‘Brod tells Del why her mother left her father.’ The nint h image shows Viv in a white shirt and blue jeans standing at a bus stop. She is holding a pile of books and standing next to a suitcase and backpack. The caption reads ‘Viv leaves for university to read Black Studies’. The tenth image shows Enid and Del s at at a table. Del is reading Enid’s palm. The caption reads ‘Del reads Enid’s palm’.
Figure caption,
An illustrated timeline showing 10 key moments in 'Leave Taking' by Winsome Pinnock.

Question

Leave Taking is entirely set in London. Why do you think the playwright chose not to include any scenes set in Jamaica?

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Scene One

Two black women sit behind a table. One is wearing a blue dress and golden earrings. The other is wearing a long, yellow dress and head dress. They are holding hands.
Image caption,
Enid visits Mai for a clairvoyant reading in Scene One

The opening scene of Leave Taking is set in Mai’s in Deptford, south-east London. The stage directions say it is "very messy", with many items scattered around. Enid has brought her two daughters, Del and Viv, to Mai for a reading.

Both Del and Viv are of Mai’s powers, especially Del, who complains about the smell and mocks the different spiritual items around the room. However, Enid persists, even paying Mai extra as it is a Bank Holiday. Enid says that "the older you get, the more you find out you got to protect yourself".

Enid asks Mai to confirm if her mother in Jamaica is ill, as she does not believe her sister’s requests for money for doctors. Enid is also worried about Del, and she tries to make Mai reveal whether Del is pregnant or not.

As the Matthews family leave, Mai offers to listen if Del needs someone to talk to, but Del rejects this offer. Mai tells Del to return the charm which she has secretly put in her pocket.

Two black women sit behind a table. One is wearing a blue dress and golden earrings. The other is wearing a long, yellow dress and head dress. They are holding hands.
Image caption,
Enid visits Mai for a clairvoyant reading in Scene One

Question

What does the setting reveal about the play?

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Scene Two

The scene changes to Enid’s flat in an estate, somewhere in north London. Enid is preparing for a visit from the Pastor, who is coming to give the family a blessing. Viv is reading.

Brod enters. He talks to Viv and Enid about how he spent his youth in Jamaica and criticises Enid for not telling her daughters more about their Caribbean heritage. Brod is also concerned about his British citizenship that he has paid £50 for. He worries that it could be .

Del enters. After being questioned by Enid, she is forced to admit that she has lost her job and was out dancing the night before. Enid and Del argue, resulting in Enid slapping Del. Del leaves and Viv goes after her. Brod and Enid continue to prepare for the Pastor’s visit.

Question

Brod complains about being seen as an "alien" in Britain when he receives a letter asking him to pay £50 to secure his British Citizenship.

Call me a alien. As if me lived the last thirty years on the moon instead of on this blasted estate.

Why might Pinnock have included this line?

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Scenes Three and Four

An old-fashioned phone
Image caption,
Enid recieves an important phone call in Scene Three

A few hours later, Enid and Brod are discussing the Pastor’s visit. Enid is worried about the Pastor's opinion. Brod is about attitudes to religion in Jamaica. Enid and Brod laugh and dance to music.

Viv enters and the phone rings. It is Cynthia, Enid’s sister in Jamaica. While waiting for the phone call to connect, Enid says that people in Jamaica "think we have so much. They don't imagine how we live over here".

Cynthia tells Enid that her mother has died and asks Enid to money for the funeral. In shock, Enid leaves the flat to send the money.

Later that evening, Enid grieves her mother's death. She talks to Viv about her family, her childhood and her relationship with Viv’s father, as well as her past desire to move to America. Enid gives Viv money she has saved for her to use at university.

An old-fashioned phone
Image caption,
Enid recieves an important phone call in Scene Three

Activity

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Scene Five

Students in a classroom
Image caption,
Viv struggles to relate to the characters in the books she studies at school

The action moves to a few weeks later. Del is living with Mai in her bedsit. Their conversation is lively, as they adjust to living with each other.

Viv arrives to speak to Del. They joke about Mai and about Del’s pregnancy. Viv gives Del the money from Enid, to help her with the costs of bringing up a child. Viv tells Del that she has walked out of her English Literature exam that morning as an act of rebellion. Del is furious and the two argue. Del forces Viv to leave.

In this scene, Viv says:

No matter how hard I search for myself in them books, I'm never there.

Viv is frustrated with reading books where she can’t see herself or her own reality and heritage reflected. It's not just the race of characters she's hoping to see represented: it's culture, language, attitudes and settings.

Viv goes on to do Black Studies at university as she continues the search for her identity.

Students in a classroom
Image caption,
Viv struggles to relate to the characters in the books she studies at school
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Scene Six

That evening, Enid is at Mai's for a reading. Enid is worried about her daughters and her parenting. Enid also feels unwell and guilty for leaving her mother in Jamaica. Mai lets her speak and gives her some herbal remedies for the physical symptoms of Enid’s feelings.

After Enid leaves, Del enters. Mai tries to persuade Del to with Enid. Del tells Mai she thinks her mother hates her, and Mai tells Del a little about her own son, who she is from.

Mini quiz

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Scene Seven

Brod sitting in a chair, gesturing as though speaking.
Image caption,
Brod reflects on the past in Scene Seven

The next morning, Brod wakes up in Mai’s bedsit to find Mai and Del standing over him. Brod tells them that Enid had kicked him and Viv out of her house the night before. He says that Enid has been depressed since Del left.

Brod talks about his to see his children in Jamaica. He also tells Del about how her father became abusive towards Enid after being racially attacked himself in London, but Del does not want to listen.

Brod sitting in a chair, gesturing as though speaking.
Image caption,
Brod reflects on the past in Scene Seven

Question

Pinnock chooses not to show the argument that happened between Enid and Brod the night before. Why?

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Scene Eight

A pair of hands, wearing rings, pointing to the palm of another hand.
Image caption,
Del reads Enid's palm in Scene Eight.

A few weeks later, Mai is training Del on practices. They are taking care of each other and Del appears to have a natural talent for the work that Mai does. Mai gives Del her notebook of spells.

Mai leaves and Enid enters: Enid has made an appointment for a reading. Del starts shuffling the fortune-telling cards but she is nervous and asks about her father instead. Del also tries to give Enid the money back that Viv had passed on to her.

Enid herself of her guilt and frustrations. The play ends with Del preparing to read Enid's palm. Enid says:

A pair of hands, wearing rings, pointing to the palm of another hand.
Image caption,
Del reads Enid's palm in Scene Eight.

Question

I want someone to tell me stories to make the sun shine.

What might these final lines from Enid mean?

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Leave Taking Plot Quiz

Test your knowledge of the plot of Leave Taking by completing this multiple-choice quiz.

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