A community-clash drama with a sophisticated treatment of race and gentrification. — Guardian In the quaint suburban community of Stillwater, a mysterious shack springs up from the dust with the inhabitants nowhere to be seen. As speculation abounds, new residents Sihle and Bonolo are recruited by their neighbourhood to be the face of a campaign to demolish the shack. Funny, thrilling and provocative, A Good House is an explosive exploration of race, resentment, and community politics when couple discovers the limits of good neighborliness and what's required to fit in. A lacerating racial and social satire…morally nuanced, exhilarating and deeply humane. — Telegraph Mischievous and unpredictable. — The Times Excruciatingly funny and highly enjoyable. — Financial Times Biting and subversive…Each of Jephta's richly drawn characters is intriguingly flawed, and surprisingly relatable. — The Stage Raucously funny…perceptive, provoking fun. — Evening Standard A constant joy to watch…Stuffed full of amazing lines, A Good House is a very good play. — Time Out Amy Jephta's writing is startling. It's a fast-paced script which has you laughing one minute and shrinking into your seat in uncomfortable horror the next. — Everything Theatre Amy Jephta is a South African playwright, screenwriter, and actor based in Cape Town. She was named one of the Mail and Guardian 's 200 Top Young South Africans in 2013, and is a recipient of the 2019 Standard Bank Young Artist Award and the 2017 Eugene Marais Prize for Drama. Her plays include A Good House (Royal Court Theatre, Bristol Old Vic and Market Theatre, Johannesburg, 2025).