A&O Meetup in NYC: 'The Testament of Mary' on Broadway
VARIETY
By Marilyn Stasio
BROADWAY---Where to begin? Well, there’s a live vulture on stage, and an uprooted tree suspended in mid-air, and a pool of water that appears to be bottomless. And that’s before the house lights even go down on “The Testament of Mary.” The matchless Fiona Shaw commands the stage in this solo piece adapted by Irish scribe Colm Toibin from the 2012 novella he fashioned as an interior monologue delivered by Mary, the mother of the historical Christ and, in Christian legend, the Mother of God and the Queen of Heaven. It’s safe to say you’ve never seen anything like it. [link]
By Marilyn Stasio
BROADWAY---Where to begin? Well, there’s a live vulture on stage, and an uprooted tree suspended in mid-air, and a pool of water that appears to be bottomless. And that’s before the house lights even go down on “The Testament of Mary.” The matchless Fiona Shaw commands the stage in this solo piece adapted by Irish scribe Colm Toibin from the 2012 novella he fashioned as an interior monologue delivered by Mary, the mother of the historical Christ and, in Christian legend, the Mother of God and the Queen of Heaven. It’s safe to say you’ve never seen anything like it. [link]
Comments
All the same, Toibin's New Testament revision -- which in a cynical age has effect of a scorching modern poem -- is the occasion of a bravura performance by Fiona Shaw, whom the audience, on entering the Walter Kerr, is invited to view garbed as the Virgin Mary. She sits silently in a tall, transparent box as if she's merely another of the thousands (millions?) of Madonna representations crowding the history of art -- right up to and beyond Chris Ofili's controversial image.
With the audience seated, though, this sacred tableau falls away, the candles are taken away, and the stage reveals itself to be a home, just a bare jumble of a room where the very earthly Mary, mourning mother of a dead son, lives out her days in grief and fury, watched over by unseen ''guardians'' who want her to stick to the company line: He is risen. He will return. She disagrees.