Three fine actresses keep the faith in Simply New’s
Agnes of God By James MacKillop John
Nara presents us with a paradox: He calls his company Simply New
Theatre, and he has, once again, produced a drama that is neither
simple nor new. John Pielmeier’s Agnes of God opened in March 1982, about the time Sarah Palin graduated from high school. Like David Mamet’s Oleanna and John Patrick Shanley’s Doubt, Agnes leaves
it to audiences to resolve dramatic ambiguities. What you take into the
theater about reason vs. faith may or may not relate to what you take
out. What you get in between is an exhilarating ride from three of the
strongest performances in any community theater production this year. Nara
does not reveal to the press his motivations for choosing to do this or
that work. He might be revising the biggest hits of his childhood, as
he did with last year’s A Man for All Seasons. That
time he proved extraordinarily prescient as none other than Syracuse
University graduate Frank Langella has just followed Nara’s lead with
an upcoming Broadway revival. There are two other obvious reasons for bringing back Agnes
after two decades. One is that the debate over faith and spirituality
vs. secularism and rationalism is once again prominent in public
discourse. Just visit any bookstore. The second is what the play offers
a performer. Whatever Agnes’ dramatic merits (Pielmeier is a
one-shot wonder, so far), the play offers three of the juiciest female
roles in American theater of the last generation. It could well be that
the delight Nara must have had in assigning these roles was his prime
motivation. The
key episode in the drama takes place before the beginning of the
action. A cloistered nun gave birth to a child in a convent, and its
corpse was found in a waste basket. The nun claims to remember nothing
of it, and a court-ordered psychiatrist comes to the convent to
investigate. News
junkies will remember that a comparable episode actually took place in
a convent near Rochester in the 1970s and information about it can be
found online. Agnes may have been inspired by that incident,
but it is by no means a dramatization of it. In Rochester the nun was a
36-year-old Irish immigrant who was allowed to travel outside the
convent. The court was able to determine easily that she was
impregnated while traveling, and it found her not guilty by reason of
insanity. Not much promise for a drama. Pielmeier
begins instead with an exposition-filled monologue by the psychiatrist,
Dr. Martha Livingston (Karis Wiggins). She tells us straight off she
thinks God is a moronic fairy tale and that she bears a special
bitterness toward the Catholic church. A younger sister with a
religious vocation had died in the convent of an unattended
appendicitis. Along with this she’s carrying quite a lot of emotional
baggage, which bit by bit we realize is relevant to the questions she
will be asking. She is unmarried and appears to be alone in the world. In
a drama where there is no single lead role, Wiggins’ Martha must bear
the heaviest load. She has the most dialogue, appearing in all but a
few short scenes. She also must master the widest array of emotions:
questioner, nurturer, accuser and defender. Wiggins has been on the
scene for a few years, but she really turned heads last year as the
confrontational mother in Bryony Lavery’s Frozen, a
professional production at the Redhouse. Much more is demanded of her
here. Along with lightning-quick changes of emotion, she travels the
longest arc. As the only character who breaks the fourth wall, she has
to take the audience with her, sharing her doubts and her deep changes
of heart. There
would be no drama if the Mother Superior (Kate Huddleston) were not a
character of comparable force. Nara could hardly have cast a better
person than Huddleston, who memorably portrayed Martha Livingston under
the late Bob Fitzsimmons’ direction at Salt City Center 22 years ago.
She knows what counterpunch is called for. A sunderer of cliche,
Huddleston last wore a wimple on stage as wisecracking Sister Hubert in
Nunsensations: The Las Vegas Review. Her Mother Superior curses casually and growls with conviction, “I am not a virgin!” In
response to Martha’s charges against her, in which she is culpable, the
Mother Superior convinces us she knows and loves Sister Agnes, a
“special” child. Her intellectual argument that “what we gain in logic
we lose in faith” carries weight. And she is anything but arrogant in
reminding the probing psychiatrist, “You’ll never find all the answers,
Dr. Livingston.” Before
an audience dominantly made up of the hated liberal elitists AM talk
radio keeps ranting about, Wiggins’ Livingston starts with an
advantage. Huddleston begins with liabilities, including her lame
opening greeting, “Dr. Livingston, I presume,” the worst first line of
dialogue in any good play, ever. Huddleston makes her case not only
with love and rhetoric but with dozens of endearing expressions of body
language, like her roguish eye-roll around the stage when Martha offers
her a cigarette. When Norman Jewison filmed Agnes of God (1985),
it was Anne Bancroft as the Mother Superior who received the Academy
Award nomination, not Jane Fonda as Martha Livingston. People who remember the Jewison film version will
be surprised how much more substantial the title role is, virtually a
third lead. Katharine (sometimes Katie) Gibson may be less well-known
than her colleagues but has already been nominated twice for Syracuse
Area Live Theater (SALT) awards. “Mentally challenged,” as she’d be
labeled in politically correct jargon, Agnes embodies a guileless
innocence, like Jodie Foster’s wild child from Nell crossed
with St. Therese of Lisieux. The blood flowing from piercing her palm,
a possible stigmata, is real. She could be touched by the divine, or
she might have the strength of will to bring it upon herself. Or maybe
she brought on hysterical parthenogenesis, as frogs can in nature,
impregnating herself. Gibson’s
real fireworks come in the second act, where she comes to dominate the
action. “Scene-stealing” is inadequate to describe what happens;
show-stopping comes closer. Three performers, here led by Gibson, whip
up the action. Three characters might seem manageable for one director,
but Nara generously credits Garrett Heater for his assistance. Heater
also supplies the costumes, including changes. Gertie Swanson’s set and
lighting allow for evocative mood changes on the bare stage of the
Mulroy Civic Center’s BeVard Studio. Abel Phillips’ raised floor comes
with an agreeable creak, a summoning-up of the old convent. Nara’s Simply New Theatre swept the SALT Awards last spring, much to the chagrin of his rivals. With Agnes of God he lays down his marker, the non-musical show to try to beat for this year. Actresses deliver strong performances in 'Agnes'
Wednesday, September 24, 2008 JOAN E. VADEBONCOEUR ENTERTAINMENT COLUMNIST Simply
New Theatre can be forgiven if its current production, "Agnes of God,"
doesn't fit in the category of new to Syracuse. Forgiven since its
three actresses are simply wonderful. Karis
Wiggins, Kate Huddleston and Katharine Gibson deliver emotionally
charged, highly nuanced and totally engaging performances in John
Pielmeier's drama that resonates decades after its Broadway premiere. Wiggins
portrays a psychiatrist hired by a court to determine the sanity of
Agnes, a young nun, apparently the mother of a baby found in her room's
wastebasket. Huddleston is the mother superior who is eager to sort out
the problem but is fiercely protective of her charge. As it progresses,
it appears the older nun is willing to engage in a cover-up to preserve
the innocence of Agnes. Pielmeier
unfurls his story slowly, drawing theatergoers into its compelling
facets. He uncovers the shrink's hatred for the Catholic Church. He
unveils the mother superior's past, a surprising revelation. And the
playwright delves deeply into the innocence and hidden guilts of Agnes.
Gibson delivers a picture of
an unearthly naif who is reluctant to speak ill of anyone and who is
God's angel. Huddleston injects a semi-earthy tone as a woman who knows
what living in the world is like but prefers to rule with godly
righteousness. Wiggins makes
a minor slip in permitting her vulnerability to surface a bit earlier
than is wise. Yet she rounds out the threesome well as she forces
Agnes, under hypnosis, to probe to her core, with disastrous results. John
Nara's direction is perfectly paced. More importantly, he displays
understanding for the work and coaxes out the best from his actresses.
Special commendation goes to set designer Gertie Swanson, who has
created a stunning stage floor that take its inspiration from Marc
Chagall's memorial stained-glass window on view at United Nations
headquarters in New York City. Simply New Theatre Gives "Agnes of God" a Skilled, Moving Production Simply
New Theatre's "Agnes of God," with three superb actresses working under
John Nara's direction, is one of those shows where everything works
powerfully together to create a magnificent production.
The story is simple (and based to some extent on actual events).
A newborn baby is found strangled in the room of a religious novice, young and perhaps mentally-impaired Agnes (Katie Gibson). Agnes,
her Mother Superior (Kate Huddleston) and a court-appointed
psychiatrist, Dr. Livingston (Karis Wiggins), are involved in a search
to discover, or perhaps to conceal , the truth of what happened.
In
the hands of a less skilled cast and director, this play's writing
could have encouraged melodramatic acting, with its steady stream of
ringing lines like "I am not a virgin, doctor," or "The Catholic Church
does not have a corner on morality, Sister!" But
Gibson, Huddleston and Wiggins create three down-to-earth characters
with depth and nuanced feelings, and even in the most impassioned
moments, the lines sound like the real talk of real people.
Even
more, under Nara's direction the play becomes almost Pirandellian in
the way that its characters feverishly pursue elusive truth, and resist
other people's attempts to define them.
All three actresses do towering work.
Gibson
is an ingenuous Agnes, given to eerie, otherworldly singing, obviously
a tormented soul but eluding attempts to find out what her inner
secrets might be, if in fact she has any.
Huddleston displays all the stereotypes of a Mother Superior and then, startlingly, lets a rich and complex character emerge. Wiggins'
character seems most accessible at first, a hard-working, chain-smoking
professional woman. But in scene after scene, Wiggins gives Dr.
Livingston increasing complexity and poignant immediacy. This
is not a minimalist production. For example the floor created by Abel
Phillips is a likeness of a Chagall stained-glass window, lush in
color, rich in spiritual allusion. Sound
(Heather Buck), set and lighting (Gertie Swanson), and costumes
(Garrett Heater) seamlessly enhance the effect of a real world but one
penetrated by spirit. |