Date: Fri 09-Feb-1996
Date: Fri 09-Feb-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Illustration: C
Location: A-8
Quick Words:
theatre-dancing-lughnasa-D'ART
Full Text:
(review "Dancing at Lughnasa" at D'ART, 2/9/96)
Theatre Review-
`Dancing' Is D'ART At Its Very Best
(with dropquote, no photo)
By Julie Stern
DANBURY - On Sunday evening we got stuck in traffic and just managed to get
the last two empty seats at D'ART's presentation of Brian Friel's Dancing at
Lughnasa . The full house was as it should be - director Eric Weitz and his
top-notch cast have put together a production of consummate perfection, by
turns funny, moving and ultimately tragic, but always totally absorbing.
Like Friel's other plays, this one uses the device of a narrator standing
outside the action to place past experiences in clearer perspective; but
unlike The Faith Healer , which played at Long Wharf in New Haven a few years
ago, Dancing at Lughnasa is very accesible.
The disintegration of a proud and close-knit family is seen through the
uncomprehending eyes of a seven-year old boy who is simultaneously an adult,
remembering the climactic summer when he met his father for the first time,
his uncle came home to Ireland after 30 years as a missionary serving lepers
in Uganda, and the five staunch women who make up his household were undone by
a combination of gruelling poverty, mean-spirited gossip and their own
yearning for romance.
In 1936, Michael Mundy lives with his unmarried mother, Chris, and her four
spinster sisters in a farmhouse outside the Donegal village of Ballybeg. Kate,
the educated sister, teaches school and acts as the authority figure in the
household, a figure of prim and strict propriety. In contrast, Maggie, the
family joker who does the cooking and cares for the chickens, brims with
suggestive jokes and easy laughter. Timidly gentle Aggie, and Rose, the
simple-minded youngest sister, make hand-knitted gloves as their contribution
to the family's finances.
The Mundys are poor - their house has neither electricity nor running water -
but singing and joking, they radiate a sense of well-being, anchored in their
genuine mutual love and indomitable joy to one another. When older brother
Jack returns from Africa, his health broken and his mind confused - ostensibly
from malaria - they are delighted to have him, and resolve to nurse him back
to strength.
When Michael's ne'er-do-well father Gerry pays an unexpected visit, his aunts
provide moral support to Chris in her hopeless infatuation, even though they
know him for the lying bounder he is.
Lughnasa is a Celtic harvest festival. In 1936, it was still common for the
country people up in the hills to light fires and participate in frenzied
dancing and mysterious pagan rituals. Although Kate is piously outraged by the
idea of such goings on, the image of dancing echoes throughout the play, not
just in the actual harvest ritual, but in the music the others want to hear on
"Marconi" - their treasured battery-powered radio - and in the glimmers of
detail that come out when Uncle Jack recalls his participation in "ceremonies"
in Uganda.
The "dancing" comes to symbolize the expression of the passionate, instinctive
natural drives that are stifled by the rigid conventions of "decent" society.
It also suggests a more vital, older form of village life that is being
replaced by modern assembly line factories, whose cheap, mass-produced gloves
will put an end to the Mundy sisters' cottage industry work.
The cast in this production is so uniformly good it is hard to single any of
them out for special mention. However, Dick Lewis is so endearing as the
befuddled Jack he has to be seen to be appreciated. In the parts of the
sisters, long-time D'ART veterans Jude Callirgos as Kate and Priscilla Squiers
as Aggie team up with Laurie Brown as Maggie, Kate Grant as Chris, and Ann
Sheehy as Rose in a performance so solid and convincing, for the rest of my
life I will remember them as a real family.
Damien Langan, who is frequently seen at Newtown's Little Theatre, does a
solid job as Michael, whose adult voice fills in the details of what became of
all the family, and invests their lives with a wistful pathos.
Dancing at Lughnasa is D'ART at its very best. Call for tickets while there
are still a few left!
D'ART's presentation of Dancing at Lughnasa continues at St. James Church, 25
West Street in Danbury, through February 17. Tickets are $12 each, $10 for
seniors and students. Call the box office at 790-1161 for reservations.
