Date: Thu 02-Jan-1997
Date: Thu 02-Jan-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
Long-Wharf-Stern-Mystery-Daly
Full Text:
(rev "Mystery School" @Long Wharf)
Theatre Review--
This Time, Daly Plays Everything But A Detective
(with cut)
By Julie Stern
NEW HAVEN -- For those who automatically associate actress Tyne Daly with NYPD
detective Mary Beth Lacey, from the actress' long-running CBS television drama
"Cagney & Lacey, " the title of Long Wharf's latest production, Mystery School
, might suggest a thriller set in an institution. In fact, the word mystery is
used in its religious sense: "the peace that passes understanding; or, that
mystical, non-rational aspect of experience that comes under the broad heading
of `spirituality.'"
Paul Selig's short, fascinating and very accessible work is a series of
dramatic monologues portraying five drastically different women linked only by
their hunger for a meaningful spiritual life that transcends the limitations
of their worldly situations.
By turns scary, touching, comic and inspiring, the play is a tour de force for
Daly, who uses minimal props and a single costume to create a remarkable range
of characters.
There is a smugly self-righteous Christian fundamentalist who divides her
thoughts between cataloging the sexual transgressions of her neighbors, and
fantasizing the coming of Armageddon.
An alcoholic lesbian struggles to take the second step at her AA meeting,
seeing sobriety as emptiness because her former lover has replaced their
relationship with the love of God.
The loopy host of a New Age call-in show on cable access TV alternates
dispensing her cheerful messages on the proper use of channeling crystals and
the ultimate benignity of the universe with snappy advice to
Lester-the-Heavy-Breather, who persists in tying up her phone lines.
The recently widowed wife of an eminent archaeologist goes through the motions
of a weekly slide show of her husband's various finds, droning on about the
details of their provenance, all the while haunted by the pain and finality of
her loss.
And an exuberant eccentric, Dr Edie, who delivers a commencement speech which
begins with her account of being kicked out of the American Psychiatric
Convention for defending the right to hear voices but which turns into an
idealistic and powerful celebration of the teaching profession.
Except perhaps for the last piece in the set, the portraits are ironic. The
characters and their respective "searches" are deeply flawed. What they are
looking for lies beyond them, or right next to them, or in some other
direction, but they don't see it.
It is the playwright's success that the audience can see, and recognize,
profundity in the midst of banality.
