Thru June 25
The cast. Photo by Manuel Harlan |
You know how teenage girls can be –
angelic one moment, hellions the next – and it doesn’t matter if they are under
the supervision of nuns, the girls find ways to be, well girls. Such is the
case with the six young ladies who are about to represent their school at a
choir competition in Edinburgh, Scotland in Our
Ladies of Perpetual Succour, one of the featured shows at this year’s
International Festival of Arts and Ideas in New Haven, which recently opened at
the Yale Repertory Theater and runs through June 25.
The girls, under the direction of
Vicky Featherstone, start out being well behaved, singing a Scottish folk tune,
but as soon as the song is over cigarettes and chewing gum appear, and it all
goes downhill from there. As adapted by Lee Hall from Alan Warner’s The Sopranos (no, not the one with Tony),
the show chronicles the girls’ trip to Edinburgh and the devilment they get up
to, with the six often bursting out into songs that range from rock and heavy
metal to more sedate ballads and an occasional hymn.
The girls – played by Caroline
Deyga, Karen Fishwick, Joanne McGuinness, Kirsty MacLaren, Frances Mayli McCann
and Dawn Sievewright – are all blessed with wonderful voices which often
harmonize to perfection, they have energy to spare, and they certainly know how
to project the frustrations and surface bravado of girls on the brink of
womanhood (as well as other characters many are called upon to create – in this
area, Sievewright is especially deft in capturing the essence of a cocky young
Scottish lad on the make).
There are, however, some problems,
the first being that these lassies are from Scotland , and although I am sure
they have all been trained to deliver lines in faultless English, they are
playing lower middle-class Scottish girls and hence deliver their lines in a
patois that is often difficult to understand.
The second problem is the “F’ word,
which is frequently used as a noun, a verb, an adjective and adverb and, if I
am not mistaken, a conjunction. Its repetition is not shocking, it just becomes
a bit tedious.
Then there’s the book itself, which
has the girls experience just about every torment and travail available, from
pregnancy to cancer, while consuming massive amounts of liquor and other
consciousness-altering substances and dealing with raging hormones. It’s a
heady mix – some might say overwhelming while others, less kind, might label it
forced and unbelievable. There are revelations galore and a lot of pubescent
soul-searching, much of which seems to have been inserted for its supposed
shock value. It might have been shocking four or five decades ago, but it comes
off today as rather banal.
All that being said, these young
actors certainly do put on a show, a show that can best be enjoyed by simply
disregarding the plot line, such as it is, and just sitting back and watching
six very talented young actors do their stuff.
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