Although its mandate to rediscover long-neglected
works has primarily covered the U.S. and Great Britain, the Mint Theater has also brought welcomed
renewed attention to notable past Irish playwrights, such as Lennox Robinson (Is Life Worth Living?, reviewed here), Hazel Ellis (Women Without Men), and today’s case in point, Teresa Deevy (1894-1963).
It is one of the anomalies of the theater world that Deevy, a playwright with such an acute ear for characters’ speech, struggled for virtually her entire adult life with the burden of deafness.
It is one of the anomalies of the theater world that Deevy, a playwright with such an acute ear for characters’ speech, struggled for virtually her entire adult life with the burden of deafness.
Remarkably, Deevy succeeded in getting six of her
plays produced in the 1930s by Dublin’s Abbey Theatre. But by the middle of
that decade, with the company leaving the orbit of founders Lady Gregory and
William Butler Yeats, she ran afoul of the literary politics of the time and
could no longer get her work performed there.
For most of the rest of her productive working life, then, she turned to
the radio, producing a dozen original works for the B.B.C. and Radio Éireann,
in addition to adapting some of her other works for broadcasting.
After being elected to the Irish Academy of Letters,
Ireland’s highest literary honor, Deevy went pretty much from here to
obscurity. Then, seven years ago, the Mint Theater made her an object of
serious re-evaluation with its production of Wife to James Whelan, the play rejected by the Abbey in 1936.
The title The Suitcase Under the Bed refers to
where all of Teresa Deevy’s writing was stored for decades. Deevy’s grandniece showed
them to the Mint Theater’s Artistic Director, Jonathan Bank, who ended up staging the world premiere of three of
them—Strange Birth, Holiday House, and In the Cellar of My Friend—along with her best-known one-act, The King of Spain’s Daughter, staged by
the Abbey in 1935.
Not all the plays work effectively, but collectively
they testify to Deevy’s willingness to try new forms—and to the Mint acting
company’s versatility in playing different characters in the same evening.
The most impressive of the discoveries, Holiday House, is the kind of
light-as-air comedy that Noel Coward might have tried if he had ever spent substantial
time in Ireland. A family gathers at their mother’s seaside home for a late summer
holiday. Derek, married for a few years, finds his carefully cultivated savoir-faire sorely tested as he copes
with unsettled business involving ex-fiancee Doris (Ellen Adair); her haughty,
jealous husband, Derek’s brother (Aidan Redmond); and Derek’s rattled wife Jil
(Gina Costigan). Witty repartee flies back and forth, as the quartet try to
remain civilized even as they veer inevitably toward verbal sniping.
Redmond had other opportunities to shine, too. In The King of Spain’s Daughter, he
masterfully depicted an authoritarian patriarchal figure who gave his daughter Annie a
choice: wed his younger coworker, Jim (A.J. Shively), or work in a factory. (The
play evoked a time when women—particularly high-spirited rebels like Annie
(played with willful, headlong romanticism by Sarah Nicole Denver) —had few
choices in life.) And, in Strange Birth, Redmond
played a thoughtful middle-aged postman proposing marriage to a skittish maid (the
estimable Ellen Adair).
Holiday
House and The King
of Spain’s Daughter were more memorable than Strange Birth and the remaining one-act play, In the Cellar of My Friend. But the Mint troupe managed to spin
multiple subtle variations on the theme of marriage, and the distinctive voice
of Deevy was heard once again—and now, one hopes, it will continue to
reverberate in rediscovery mode.
The
Suitcase Under the Bed closed at the end of September.
But I couldn’t let the opportunity go to review it before The Mint Theater
starts another season.
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