At the
Wakefield Mystery plays on Saturday, while the plots of the plays are all
unusual and sometimes vaguely blasphemous interpretations of Biblical stories,
the way the director and actors presented them made them fun and interesting.
Also, as we learned in the post-performance discussion, the plays were
originally intended to simply familiarize the general public with the stories,
and they certainly do that. In order to interpret and modernize the stories,
the actors added singing and dancing to many of the stories, usually fitting
the style, for example the devil and his demons did a rap song and Adam and Eve
did ballet.
In the post-production discussion, we discussed the
history of the Wakefield Mystery plays and some of the changes the director
made and the reasoning behind them. The character of God was always played by
three actors/actresses at a time who would speak the lines separately and
together, and these three actor/actresses alternated between almost the entire
cast throughout the plays. The director explained that she didn’t want to have
to choose one person to play God because it brings up all kinds of questions
and would probably offend someone no matter who she chose. The three-person God
represented the Trinity nicely, could have both actors and actresses so there
weren’t gender problems, and meant that no one was limited to only playing one
character.
I liked
the way they modernized some of the stories, like Cain and Abel, so that they
were a little more approachable to modern audiences. While moving the stories
into a modern setting made them seem less like The Canterbury Tales, the slapstick style of the Noah story is
similar to some of the more low-brow tales, like the Miller’s Tale. The Mary
story, with its emphasis on her virginity and purity, reminded me of characters
like Constance in the Man of Law’s Tale and Griselda in the Clerk’s Tale, or
even Virginia in the Physician’s Tale.
Yeah. Even though it was modernized, there are still medieval elements in it that we can recognize, right?
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