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The Chastitute
John B. Keane
John Bosco (Mick Lally) is a
fifty three year old bachelor living in rural Kerry. He has been consigned to a life of
celibacy by a combination of religiously inspired sexual guilt, social ineptitude and
plain bad luck. His fate is not, as he explains himself, the result of a lack of effort on
his part. A combination of flashbacks, imaginings, and actual happenings illustrate his
endeavors with the opposite sex. His run of failure continues throughout the play in spite
of the ministrations of a matchmaker (Derry Power), a smooth-talking lothario (John
Olohan), and even the local priest (Eamonn Draper), all of whom are filled with parochial
advice on the subject. By the time the play ends, John has reached the conclusion that
there is simply no hope for him, and contemplates suicide by alcohol.
Even a cursory examination of the plot of The Chastitute shows
just how dark and terrible a tale it really is. Its final scenes feature the central
character on his knees and screaming as the voices in his head recite lines from dogmatic
prayers, forcing him to reach first for his shotgun, then for the bottle: it is not funny
at all. This is a play about an Ireland which destroyed generations of rural males in the
name of principles of dubious benefit to society on the whole. The repression of natural
instincts originally for the purposes of controlling land ownership eventually led to
social and psychological excesses such as religious fanaticism, casual misogyny and
habitual alcohol abuse. By the time the play was first performed in 1980 the social
dysfunctionality of conservative attitudes towards sexuality was obvious, yet the cycle
continued. Keane, in his usual fashion, chose to confront the issue through the
comparatively safe domain of comedy.
Good comedy is always socially subversive, of course, but when the
story is set in rural Kerry and the dialogue is filled with idiosyncratic provincial
witticisms, few seek enlightenment in the text. Keane was always able to balance humor
with pointed personal and cultural concerns, and though he cultivated an attitude of
provincialism, he was genuinely rooted in a sense of his immediate audience. The
Chastitute delivers the requisite amount of laughs to satisfy their needs. It is
filled with comic situations, bawdy one-liners, and plenty of obvious and subtle jibes at
the foibles of rural Ireland. It is written with a keen ear for the rhythms of Kerry (and
Cork) dialogue and infused with Keanes precision in expression. Though the plot is
relatively loose and some of the characters too closely related to those in The Matchmaker, the play
provides exactly what the audience expects, namely drunken Corkonians, fire and brimstone
missionaries, disco-dancing townies, a no-nonsense housekeeper, a reflective priest, the
comparison of women to horses, scenes of embarrassment and immodesty involving individuals
of both sexes, and various moments of comedy and satire which raise a chuckle.
The current production is able to draw on the strength of Keanes
comic writing without ignoring its depths. Mick Lally is very good in the title role. He
succeeds in making the character sympathetic, which is vital to the plays success.
Though those around him are frequently less than admirable, defined as they are by
attitudes which were archaic and destructive even in 1980, John Bosco is a generally
earnest person. He is the victim of a culture which has paralyzed him, and his sexual
misadventures are amusing because the audience can generally empathize with his situation.
The actor does perhaps resort to Harpo Marx-esque facial expressions too frequently for
his own good, but his flawless delivery and practiced sense of the movement and deportment
of this kind of rural male are effective. The rest of the cast provide skilled support,
including Nichols Grennell, Bill Murphy, Elizabeth Moynihan, and Ann Russell in multiple
roles. Headlined supporting actor Mary McEvoy (Lallys co-star on the long-running
soap Glenroe) has no bigger a role than any of the others, solid as she is in the
part.
Director Terry Byrne makes good use of the relatively sparsely
decorated stage. The action moves from Kerry to Cork to Dublin and from kitchens to
bedrooms to pubs, which ensures a great deal of physical movement. The narrative breaks
down into a mixture of monologue narration and dramatic scenes between characters, which
allows for welcome changes of pace and the capacity to keep the audience engaged as they
view events through John Boscos eyes. The sense of this characters perspective
is important, especially for the ending, where the audience is forcefully reminded that in
spite of the laughter, there is terror in this world.
Dublin, July 17,
2002
- Harvey O'Brien