THE
YORK MYSTERIES
in
the Museum Gardens
08.08.12
These
Benedictine arches were old before the Mystery Plays saw the light of
day. Like them, they've seen glory, decay, neglect and revival. They
made the perfect backdrop to Mike Kenny's new version, the first to
be performed in these gardens since 1988. On Press Night, only the
second performance unaffected by summer rain, the trees and the
clouds were tinged with pink for the Nativity, the ruins starkly lit
against black for the later, darker scenes.
Kenny
looks back to the first modern production in 1951 – when the four
dozen individual scenes were first welded into a whole – and gives
his world a cosy, retro look, inspired, he says, by Stanley Spencer.
Lots of ancient bicylces, and topiary animals for creation, including
a strawberry spider and, of course, a coiled serpent for Lucifer to
hide behind. His Adam and Eve, in their innocence, are played by a
young boy and girl, replaced when they taste the fruit by ashamed
adults.
Strife
and death run through the scenes. The Flood, with the traditional
comedy Mrs Noah, is done with brollies, but there are drowned
children when the waters recede.
The
staging [set design by Sean
Cavanagh] allows
multiple traps, used cleverly as the doors in a busy Bethlehem, more
sinister for the Massacre of the Innocents. The drab utility costumes
of the people are nicely contrasted with the rainbow colours of the
angels.
The
huge crowds – superbly directed by Damien
Cruden and Paul Burbridge - are effective in scenes like Casting the
First Stone and the Harrowing of Hell, where the souls stream up to
heaven like a Doom painting – no crowds, alas, in the Sheep and
Goats Judgement, though. And there was little black humour in the
Crucifixion scene – it's there in the text [the same vein that Tony
Harrison mined for his Mysteries], but perhaps didn't fit with the
violent, militaristic mood of this production.
Many
excellent performances in parts large and small: Ewan Croft's Young
Adam [Anna Robinson his Young Eve], Anthony Ravenhall's Joseph,
Maurice Crichton's Pilate, Roger Wood's Peter and Mandy Newby's
Mother Noah.
Only
two professionals on stage – Ferdinand Kingsley as a young,
athletic God [later taking human shape as Jesus] and Graeme Hawley's
smooth, oily Devil [and several of his works].
There
were choirs and a brass band, too, adding to the challenge of stage-managing "the biggest outdoor production in the UK this year"
[not counting Danny Boyle's Olympic opener, I guess]. The effect was
stunning, alternating the epic and the intimate, and remaining
remarkably true to the originals, not only in the language, but in
the spirit of place, a dramatic declaration of faith for, and by, the
people of York.
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