ARTS
& CULTURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Actresses
transcend material in look at all things Catholic
by Robert
Nesti
Tuesday,
January 7, 2003
``Beyond
Belief, or Catholics Are People Too!'' by Jack Neary, presented by the Lyric
Stage Company of Boston, 140 Clarendon St., through Feb. 1.
Gert, Alma and
Marjorie are the ``Golden Girls'' - Boston style. They are the best thing about
``Beyond Belief, or Catholics Are People Too!'' Jack Neary's crowd-pleasing
look at Catholicism is having its world premiere by the Lyric Stage Company of
Boston.
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In a series of
sketches, these retirees spend their days sitting on Alma's front porch, where
they discuss a variety of sexually related topics, from President Clinton's
indiscretions to ramifications of the recent crisis in the church.
Some may
remember the trio from the 1999 Boston Theater Marathon of Ten-Minute Plays,
where they were enthusiastically received in a playlet called ``Oral Report,''
in which they discussed Clinton's relationship with Monica Lewinsky. That
sketch opens this piece.
As in the
formulaic writing of television sitcoms, each reverts to type: Gert (Bobbie
Steinbach) is the no-nonsense one, Alma (Ellen Colton) is dimwitted and
Marjorie (Cheryl McMahon) is practical. The comedy largely comes from Gert's
sharp one-liners and Alma's naivete on sexual matters.
That is, until
the final scene. In his short program notes, Neary says it would be impossible
to write a play about Catholics without addressing the recent crisis, and he
takes on the controversy by examining how the sensitive subject of pedophilia
affects the lives of these three women.
Though the
writing may seem shameless in the way it manipulates the audience to get a
particular emotional response, it is nevertheless effective, largely due to the
deeply touching performance of Colton as a woman wrestling with a long-hidden secret.
As the memories strip away her defenses, Colton gives her character a depth of
feeling unrealized in the broad and repetitive skits that came before. Here,
the three women feel part of a play that Neary has yet to fully realize, and
the actresses rise to a level that transcends the material itself.
Otherwise,
though, this entertainment shrewdly, if coyly, lampoons Catholics' repressed
attitudes about sexuality.
In addition to
these women arguing about homosexuality and the meaning of the term ``menage a
trois,'' there is a skit about a randy young man whose sexual drive is stilled
when he becomes ``Catholic Man,'' a superhero who believes in chastity (amongst
other virtues).
There's also a
skit in which Santa Claus visits a confessional to seek forgiveness for having
``sinned'' with a cookie-bearing mom on Christmas Eve.
In these skits,
performers Lindsay Joy, Christopher Loftus and Robert Saoud are right on
target.
Neary's
direction is sharp throughout, and he has found an ideal trio of local
actresses for his Golden Girls: Steinbach makes a delightfully tart Gert,
McMahon is master of the deadpan expression as Marjorie, and Colton brings
pathos to what easily could have been the most stereotypical character.
The Lyric Stage Company of Boston presents ``Beyond Belief'' through Feb. 1.