'night, Mother
'night, Mother | |
---|---|
Written by | Marsha Norman |
Characters |
Jessie Cates Thelma Cates |
Date premiered | 1982 |
Place premiered |
American Repertory Theater Cambridge, Massachusetts |
Original language | English |
Genre | Drama |
'night, Mother is a play by American playwright Marsha Norman. The play won the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Drama and was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Play.[1]
The play is about a daughter, Jessie, and her mother, Thelma. It begins with Jessie calmly telling her Mama that by morning she will be dead, as she plans to commit suicide that very evening. The subsequent dialogue between Jessie and Mama slowly reveals her reasons for her decision, her life with Mama, and how thoroughly she has planned her own death, culminating in a disturbing, yet unavoidable, climax.[2]
Synopsis
The scene is the living room/kitchen of a small house on an isolated country road, which is shared by Jessie and her mother. Jessie's father is dead; she is epileptic and unemployable, her loveless marriage ended in divorce; her absent son is a petty thief and ne'er-do-well; her last two jobs failed and, in general, her life is stale and unprofitable. As the play begins Jessie asks for her father's service revolver and calmly announces that she intends to kill herself. At first her mother refuses to take her seriously, but as Jessie sets about tidying the house and making lists of things to be looked after, her sense of desperate helplessness begins to build. In the end, with the inexorability of genuine tragedy, she can only stand by, stunned and unbelieving, as Jessie quietly closes and locks her bedroom door and ends her profound unhappiness in one fatal, stunning and deeply disturbing moment—a moment never to be forgotten by those who have witnessed, and come to understand, her plight.[3]
Characters
Jessie Cates: A divorced woman who lives with her widowed mother. She is an epileptic who has experienced seizures most of her life. Nothing in life has worked out for this woman, including raising a son who turned out to be a disappointing loser. She has suffered with severe extended depression that has never been treated. In the play her long standing despair has been temporarily relieved by a decision that has her uncharacteristically peaceful and talkative. The usual grayness and unsteady physical energy of this woman have given way to a new purpose that is expressed in productivity and detached humor.
Thelma "Mama" Cates: A widow, she is starting to feel her age and has easily allowed her depressed daughter to come and take care of all the details of her life. She sees life as she wants it to be, rather than how it is. She speaks quickly and enjoys talking. She is a simple country woman who never wanted much and could find a way to be happy with whatever she had, even if it meant lying to herself and others. She has no need for intimacy in relationships, but is energized by social situations.
Historical casting
Character | 1982 A.R.T. cast | 1983 Broadway cast | 1st National Tour cast | 1985 London cast | 1986 Film cast | 2004 Broadway revival cast |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thelma Cates | Anne Pitoniak | Mercedes McCambridge | Marjorie Yates | Anne Bancroft | Brenda Blethyn | |
Jessie Cates | Kathy Bates | Phyllis Somerville | Susan Wooldridge | Sissy Spacek | Edie Falco |
Production history
Norman wrote the play in 1981, it was developed at the Circle Repertory Company, and premiered at the American Repertory Theater with Robert Brustein in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[4]This production transferred to Broadway at the John Golden Theatre with the same cast and was directed by Tom Moore. It opened on March 31, 1983, and closed on February 26, 1984, after 380 performances. It received 4 Tony Award nominations: Best Play, Best Actress in a Play (both Bates and Pitoniak) and Best Director (Tom Moore). The Broadway cast transferred to Off-Broadway at the Westside Theatre in 1984 for 54 performances.[5]
A US. National Tour was launched after the Broadway production closed. Phyllis Somerville, who was Kathy Bate's understudy on Broadway, played Jessie for the tour. Mercedes McCambridge was nominated for a Helen Hayes Award for her performance as Mama in the Washington D.C. production.[6][7]
The first London production opened in 1985 at the Hampstead Theatre, directed by Michael Attenborough.[8] Pitoniak and Bates again starred in a 1986 production at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles.[9]
The first Chicago production opened in 1986 at the Wisdom Bridge Theatre, starring Sarajane Avidon and Elizabeth Moore.[10]
A Broadway revival opened at the Royale Theatre on November 14, 2004, and closed on January 9, 2005, after 65 performances and 26 previews, directed by Michael Mayer.[11]
Film adaptation
Sissy Spacek attended the Broadway production and liked the play so much she began work on a film version. Anne Bancroft was cast as Mama. Marsha Norman adapted her own play for the films screenplay. Tom Moore, who directed the play on Broadway, also directed the film. The film added more characters, whereas the play featured only two performers. The film received mixed reviews and was not nominated for any Academy Awards, although Bancroft was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama. Spacek was nominated for the Academy Award that year for Crimes of the Heart, another film adaptation of a play, released the same year.[12]
Response
Ben Brantley, in his New York Times review of the 2004 revival, wrote: "...these two first-rate actresses are never quite at home in their roles.... Ms. Norman's Pulitzer Prize-winning drama ... is looking more artificial than it did two decades ago.[11] Reviewing the 2004 revival, Elyse Sommers wrote in curtainup.com that Blethyn's performance "is superb" and that "Falco embodies a woman who has given up on life as anything remotely resembling fun and optimism." She expressed reservations about the "play's psychological authenticity."[13]
Awards
Marsha Norman also won the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize for her work.[14]
References
- ↑ Carmody, Deirdre. " 'Night Mother' Wins Pulitzer Drama Prize" April 19, 1983
- ↑ Night Mother summaryaccessed 11/23/2016
- ↑ Night Mother Script Notes Samuel Frenchaccessed 11/23/2016
- ↑ New York Times reviewaccessed 11/23/2016
- ↑ Lortel Archies 1984accessed 11/23/2016
- ↑ Los Angeles Times night,motheraccessed 11/23/2016
- ↑ Helen Hayes Awards 1986accessed 11/23/2016
- ↑ London Theatre archiveaccessed 11/23/2016
- ↑ Los Angeles Times reviewaccessed 11/23/2016
- ↑ Chicago Tribuine reviewaccessed 11/23/2016
- 1 2 Brantley, Ben. "Review. Mother-Daughter Angst, With Death in the Wings" The New York Times, November 15, 2004
- ↑ New York Times reviewaccessed 11/23/2016
- ↑ Sommer, Elyse. "A CurtainUp review - 'Night, Mother" curtainup.com, November 16, 2004
- ↑ http://www.blackburnprize.org/home/finalists-2015-2016.aspx
External links
- 'night, Mother, 1983 production at the Internet Broadway Database
- 'night, Mother, 2004 production at the Internet Broadway Database
{{Pulitzer Prize for Drama 1976–2000}}