Lucia's Chapters of Coming Forth by Day

at Mabou Mines

Reviewed by Jason Fitzgerald

September 18, 2011


Photo by Beatriz Schill
Priceless: Ruth Maleczech, member of Mabou Mines and downtown-theater doyenne for 40 years, spitting insults against Carl Jung and Ezra Pound from a wooden chair that flies, suspended, over the stage of what is normally P.S. 122 but here is called the Mabou Mines ToRoNada Space. As Lucia Joyce, James' youngest daughter, languishing in her final years in a mental institution in Northampton, England, Maleczech hovers (literally) between an elevated fantasy life and an insufferable reality. What sustains her, and the audience, is a defiance so blistering that it nearly burns the theater down.

Writer and director Sharon Fogarty, another Mabou Mines member, presents the story of Lucia Joyce as a dark, censored chapter in the history of modernism. A free spirit whose family had her institutionalized in her teenage years, Lucia gradually lost her grip on reality, after which her doting but work-obsessed father wrote down her loopy language to channel it into "Finnegans Wake." James, a shadowy presence in the show, is played by Paul Kandel, a consummate performer who is gracious enough to accept his back seat to Maleczech's star turn.

Most of "Lucia's Chapters of Coming Forth by Day" is spent watching Maleczech in her occasionally airborne chair. A Beckettian heroine with a Joycean vocabulary, Lucia leaps from charming to churlish to furious to seductive to bitter, biding her time until she is rescued by her "doctors" or by death. "Bad news" is her wry refrain, delivered each time she realizes that she's not going anywhere. Jim Clayburgh's sets and lights, combined with Julie Archer's artful projections, wrap Lucia in haunting white images of a late-Victorian ghost story.

Fogarty's play is admirably constructed, a monument to a lost life, but a lesser actor might make it a snoozer. Maleczech turns her old age into a weapon, daring us to dismiss her (and Lucia) as a relic. A dragon protecting the cave of her secrets, all written down in the "chapter book" she clutches to her side, Maleczech's Lucia is fueled by the magnitude of her wretchedness. By the time she dances her manic final dance, she has made the case that to ignore Lucia Joyce—and Ruth Maleczech—is to disregard a treasure in our midst.
 
Presented by and at Mabou Mines, 150 First Ave., 2nd floor, NYC. Sept. 18–25. Tue.–Sat., 8 p.m.; Sun., 3 p.m. (212) 868-4444 or www.smarttix.com.
 

 
Subscribe to Back Stage

More Off Off Broadways

NY Review: 'She's of a Certain Age'

NY Review: 'She's of a Certain Age'
This sketchy play by Susan Charlotte on serious issues that women face is given an anemic treatment, despite the tal... More »

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Unscripted Blog


    Visit Unscripted »

    Sponsors

    Back Stage Video

    Duncan Stewart, director of casting at National Artists Management Company, talks about opening every submission and what he wants to see in a headshot.; casting; Duncan Stewart; headshot; new york city; open submissions; Duncan Steward, director of casting, talks about what he wants from an actor in a general meeting, mainly truth, likability, and lack of ego.; advice; casting; Duncan Stewart; new york city; tips; Duncan Stewart, director of casting, talks about what he expects from an audition and common mistakes actors make.; advice; auditions; casting; Duncan Stewart; new york city; Alaine Alldaffer breaks down the real role of a casting direcor.; Alaine Alldaffer; casting; casting director; Grey Gardens; play; stage; theater; Casting director Alaine Alldaffer talks about casting "Saved" and all the misconceptions about being an actor in New York City.; Alaine Alldaffer; casting director; NYC theatre; play; saved; NY casting director Bernie Telsey describes what actors need to know before walking into an audition. (Part 1 of 2) ; Bernie Telsey; casting director; We spoke with casting director Mark Teschner about working on soap operas. (Part 1 of 3) ; General Hospital; Mark Teschner; soap opera; NY casting director Bernie Telsey describes how to give your best audition. (Part 2 of 2) ; Bernie Telsey; casting director; We spoke with casting director Mark Teschner about working on soap operas. Need only beautiful people apply? (Part 2 of 3) ; General Hospital; Mark Teshner; soap opera; We spoke with casting director Mark Teschner about auditioning for soap operas. (Part 3 of 3) ; General Hospital; Mark Teschner; soap opera; Videos for the Back Stage News & Features section.

    ADVERTISEMENT